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‘Lunch and Learn’ breaks bread on materialism

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

The juxtaposition between discussing “living by not eating bread alone” while eating sandwiches wasn’t lost on the audience Friday at the Integration of Faith, Learning and Work event for Grand Canyon University faculty, but this dialogue wasn’t about carbs. Or even food.

The first of six IFLW “Lunch and Learn” speaker series events during the 2016-17 school year revolved around Biblical and philosophical concepts of bread: materialistic and often unfulfilling pursuits in life.

Dr. Jason Hiles

Dr. Jason Hiles

College of Theology Dean Dr. Jason Hiles referenced Luke 4: 3-4, in which Jesus fasted for 40 days only to be confronted by the devil, who asked Him to turn a stone into bread. Jesus refused: “It is written, man shall not live by bread alone.”

Instead, Hiles said, conversations, relationships, discussions, words and actions sustain happy, healthy and meaningful lives.

Dr. Moronke Oke from the Colangelo College of Business spoke of the relationship between our pursuits of “bread” in the business world. She used a “Pyramid of Priorities” to explain how many modern businesses and our individual professional goals are misaligned. Position, profit and performance are atop the pyramid, with purpose, principles and people at the bottom.

“It should be the other way around,” she said. “It should start with people. … If you love thy neighbor as yourself, you’ll still achieve good results.”

Joshua Danaher from the College of Humanities and Social Sciences spoke of ways to integrate spiritual life and communications into our daily interactions and actions.

Danaher said being authentic in conversations and interactions and in your daily actions can challenge you and others by bringing out your true self, thoughts and feelings. This kind of transparency “helps us be critical of what we are, what we know and our world around us.

Josh Danaher

Josh Danaher

“Cheap talk is very expensive,” he said.

A four-person panel of GCU teachers and students then shared their experiences, ranging from collaborations with students, to getting involved, to helping find your own “community.” Both self-reflection and authentic conversations help open the mind and prioritize what is truly important in work and life.

Hiles noted that “living by bread alone” often leads to focusing on the “mundane, busyness and creates anxiety.” The lure of many rewards often leaves us ultimately unsatisfied, creates needless competition and reinforces a desire for more that can lead to restlessness.

“Not living by bread alone allows us to focus on other things and pursue something better,” he said.

Hiles then posed two questions to the capacity crowd:

  • Are you tempted at any points by the “bread alone” approach to life?
  • If so, what is the “bread alone” lifestyle that presents the strongest temptations?

“Are we driven by titles, success and money, or what really matters?” Oke said. “It’s up to us to be the master of our own time and lives, or someone will do it for us.”

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

The post ‘Lunch and Learn’ breaks bread on materialism appeared first on GCU Today.


GCU is paving the pathway to computer science

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By Laurie Merrill
GCU News Bureau

Dr. Heather Monthie, assistant dean and associate professor of Grand Canyon University’s College of Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET), was in middle school when she discovered Oregon Trail, the role-playing computer game about a wagon leader guiding a party of settlers.

She was hooked and decided she wanted to learn to develop her own computer game. She  enrolled in a summer school program that taught BASIC, a programming language that allowed her to achieve this.

“It challenged me,” Monthie said. “It’s something that allowed me to think through the process.”

Monthie’s love of computers and problem solving has only grown over time and was a factor in her choosing Information Technology (IT) as her career more than 26 years ago.

Today, Monthie is one of several key figures at the forefront of a new GCU partnership with Science Foundation AZ, which has been selected as a Code.org Professional Learning Partner.

Dr. Heather Monthie

Dr. Heather Monthie

The partnership’s goal: to upend the status quo and improve a troubling statistic — only one in four schools offers computer science education. Code.org, perhaps best known for its successful Hour of Code, supports the idea of universally requiring computer science as part of the K-12 curriculum, alongside English, history, math and science.

“GCU shares the vision of Code.org that computer science is for every student and every school,” said Kathryn Scott, GCU’s director of Strategic Educational Alliances. “We want this in Arizona ─ especially for the under-represented and for girls.”

Despite the technological acumen of women such as Monthie, fewer female students overall embrace science and math.

“We want them to know it’s not a scary subject,” Monthie said. “It’s fun and it’s creative. It’s a way to build something, invent something. Everything we use, someone had to code in. Somebody had to develop everything we use today. Somebody had to make it that way.”

Scott is the partnership’s professional program manager, and Monthie was named Code.org facilitator of AP Science Principles curriculum. The third key participant in the Arizona agreement is Linda Coyle, director of education for Science Foundation Arizona and the Arizona STEM network.

Today, Coyle and Scott are among regional Code.org partnership members scheduled to appear at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy for a “Computer Science Education — Regional Partner Discussion.”

“We are a team that recognizes computer science professional development in the state of Arizona,” Scott said. “We are not only educating, but we are also advocating. We are becoming big advocates for Arizona.”

Training the trainers

Through workshops and courses, the partnership gives K-12 teachers tools and support for teaching students the skills and knowledge they need to be successful.

One of GCU’s key missions it to provide more education in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM), not only to students in the University but also to K-12 children throughout Arizona. The Code.org partnership is just one of many STEM programs that GCU is endorsing or spearheading as it attempts to help bridge the gap between the rapidly multiplying number of high-tech job opportunities and the inadequate number of graduates trained to fill them.

For example, GCU’s Strategic Educational Alliances department recently became a driving force behind the Chief Science Officers (CSO) program in Arizona’s high schools and middle schools.

This school year, in her AP Science Principles facilitator role, Monthie has been conducting professional training workshops in how to teach computer science to 10 high school teachers from across Arizona. They hail from such school districts as Tucson, Sierra Vista, Flagstaff, Phoenix and Paradise Valley, Monthie said.

“The teachers are very excited about it,” Monthie said, noting that she is the only such facilitator in Arizona.

