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wellness

Two Initiatives at NCCC Increase Attention and Support for Students with Disabilities

By News Archive

April 12, 2023

A two-person team from Niagara County Community College (NCCC) has earned sponsorship to the world’s pre-eminent event for and advancing disability inclusion in higher education.

Professor Mark Voisinet of the college’s Business & STEM Division and Kevin Beato, NCCC’s accommodated testing and adaptive technology specialist, will participate in the 2023 Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) conference, Equity & Excellence: Access in Higher Education. They are one of just 20 teams nationwide to receive funding from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at Rochester Institute for Technology to attend the conference, which will take place in Portland, Ore., in July.

“We have accepted this grant to allow us to continue to gain more knowledge as well as build a network of colleagues nationally to assist the NCCC technology programs in building more diverse learning environments,” said Voisinet. “Being an alumnus of RIT and having been educated side-by-side with NTID students we are hoping to foster a more inclusive approach to disabled students and in particular those that are hearing impaired.”

Beato also is co-advisor of a club formed this month at NCCC for students with disabilities and their allies. The Wellness Club is a safe-space for disabled students and their advocates. Its goal is to create a community of belonging, awareness and acceptance.

“The Wellness Club’s launch will help our campus maintain a welcoming environment for all,” said NCCC Vice President of Academic Affairs Lydia Ulatowski. “Likewise, our presence at the AHEAD conference will ensure that our college continues to respond appropriately each student’s unique challenges.”

AHEAD is a leading professional organization committed to equity for persons with disabilities in higher education. Founded in 1977, AHEAD works to promote research, best practices and information about emerging issues related to disability in higher education. The organization’s membership now exceeds 4,000, representing all 50 states and more than 10 countries.

A two-person team from Niagara County Community College (NCCC) has earned sponsorship to the world’s pre-eminent event for and advancing disability inclusion in higher education.

Professor Mark Voisinet of the college’s Business & STEM Division and Kevin Beato, NCCC’s accommodated testing and adaptive technology specialist, will participate in the 2023 Association on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD) conference, Equity & Excellence: Access in Higher Education. They are one of just 20 teams nationwide to receive funding from the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at Rochester Institute for Technology to attend the conference, which will take place in Portland, Ore., in July.

“We have accepted this grant to allow us to continue to gain more knowledge as well as build a network of colleagues nationally to assist the NCCC technology programs in building more diverse learning environments,” said Voisinet. “Being an alumnus of RIT and having been educated side-by-side with NTID students we are hoping to foster a more inclusive approach to disabled students and in particular those that are hearing impaired.”

Beato also is co-advisor of a club formed this month at NCCC for students with disabilities and their allies. The Wellness Club is a safe-space for disabled students and their advocates. Its goal is to create a community of belonging, awareness and acceptance.

“The Wellness Club’s launch will help our campus maintain a welcoming environment for all,” said NCCC Vice President of Academic Affairs Lydia Ulatowski. “Likewise, our presence at the AHEAD conference will ensure that our college continues to respond appropriately each student’s unique challenges.”

AHEAD is a leading professional organization committed to equity for persons with disabilities in higher education. Founded in 1977, AHEAD works to promote research, best practices and information about emerging issues related to disability in higher education. The organization’s membership now exceeds 4,000, representing all 50 states and more than 10 countries.


Media Contact Information

Denyel Beiter
Public Relations Assistant
Phone: 716-614-5974
Email: Dbeiter@niagaracc.suny.edu

Tami Scruggs Portrait with Rocks

NCCC’s Nursing Student “Rocks” Exams

By News Archive
EKG Rock

Tami’s painted rocks are left at the NCCC campus for nursing students to find.

October 22, 2020

During the summer months of 2020, nursing student, Tami Scruggs, received news that the classes she signed up for at Niagara County Community College were going remote because of the continued threat of COVID-19.  Tammy revealed, “I am a bit older than the traditional college student so, when the nursing program went online, I was not excited. It’s difficult for me to be behind a computer and not in a classroom. I have to be more creative in the way I learn and study.”

Coincidentally, at the beginning of the pandemic, Tami began a new painting journey to deal with the stresses of the world’s new normal.  “My daughter and I had found a painted rock while on a walk. We thought painting rocks would be a good hobby while everything was shut down. It was a way to relax, clear our minds, and cope with the changes that were happening so quickly around us,” Tami explains.

During the fall 2020 semester, Tami applied her new hobby to the way she studied for exams in the competitive nursing program. She began painting cardiac rhythms in order to remember them. “Painting on rocks helped me to not only memorize certain EKG strips, but it also helped me to relax. Usually, there is nothing relaxing about nursing school,” jokes Tami.

Tami Scruggs Placing Rock

Tami places a rock with a cardiac rhythm painted on it at the NCCC campus, hoping it will brighten a nursing student’s day.

Tami is now a part of the rock painting community, Sweet Buffalo Rocks, in Western New York. Tami joined the Facebook group and became a part of the trend spreading across the country of painting, hiding, and finding others’ rock creations. She is now an active contributor to an act that spreads joy, wonder, and a family-friendly treasure hunt at any given moment. She says “I like to leave my rocks near walking trails, bike paths, or public rock gardens for people to find. Sometimes a silly rock really brightens someone’s day.”

In addition to painting rocks to de-stress, study, and make people smile, Tami is also painting them to teach. During the summer of 2020, Tami’s husband, Jeff, was diagnosed with Lyme disease. To help prevent the illness in others, Tami took her message to the woods, leaving rocks with ticks painted on them, reminding hikers to do a tick check, and including a fact about Lyme disease.

While the world awaits a safe COVID-19 vaccine, Tami continues to find the silver linings while living and studying through the pandemic. “You really build some amazing friendships in the nursing program and we all miss each other.” However, “Online learning does allow for more flexibility in my schedule,” said Tami.

To stay connected and supported, the NCCC faculty have carved extra time into their schedules to connect with students in new and resourceful ways. Whether it is through one-on-one check-ins, lecturing outdoors while the weather cooperates, or moving classes to larger spaces like the campus’ banquet hall, faculty and staff are striving to meet students’ needs. Tami says she feels supported because “The nursing staff has open office hours via Zoom or we can send emails if we have any questions or concerns that need to be verified.”


Media Contact Information

Denyel Beiter
Event Coordinator
Phone: 716-614-5974
Email: dbeiter@niagaracc.suny.edu