Kathryn Scott

Kathryn Scott

The training is also offered to:

  • Phoenix area-elementary school teachers: GCU offers one-day Computer Science Fundamentals Workshops to help educators introduce computer science basics to the earliest learners. To register, visit http://www.gcu.edu/codeorg.
  • Elementary school teachers outside the phoenix area: Code.org facilitators can bring the same workshop to elementary school teachers in groups of 25 of more, Coyle said. “We have 28 teachers from the Prescott school districts taking our Code.org Fundamentals training,” Coyle said.
  • Middle School teachers: This spring, Arizona middle school teachers can participate in Computer Science Discoveries, an introductory course aimed at empowering students and preparing them for high school.

“The Code.org curriculum creates a ‘Pathway of Computer Science’ from elementary, to middle school, to high school and all the way up to higher education and, specifically, GCU and our engineering and science programs,” Scott said.

The earlier students begin this kind of education, the more proficient they will be later on, Monthie said. Children have a keen interest in computer science, many listing it as a top subject when it is offered.

“GCU is focused on improving the STEM fields at all levels,” Monthie said. “The idea is to spark students’ interest earlier to help fill some of the growing employment needs in the computer science and IT Fields.”

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

 

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Hinkle raises awareness for vets one step at a time

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

Even during a 2,600-mile journey, Larry Hinkle is on a deadline.

The former United States Marine needs to reach Camp Pendleton near San Diego by Nov. 10. And since it’s an hour flight or six-hour drive, it shouldn’t be difficult.

Except Hinkle is walking.

Larry Hinkle (left) stopped at Grand Canyon University on Wednesday to visit with other veterans.

Larry Hinkle (left) stopped at Grand Canyon University on Wednesday to visit with other veterans.

He began from North Carolina in early April and continued through Wednesday’s stop at Grand Canyon University.

The former Marine did tours in Afghanistan and Iraq. The plan was to travel the country on a self-discovery mission: “To see our country and see what I was fighting for,” he said.

Walking wasn’t his original plan, but he’s on his 11th pair of shoes and fifth knee surgery. For the purposes of raising money and awareness for fellow veterans, blisters, a bad back, sore hip, and the agony of walking through the South and parts of Texas in the middle of summer is worth the wear. There also was a three-week pause for an injured Achilles tendon and another week lost to a staph infection.

The planned 27-week meander on both interstate freeways and back roads is instead approaching its seventh month.

“I’ll probably be using a walker after this,” he joked while showing a few of his (literal) battle scars.

Energetic, affable and approachable, Hinkle arrived in Phoenix last week. After setting up his truck and trailer in an RV park in Tempe, he has walked around the city. He visited the VA Hospital, where he bought lunch for fellow veterans, and plans to visit Valley firehouses, police departments and meet first responders.

When Hinkle met Chris Landauer, GCU’s regional director of operations for military enrollment, last month in El Paso, Texas, Hinkle agreed to stop by GCU for a campus tour and to meet some military students.

Hinkle’s preconceived notions of GCU and its Veterans Center didn’t stick.

“My eyes have been opened here. I never knew this type of place existed,” he said inside the Veterans Center while visiting with students.

Then he laughed: “I’d have been in so much trouble if this was my college experience.”

He plans to resume his commercial pavement service job when he returns to North Carolina, a long way removed from a $100 weekly per diem he gives himself on this journey. The rest of his funds (gas for the truck, camping costs, military organizations) are raised through donations, including shoes from Brooks and Saucony.

Students who passed in and out of the Veterans Center on Wednesday — and a few who stayed through Hinkle’s visit — harkened to a common phrase heard throughout the day: “Keeping up the good fight.”

”It’s different than what he and most people normally see,” said GCU senior Francisco Quijada, who did a tour in Afghanistan. “We have that environment and community you can’t find anywhere else.”

As the current and former military student populations continues to increase, GCU Veterans Resource Coordinator Hattie Douglas estimated that nearly 300 traditional students on campus have military experience while nearly 500 are commuting to campus. Wednesday, Douglas discovered that she and Hinkle had worked together on a project in Afghanistan back in 2002.

It’s a small world, which is kind of Douglas’ point in speaking about training faculty and offering additional programs and services to military students. And it’s also Hinkle’s point when he shares the resources and programs available to first responders and military personnel.

“We like (the Veterans Center) to be a safe place where students who’ve experienced so much in their lives can go to get help with homework, or relax, and share those incredibly unique relationships and experiences,” Douglas said.

In a few days, Hinkle heads to Tucson, then back up to Casa Grande, west to Dateland and Yuma, then across the California border to San Diego and Camp Pendleton.

He expects to return in 2017 during another planned cross-country excursion of visits and speaking engagements. It won’t be on foot, but he still plans to pay his knowledge and experience forward.

“I’m sore and my body hurts, but I’ve never been happier in life,” he said of his journey. “It’s lit a fuse and I’ve felt great about what I’ve learned, so I want to take that feeling and pass it on through my (military) brothers and sisters.”

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

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GCU Family Weekend ready to return

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ax114_0380_9

One of the biggest events at Family Weekend is the introduction of the men’s basketball team at Midnight Madness.

By Karen Fernau
GCU News Bureau

Kathy Seter returned home last year to California from Family Weekend at Grand Canyon University tired, but content.

“I left with the reassuring knowledge that our daughter Elizabeth is in a safe and nurturing environment. The weekend built a strong connection with campus that lasted long after my husband and I left for home,” said Seter, now a member of the GCU Parent Council.

family weekend 2

Family weekend is a great way to bring students and their families together.

This weekend, the Seters return for Family Weekend, joining a record number of families visiting campus Friday to Sunday for an event-packed celebration with tours, soccer games, bowling, chapel, a fun run and hugs from students.

More than double the thousands of families — from parents, grandparents to siblings — are expected to attend the 2016 Family Weekend over last year.

“The interest this year has been incredible,” said Jeanne Lind, Parent and Family Programs Coordinator for GCU Office of Student Engagement.

Family Weekend allows families to visit students six weeks after moving into dorms and apartments on campus. The majority are families of freshmen and sophomores.

“It’s a great time of year, and students have been on campus long enough to have gained their footing. The time is right for a weekend visit with their parents, their families,” she said.

The weekend also is designed to showcase GCU’s campus, academics, restaurants, sports, arts and spiritual life.

family weekend 1

Bowling is part of the fun at Family Weekend.

An inaugural nine-hole golf tournament and cheer and dance clinic are newcomers to the annual weekend lineup, which includes an outdoor movie, Thunder Run, ArtsJam!, introduction of the men’s basketball team at Midnight Madness and informal family dining at GCU eateries.

The most popular event is expected to be Saturday’s Chapel service led by President Brian Mueller.

Lind said the weekend offers events to keep families busy on campus while at the same time allowing for unstructured time together.

“We try to maintain a balance. We want to offer enough things to do, but not so much that they don’t have free time together. This is a weekend for families to reconnect,” Lind said.

Family Weekend also provides GCU an opportunity to show parents how important they are to their child’s university experience.

family weekend 5-brian mueller

The most popular event at Family Weekend is expected to be Saturday’s Chapel service led by President Brian Mueller.

“They entrust us with their child and we want to let them know that they are always welcome,” she said.

This year the Seter family plans to attend as many activities as possible, including a repeat of last year’s hands-down favorite — Midnight Madness. The turbo-charged, smartly choreographed pep rally turned the Seters into avid Lope basketball fans who watch live games streamed to their computers.

Along with spending time with their daughter, the couple will be busy stockpiling visual images to take home to Redlands.

“We had a blast last year and left with a wonderful visual image of where Elizabeth was living and going to school,” said Seter, an elementary school math teacher.

“We want to do it again this year, so when she tells me about a volleyball game or a place she went to eat on campus, I’ll know what she is talking about.”

Because of this year’s heightened interest in Family Weekend, events requiring registration booked up nearly a week in advance. The following is a sampling of Family Weekend activities:

Friday, Oct. 7: Recreational activities, shotgun golf tournament, bowling, campus tours, movie and Midnight Madness.

Saturday, Oct. 8: Thunder Run, chapel, recreational activities, tours, cheer clinic, art’s jam and men’s soccer game.

Sunday, Oct. 9: Goodbyes and women’s soccer game.

Contact Karen Fernau at (602) 639-8344 or karen.fernau@gcu.edu.

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GCU students help bring TEDx to campus

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Jedidiah Woods

Jedidiah Woods hopes to fill GCU Arena for a TEDx event in March. Photo by Darryl Webb, GCU.

Story by Karen Fernau
GCU News Bureau

When business major Jedidiah Woods decided to bring TEDx to Grand Canyon University, he turned to President Brian Mueller for support and to the Project Management Club for muscle.

Woods received both. Today, armed with GCU’s backing, club leaders are busy planning what they predict will be the largest TEDx program ever held in Arizona.

The all-day event is scheduled for March 2 in GCU Arena.

“I’ve loved TED forever, and I have no doubt we will fill the Arena for the local program,” said Woods, a resident assistant at Sedona Hall.

TED is a nonprofit founded in 1984 that converges Technology, Entertainment and Design concepts and spreads those ideas in short, powerful talks, covering topics ranging from science to business to global issues. In 2009, TED launched TEDx with the goal of bringing the TED experience to local communities, from cities to universities.

A 10-student planning committee, led by Woods and Austin Mosher, vice president of Project Management Club and TEDx planning director, plans to select as many as 20 speakers. The speakers will likely range from famous to the unknown.

“We are just looking for people with a passion, an emotional story, who can share it with others,” said Woods, a Michigan native who co-founded Storage Together, an online marketplace business that links those with storage space to those in need of storage.

TEDx topics are expected to run the gambit, but Woods expects that several will address Conscious Capitalism, a free market system described as ethical, noble and heroic. The theories of Conscious Capitalism are the foundation of GCU’s business curriculum.

For Woods and other club members, TEDx offers an opportunity to gain real life experience.

“The great thing about this specific TEDx is that it is almost entirely organized and directed by students,” said Woods, a student leader easily recognized by his long, blond hair, skateboarding prowess and quick smile. “This empowers students with the kind of extraordinary leadership and project management skills that most career professionals never have the opportunity to experience.

“We are empowering our generation by giving GCU students the opportunity to do something great.”

Dr. Randy Gibb, dean of the Colangelo College of Business, agrees: “It was a student idea, organized by students, pitched to President Mueller by students, and brings to life principles of project management. Thus, TEDx GCU is as much about the process as it is the final product — students living out servant leadership.”

TEDx also illustrates the magnitude of opportunities offered by GCU’s fast-growing, hard-working network of clubs. There are 82 campus clubs, and GCU expects the number to increase to 90-100 by next spring. Nearly 3,500 students attended a recent club fair.

And who’s to thank for GCU’s club mania? Students.

“Staff provides support, but it’s the students who are driving the popularity of clubs. It’s a way for them to make their college experience what they want it to be,” said Pablo Ciscomani, GCU clubs and organizations coordinator.

Students draft proposals and craft mission statements for clubs that are submitted for approval by the Student Senate.

Ciscomani said GCU clubs range from social, political, professional to spiritual and showcase the diversity of interests on campus. Clubs are focused on debate, theology, forensic science, justice, sports medicine, computer gaming, scuba diving, math and chess, to name just a few.

“The list of our clubs shows the diversity of the campus. They target people of all backgrounds and interests,” he said.

Student clubs do, however, share common threads. They build campus unity, give students a feeling of belonging and promote leadership.

Some of the most popular include Defenders, a club promoting Christian faith, and the Outdoors Club, which organizes weekly trips to mountains, caves, lakes, canyons and snow-capped peaks.

Contact Karen Fernau at (602) 639-8344 or karen.fernau@gcu.edu.

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Laura Roberts preaches responsibility, sustainability in CCOB talk

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

There’s more to a successful business than making money hand over fist.

Sustainability, social and environmental impact, and conscientiousness are more important than ever, and their importance is growing by the year.

Pantheon Enterprises co-founder and CEO Laura Roberts’ message to Grand Canyon University students in the Colangelo College of Business on Wednesday was widely applicable for future business professionals:

Learn. Think critically. Understand. Act. And, if necessary, rebel.

Roberts pointed to what she believes is one of the worst mantras the business world has fostered: “That’s the way we’ve always done things.”

Laura Roberts

Laura Roberts

“That’s intolerable,” she said. “That can’t be the way. It has to be better.”

Roberts knows. She began her startup business in 2001, was told “no” by a variety of investors “about 400 times,” but eventually raised $30 million in capital for her business. Her privately-held organization is a chemical manufacturer of environmentally safe industrial products.

An advocate for conservation and sustainability of products, Roberts is also a member of Conscious Capitalism, an organization dedicated to promoting higher purpose in business, and has served on a variety of organizational and leadership boards throughout the Valley.

“Business can be a force for good,” she said. “If you only do it to maximize profits, then a whole lot of stakeholders will be negatively impacted. There needs to be a higher reason than just making profits.”

Her endeavors into chemicals and other potentially harmful substances used in everyday goods and manufacturing were partly influenced by the harms often created and a lack of transparency. She urged her audience of next-generation business professionals to advocate change, responsibility and the difference between “transaction” business and “interpersonal” business.

In citing the aluminum industry, along with companies such as Patagonia outdoor clothing company and The Container Store, Roberts pointed out how potential negatives (not seeking maximum profits, minimalist expenses, poor labor practices, etc.) can be turned into positives through sustainable practices that preserve our environment for the next generation.

Doing so through organizational change and transparency may cost time and money up front, but can still boost the bottom line over time.

“Sustainability isn’t a stand-alone concept,” she said. “Whether you’re a doctor, lawyer, accountant, mathematician, engineer, (human resources), anything, there’s sustainability within every field.”

The conscious capitalism theme is a thread in CCOB’s Speaker Series this year. Colangelo College of Business Dean Dr. Randy Gibb emphasized the concept is an integral part of GCU’s servant leadership.  Roberts, who spoke earlier in the day to a group of law and ethics students, shared her multi-dimensional expertise that includes women in leadership, women in STEM subjects, chemistry, sustainability and entrepreneurship.

“We’re going to repeat these types of presentations over and over to expose (students) to conscious capitalism and having a higher purpose,” Gibb said. “You have to have a higher purpose in how you do business.”

That includes preserving our world, the people who live in it, and making a positive impact beyond bank accounts.

“This generation is so influential to help create solutions for our world, and there are solutions for everything,” she said. “You can change the conversation, and it can happen whether you’re at the helm or want to be soon enough. You can have an impact no matter where you sit.”

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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A new experiment: CSET is conducting scientific research

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Goodyear (Ariz.) Fire Captain Branden Husky and Donna Gerakos, a CSET assistant professor,

Goodyear (Ariz.) Fire Captain Branden Husky and Donna Gerakos, a CSET assistant professor,

(Editor’s note: This story is from the August 2016 issue of GCU Magazine. To view the digital version of the magazine, click here.)

By Laurie Merrill
GCU Magazine

How helpful are certain plants in cleaning toxins from soil?

Will 3D printing technology eventually create anatomical replacements?

Can a fitness curriculum help firefighters prevent injuries?

What is exciting about these topics — and about 17 more like them — isn’t that students and faculty at Grand Canyon University are posing such questions. It’s how they will attempt to arrive at the answers  that is of major significance.

In the dawning of a new era, GCU’s College of Science, Engineering and Technology (CSET) this fall established a scientific research program on campus.

“One of the things I was brought here to do was to revisit the idea of whether we could build a research capability for the faculty and students,” said CSET Assistant Dean Jon Valla, who came to GCU in June 2015 after working at Midwestern University in Glendale, Ariz., and Barrow Neurological Institute in Phoenix.

The resounding answer, Valla learned, was yes. Once it was proposed, science faculty and students began flocking to the fledgling program.

The reasons are clear. Promoting a research capability in the sciences gives GCU students an edge in applying for medical and graduate programs. They can also dig deeply into subjects they care about and strive for outcomes that make a difference in the world.

“This also improves the scientific reputation as well as the overall reputation of the University,”Valla said.

Valla said dozens of students have applied for the extracurricular projects.

“The students are so hungry,” he said.

The research is in addition to work performed at GCU’s Center for Innovation in Research and Teaching (CIRT), which publishes the Journal of Instructional Research (JIR) online.

The research opportunities, however, do not detract from GCU’s superior reputation as a “teaching university” in which faculty responsibilities are first and foremost to instruct students.

“We will continue to be a teaching university first, but now we will be a teaching university with a research capability,” Valla said.

Here are some examples of what is being explored:

Environmental sustainability: Dr. Randhir Prakash Deo, a CSET professor, has conducted extensive research on the impact of contaminants in the environment, and several projects he plans to explore will utilize his expertise.

A project he is leading will research the effects of certain pharmaceuticals after they pass through humans into the environment.

“Wastewater is not able to degrade these stubborn chemicals,” Deo said.

In addition to monitoring, calculating a risk assessment and creating a remediation plan, Deo intends for students to take the scientific process a step further and propose action strategies for change.

“This is unique,” he said. “There could be laws written, stricter regulation and a charge created
to clean the environment.”

Phytoremediation: Deo is teaming with CSET professor Dr. Neal Adam on a phytoremediation project to research the use of plants to cut down on pollution and assess environmental health.

“Some grasses are good at removing heavy metals from the soil,” Adam said. “A first step in our program would be to see if we can produce similar results in this area. Then, more importantly for our project, would be to test to see if plants actually take up pharmaceutical compounds. Can plants remove pharmaceutical contaminants from the soil/water solution?”

Firefighter wellness: Goodyear (Ariz.) Fire Captain Branden Husky and Donna Gerakos, a CSET assistant professor, have been hard at work investigating a curriculum to improve the health and decrease the injury rates of firefighters.

A 21-year firefighting veteran, Husky has witnessed first-hand the kinds of problems that put firefighters out of commission.

Back injuries are number one, Husky said, followed by knee and shoulder injuries, heart disease and crashes to and from scenes.

“The top four we can do something about,” said Husky, who is enrolled in GCU’s exercise science degree with a sports performance emphasis.

“Until now, I never thought of firefighters as athletes,” Gerakos said.

Gerakos met with Husky to develop the strengthening and conditioning program. They met their first goal: Teaching a class at the Arizona State Fire School.

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The first research projects are focused on biology and chemistry, Valla said, but engineering, IT and computer science soon will follow.

“The hope is that other colleges will follow the same model,” Valla said.

He stressed that the Christian ethic will be alive and well in research. “The application of the Christian ethic to the practice of research

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

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GCU researching the impact of shoes on muscles

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unning shoes galore at Run to Fight Children's Cancer annual GCU fundraiser. Their fit could impact performance.

Running shoes galore at the annual Run to Fight Children’s Cancer on GCU’s campus. Their fit could impact performance.

 

By Karen Fernau
GCU News Bureau

Grand Canyon University junior Meghan Maddux suspects her shoes are to blame for a debilitating leg injury she suffered as a teenage softball player.

A pair of running shoes -- with feet inside -- from the 2013 Run to Fight Children's Cancer race held every March.

A new GCU research project explores the impact of shoes on muscle activation.

“I was wearing shoes with metal cleats, and one leg moved and the other didn’t. My injury convinced me that shoes matter,” said the pre-med major from Douglas.

This semester, Maddux joins 11 students and Exercise Science faculty on research that could prove her hunch right.

Their project – part of this fall’s launch of research initiatives in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology — explores the impact of shoes on muscle activation.

For CSET Assistant Professor Donna Gerakos, GCU’s leap into research is significant on two fronts. First, research adds to GCU’s reputation as a leader in exercise science education.

Donna Gerakos

Donna Gerakos

Equally important, it offers undergraduate students an opportunity to participate in cutting-edge research into fitness and wellness. Research also helps prepare students for the research requirements of graduate school.

“The main goal of the project is to engage students in research-based opportunities that will bring to life the knowledge gained in the classroom,” Gerakos said.

“We help them to help us learn more.”

Dr. Lindsey Wagner is spearheading The EMG Project, research using electromyography to measure muscle activity in conjunction with different shoes. Foot strike patterns also will be measured and analyzed.

Students, who applied and were selected for the project, are required to spend at least four hours weekly on research. Students begin

Lindsey Wagner

Dr. Lindsey Wagner

the yearlong research project by analyzing existing research on the connection between shoes and movement.

They also attend classes to learn the rules and methodology for scientific research.

“This is my first introduction to research,” Maddux said, “and it’s both challenging and interesting.”

Once analyzed, the team will begin designing and implementing the research project. The goal is for students to present the findings with a curious public.

“The end goal is add to the body of research that shows how important movement is to wellness,” Gerakos said.

A second project, under the direction of CSET Associate Professor Dr. Cindy Seminoff, explores the relationship between sports performance, nutrition and objective health measures such as cholesterol and triglycerides to injury rates in college athletes.

Nine faculty and 15 students are conducting the research that will establish an ongoing data base of information.

Cindy Seminoff

Dr. Cindy Seminoff

Thirty athletes have agreed to be the initial test subjects.

Like with the EMG, Seminoff’s research project is possible only because of the new lab facilities in the Performance, Optimization, Wellness, Exercise and Research (POWER) Center.

“We have the support of the university and now have the lab equipment necessary to conduct the research. It’s very exciting,” she said.

The third project on tap for this year is working with firefighters to develop a fitness program to improve their health and decrease injuries. Once implemented, GCU researchers will measure the program’s success.

“We are addressing movement, mental health and nutrition,” Gerakos said. “We want to be able to help them know what they need to do their job and take care of all dimensions of wellness.”

The inaugural GCU research projects launch during an era of increased interest in exercise, movement and health.

“People are beginning to pay attention to the health risks of being sedentary,” she said. “We want our research to help keep everyone moving and healthy.”

Future projects associated with the POWER Center will include testing of health measures of general college population as well as a new focus of research on blood pressure under the direction of Dr. Zach Zeigler, a new faculty member in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology.

Along with Seminoff, Gerakos, Wagner and Zeigler, CSET faculty involved in the POWER Center research initiatives include Trevor Nordin, Dr. Mark Wireman, Dr. Brian Sillanpaa, Dr. Stephanie Stang   and Michael Barton.

For a story about the overall launch of scientific research at GCU, click here.

 

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Purdins’ radio show is rooted in Christian values

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Wayne Purdin (left) and his wife Julie share their views about the need to go back to our Christian roots in their weekly radio show on KFNX.

Wayne Purdin (left) and his wife, Julie, share their views about the need to go back to our Christian roots in their weekly radio show on KFNX.

By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

We’ve lost our way.

It’s a national and societal concept Wayne and Julie Purdin feel strongly about, which is why they’ve taken to radio and Internet podcasting as a means to share their – and others’ – perspectives.

Wayne has been lead curriculum editor at Grand Canyon University for seven years. Julie is a teacher in the Cartwright School District in Phoenix. On Saturdays, however, they co-host the “God and Country” radio show on KFNX (1100 AM) from 11 a.m. to noon.

The shows often revolve around their guests, who include a wide swath of religious and cultural backgrounds, perspectives and opinions. Guests often present a broad spectrum of political, social and economic thought leaders:

  • Al Fadi: a former Islamic jihadist who’s now director of the Center for Islamic Research & Awareness
  • Stephen Limbaugh: musician, composer and cousin of nationally syndicated conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh
  • Dannion Brinkley: author and “New Age” thought leader following three near-death experiences
  • Ravi Batra: award-winning economist
  • Elbert Guillory: former Louisiana senator, lawyer, Navy veteran and U.S. congressional candidate
Julie and Wayne Purdin

Julie and Wayne Purdin

“We’re all looking for answers,” Wayne Purdin said. “Whatever the religion or politics, it seems like God is missing and we need to get back to our roots.”

GCU faculty members also are occasional guests. The Sept. 24 show featured Kevin Walling, a fourth-year full-time faculty member in the College of Humanities and Social Sciences and also a former civil attorney and judge in Arizona. They discussed civil liberties, the Constitution and governments’ various roles (or non-roles) in society from what Walling called “more of a libertarian lens.”

“We have local TV and local radio that deals with politics and government,” he said. “It’s not uncommon, but I think it’s something of a new thing for GCU to engage in by allowing faculty and staff to participate.”

While the opinions expressed are solely those of the hosts and/or guests, the opportunity to speak and share isn’t lost on the hosts.

“The world is kind of a classroom for the journey of our souls,” Julie Purdin said. “People are so caught up in gratifying the finite desires of their human bodies and psyches that they’re missing the eternal joy of spiritual fulfillment. What’s important is to do God’s will in their lives, but it seems as though people are finding ways and creating diversions to do the opposite.”

Since KFNX provides a wider forum for those wishing to broadcast via radio or podcast, securing advertising, sponsorships and donations is key to sustaining air time and perhaps expanding the show’s length and frequency.

“We just want to educate people, to know about the realities beyond themselves and their own individual little worlds,” Julie Purdin said. “People have often missed the real pursuit of happiness. It’s a conservative message about not being caught up with ego or outward appearances. That pursuit will not give lasting happiness.

“People lie to support an agenda these days. It’s a shame, but we hope to regain some of that honesty of our spiritual roots. That’s a big part of spiritual fulfillment.”

You can listen to their shows here or follow them on Facebook.

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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They’re walking to raise cancer awareness, funds

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From left, CONHCP employees Connie Colbert, Brandon Warner, Maria Quimba and Pascale Lee pose with Thunder during a kickoff for the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk.

From left, College of Nursing and Health Care Professions employees Connie Colbert, Brandon Warner, Maria Quimba and Pascale Lee pose with Thunder during a kickoff for the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk.

Story and photos by Laurie Merrill
GCU News Bureau

Brandon Warner was 10 years old the first time his world was first shaken. It was when his mother told him she had cancer.

His mother would survive her first two bouts with the disease, Warner, director of Athletic Training Education in the College of Nursing and Health Care Professions, told a rapt audience Monday at Howerton Hall.

Warner and cancer survivor Darrian Piper, a junior studying Health Care Administration, each shared their experience and hope at CONHCP’s kickoff of this year’s Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk, an American Cancer Society awareness-raising fundraiser on Oct. 22 in Tempe.

“I can still see the bedroom and my mom sitting on the bed,” Warner said, recalling the moment. “And that is when she told me she was diagnosed with breast cancer. I asked my mom if she was going to die.”

Brandon Warner

Brandon Warner

He said he now knows how much courage and strength it took for her to look her 10-year-old boy in the eye and say, “everything is going to be OK.”

His mother did overcome breast cancer that time and beat it a second time 10 years later, when Warner was a sophomore in college. The diagnoses barely slowed her down, and cancer couldn’t stop her from being his No. 1 fan when he was on the college track team. She would park her chair right next to the long jump pit, where he was competing, and wait for him.

“She came to everything,” Warner said. “She was amazing.”

Warner was in his fourth year of college and had just returned from a term abroad in Costa Rica when his mother told him that she had cancer for the third time. She made it to his graduation. Her tumors were shrinking. Though he was a pre-med major, she suggested that he check out a degree in athletic training, a tip that changed his life, he said. He switched majors and found his calling.

When the cancer spread to her brain, Warner drove eight hours each way nearly every weekend to visit his mom. He watched her deteriorate. Most of the time, she didn’t recognize him.

Even so, Warner wanted to share important news with her during one visit. He told her he was planning to propose to his girlfriend.

In what he described as a “surreal moment,” his mother took off her wedding ring and gave it to her son. She told him even if she couldn’t make the wedding, she would be there in spirit.

She died before the wedding, but Warner never doubted she was with him then and is with him today and always.

“She never gave up,” Warner said. “She never let anything get her down.”

Piper was a high school sophomore running track and field the first time her knee swelled up. An urgent care doctor dismissed it as a sports injury.

The next time it ballooned, the diagnosis was grim: She had bone cancer, osteosarcoma. Instead of going to high school her junior year, she had a knee replacement and received chemotherapy daily.

The knee replacement didn’t work. Ten surgeries and a persistent infection later, Piper had a bitter choice. “I told the surgeon to cut it off,” she said, her eyes misting.

Students and employees from the College of Nursing and Health Care Professions after an event to drum up in terest in joining a team for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer.

Students and employees from the College of Nursing and Health Care Professions after an event to drum up in terest in joining a team for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer.

Her faith in God had lapsed at that time, she said. She blamed Him, asking, “Why me?”

She is a cancer free today, but the chemo left its grip. She has shortness of breath, an abnormal heart rate, some difficulty with memorization and a prosthetic leg.

But she also has gone from anger to gratitude and from blame to thankfulness. She is grateful to have friends who love her and has found her calling in studying hospital administration.

Her advice to others in the same boat: “Keep fighting. Miracles do happen.”

October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. Maria Quimba, CONHCP assistant dean for Undergradute and Professional Studies, said in her opening remarks that through participation in the walk, COHNHP hopes to help bring GCU together as a community to raise awareness and funds for a cure and to pray for one another.

CONHCP has formed three teams in the Making Strides Against Breast Cancer walk, Lopes 1, Lopes 2 and Lopes 3. For more information about the walk, click here. To join a team, click here. Team captains include Warner, Quimba and Connie Colbert, director of Student Health Services.

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

 

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Career practicum is handy for students, employers

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Hundreds of student packed an event to meet potential practicum employers.

Hundreds of students packed an event to meet potential practicum employers.

Story and photos by Laurie Merrill
GCU News Bureau

With resumes in their hands and smiles on their faces, hundreds of Grand Canyon University students flocked to meet representatives from as many as 17 behavioral health organizations Tuesday at the first annual Counseling and Psychology Career Practicum.

The event, co-sponsored by GCU’s Career Impact Center and the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, was as much a win for the organizations seeking interns as for students seeking practicum placements.

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Kathy Britton, of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, was one of the event organizers.

“This is so wonderful,” said Susanne Tso Grant, a second-year master’s student in Professional Counseling. “It’s pulling all the information together that I have been trying to gather on my own with little success. It’s eye-opening.”

Every student working toward a master’s in counseling is required to undergo an eight-month practicum, said Kathy Britton, GCU’s counseling program manager and the recruiter of the organizations in attendance.

“One of the biggest fears from Day One is, ‘Where am I going to do my practicum?’” Britton said. “This brings the companies to the students.”

And not just any company, but those that have brought on at least one GCU student intern in the past and are excited about working with more in the future.

Several representatives visiting campus once were interns who were hired by the organizations after they graduated. One of them, Carly Kerr, said she was able to stay on at Banner Thunderbird because it tends to hire from within.

Cindy Elms, co-owner and dietician of the Glendale-based Empowerment Treatment and Counseling center, said they had a positive experience with one GCU intern.

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Master’s in Counseling students, undergrads and more benefited from talking directly with organization representatives.

“Now, we’re are looking for two more,” Elms said. The center has positions in the Intensive Outpatient Program for eating disorders.

Jacqueline Smith, executive director of GCU’s Career Impact Center, said the event was one of a series the center is organizing that brings employers on campus to interview students from particular colleges.

“It is so important for students to have a meet-and-greet with prospective employers before they are ready to graduate,” Smith said. “This is a safe place for them to practice interviewing and job-seeking skills.”

Up next is an IT Career Consortium, scheduled for 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Nov. 2 outside Building 57, said Alexa Wennet, Career Impact Center employer outreach supervisor.

Students said it was rewarding to meet with representatives from such places as Touchstone Health Services, Arizona Trauma Counseling and the Meadows of Wickenburg addiction treatment center.

Student Roger Wallmueller said the two hours he spent at the event were invaluable in learning about his practicum.

That sentiment was echoed by Nicole Baker, a Master’s in Professional Counseling student. “This is a great opportunity,” Baker said. “I can talk to so many companies at the same time.’’

“I love it,” Master of Science in Counseling student Shayna Landry said.  “It has been incredibly helpful.”

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

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Comic belief: McFarlane shows he’s on the ball

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By Rick Vacek
GCU News Bureau

The scene at Grand Canyon University on Wednesday was not unlike what you’d see outside a major sports venue. A throng of fans crowded around their hero, seeking autographs and taking selfies.

Todd McFarlane speaks to students Wednesday at the Colangelo College of Business. (Photo by Darryl Webb)

Todd McFarlane speaks to students Wednesday at the Colangelo College of Business. (Photo by Darryl Webb)

And while Todd McFarlane is an athlete and has played a major role in one facet of the sports world (more about that later), he’s more famous for something completely different: He’s an artist, writer and entrepreneur who has parlayed his ability to create comic books, such as Spider-Man and Spawn, into leading the most successful independent publishing company in the industry.

He was on campus to speak to Colangelo College of Business students, and the huge crowd that turned out made it clear that he certainly is a household name in their households. That gave him the cachet to talk to them in a lively and street-wise fashion about how to go about building and sustaining a career.

McFarlane signed autographs for a large crowd of students, some of whom brought their packaged action figures of characters he conceived.

McFarlane signed autographs for a large crowd of students, some of whom brought their packaged action figures of characters he conceived.

If it had been a comic book, McFarlane’s talk would have contained one panel after another with a catchy lead-in and a smart conclusion. He spoke from the heart with no notes, with a superhero passion that made the simplest point entertaining.

Panel 1: The importance of hard work

McFarlane didn’t mince words. If you want to be more skilled, you need to work hard at it. He said he spent “thousands of hours” drawing as a youngster.

“Who gets better at anything if you don’t do it?” he said, adding that if you did nothing but draw a picture of your hand for a week straight, “your drawings on Sunday would be better than on Monday.”

McFarlane's appearance drew a large crowd of students to the CCOB lecture hall.

McFarlane’s appearance drew a large crowd of students to the CCOB lecture hall. (Photo by Darryl Webb)

Panel 2: When opportunity knocks, answer the door

McFarlane isn’t averse to taking things that are free, such as the baseball scholarship he used to attend college. “I would go to my enemy’s house and eat his food if it was free,” he said.

But the flip side of that is finding ways to get in the door yourself, and McFarlane told of how he’d make 40 copies of each of his drawings and send them to 40 different editors. He was convinced he’d get a chance if he could just get someone to notice, and, looking back, he realizes now that he had a vastly inflated idea of his ability at the time.

“There’s a fine line between tenacity and stick-to-it-iveness and delusional,” he said. “I was delusional. Do yourself a favor for the rest of your life — lower the bar.”

McFarlane's animated speaking style included powerful messages. (Photo by Darryl Webb)

McFarlane’s animated speaking style included powerful messages. (Photo by Darryl Webb)

Panel 3: Timing is everything

When McFarlane did get a chance, it wasn’t because someone noticed how great his drawings were. It was because a man who was doing a book passed away, and the company needed a quick replacement.

Once he got the gig, he learned one thing quickly: “You have to get it in on time. I started showing them I could meet a deadline, and that was more than 50 percent of the job.”

And then when got established, he took the Spider-Man opportunity even though his editors counseled against it. “It’s a wreck,” they told him. But that was exactly why he took it — he had a chance to save the day and look good doing it.

“You want to look smart? Hang around with dumb people,” he said. “And when things go right, always act like it was intentional. Act like you knew what you were doing.”

Panel 4: Don’t try to reinvent the wheel — just make it better

McFarlane likened what he does to how Steve Jobs revolutionized the computer.

“I don’t believe I’m doing anything original,” he said. “What I’m good at is making things better. It doesn’t have to be all new. It just has to be five percent, eight percent different.”

When he took six other Marvel Comics employees with him and started Todd McFarlane Productions, he used his competitiveness and determination to make it work. He considers himself a modern-day Braveheart.

“I don’t believe I’m doing anything original,” McFarlane said. “What I’m good at it is making things better."

“I don’t believe I’m doing anything original,” McFarlane said. “What I’m good at is making things better.” (Photo by Darryl Webb)

“Business is a language,” he said. “Was I good when I started? No. But I got better.”

Panel 5: The value of street cred

McFarlane’s name might ring a bell among hard-core sports fans: He’s the guy who paid $3 million for the ball that Mark McGwire hit for his 70th home run (then the Major League Baseball single-season record) in 1998.

But McFarlane didn’t stop there. He has a number of other famous home run balls, including the one used to set the current record — Barry Bonds’ 73rd in 2001.

Why would he pay that kind of money for a three-dollar baseball? Simple. He has made much more thanks to his largesse.

“I wanted to start drawing sports figures, but they wouldn’t let me in. I needed street cred,” he said.

The simple act of buying a baseball exposed his fanaticism to the four major sports leagues (football, basketball and hockey in addition to baseball), and he estimates that the deals he was able to strike with them are worth more than $20 million.

“You can’t put certain things on a spreadsheet,” he said. “It’s just gut.”

“From the caveman days, youth was always considered irresponsible,” he said. “Don’t buy into it.”

“From the caveman days, youth was always considered irresponsible,” he said. “Don’t buy into it.” (Photo by Darryl Webb)

McFarlane lives out his passion for baseball in another way. Right after his talk Wednesday, he had to go play center field for his team in the MSBL MABL World Series, which brings together older players from all over the country (there even is an over-70 division) for a week of reliving their youth. The Boys of Summer get to be the Boys of October as the December of their lives nears.

He’s still a boy at heart and is passionate about the potential of today’s youth. “I’m amazed by how brilliant you are,” he told the students, and he urged them to respect their elders but realize that they, too, once made young mistakes.

“From the caveman days, youth was always considered irresponsible,” he said. “Don’t buy into it.”

A better approach, in his opinion, is to never complain about things you can change. McFarlane joked that the most important advice he got as a child was, “Only you can prevent forest fires.” Translation: It’s on you to make your life work.

“When you are bellyaching, ask yourself, ‘How much control do I have over this?’” he said. “Pick a goal, and everything else is white noise. Just pick one, be a dog and gnaw on it.”

The students showed they can take the initiative just by getting McFarlane to GCU in the first place. How it came about: One of the students, Daulton Hopkins, has a cousin who is friends with McFarlane’s son, and the Business Management Club — led by Nick Gribbin, Nicole Giles, Zachary Argenbright and Ricky Morse — took it from there.

The very first thing McFarlane told the students Wednesday was, “I can take anybody in this class and turn you into a functional artist.” But he did much more — he gave them functional life and business lessons. They drew a lot more from that.

Contact Rick Vacek at (602) 639-8203 or rick.vacek@gcu.edu.

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Faculty to peers: ‘Practice what you teach’

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

Being a student is hard. Being a teacher is often harder.

At Grand Canyon University, education is acquired, taught and shared using a Christian worldview of practices, values and ethics. But applying those principles within classrooms that revolve around STEM subjects, computers and technology can be complicated.

Lydia Fritz

Lydia Fritz

Friday’s latest “Lunch and Learn” faculty speaker series explored these topics as part of the Integration of Faith, Learning and Work (IFLW) series, led by College of Theology Dean Dr. Jason Hiles.

The challenges of working with students by integrating Christian values, connecting with today’s college students and preparing them as 21st-century leaders is often difficult. And that’s without factoring in students’ dispositions, attention spans and whatever may be happening in their personal lives.

Lydia Fritz is teaching proof of these challenges. An assistant professor in the College of Science, Engineering and Technology, she works primarily with freshmen; some might not be ready for the rigors of college or might not seem willing to be challenged to use critical-thinking skills while learning about technologies.

She said both education and teaching Christian values shouldn’t be an “either/or” proposition, but these concepts can be intertwined during both good (and easy) times and during challenging or difficult circumstances.

Isac Artzi

Isac Artzi

“Remember, these are all teaching moments,” she told her colleagues. “Let your faith guide you.”

Fritz’s CSET colleague, Isac Artzi, shared elements of his classroom integration with fellow faculty. Namely, the intersection and interaction between humans and technology often creates limitations or constraints.

The key, Artzi said, is to turn those constraints into advantages or opportunities. He referenced an MIT software company that specifically hired people afflicted by autism because the brain disorder allows them to better fit with the demands and characteristics desired for software testing.

Integrations occur even before teacher-student interactions. Heidi Blocker, a curriculum design and development manager at GCU, said the University’s Statement of Integration and Faith is heavily emphasized when originating content and discussion questions that are embedded in every program’s curriculum.

Heidi Blocker

Heidi Blocker

“There are embedded opportunities to have these conversations with students,” she said. “What are the connections (between Christian values and specific lessons) for these themes?”

As nearly every teacher can attest, it requires a lot of one’s body, mind and soul to excel at working with the next generation. But the reminder was simple: Practice what you teach.

“There can be gaps, and these gaps are important,” Hiles said of having faith guide your teaching. “If I can’t put (Christian teachings) into practice on my own, then, as a teacher, it can sound hypocritical or disingenuous.”

Mark Heller can be reached at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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Thrive Conference gives family businesses a boost

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Panelists in the Thrive Conference Wednesday included (from left) Holly Betenbough, Rick Betenbough, Dr. Kevin Leman and Dennis O’Reilly.

By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

Ears were perked and business cards were dealt out like cards as a few hundred entrepreneurs and family business owners gathered Wednesday at Grand Canyon University Arena for the Thrive Family Business Conference.

Hosted by Intentional Living Center president, author and radio personality Dr. Randy Carlson, Wednesday’s daylong presentation featured a half-dozen speakers, more than a dozen video presentations, guest panels and interactive Q-and-A sessions with successful family business entrepreneurs of faith.

The day’s focus revolved around helping the audience navigate the dozens of challenges (large and small) entrepreneurs and small businesses encounter. Both GCU President Brian Mueller and Colangelo College of Business namesake Jerry Colangelo shared their passions for entrepreneurship and how to navigate the realms of uncertainty in building an organization from the very beginning — whether in education, sports or otherwise.

“You learn much more from failure and losses than the wins,” Colangelo said. “Out of adversity comes opportunity.”

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Dr. Randy Carlson (left) speaks with Jerry Colangelo, namesake of the Colangelo College of Business.

The day concluded with an entertaining and informative panel of four guests: Rick and Holly Betenbough, a husband-and-wife team who’ve built a successful housing development business in west Texas; Dr. Kevin Leman, a psychologist, author and creator of the Leman Academy of Excellence, tuition-free, K-7 charter schools throughout the Tucson area; and his son-in-law, Dennis O’Reilly, the head of school for the academy.

With five daughters — one of whom is in charge of more than 20 traditional schools around Tucson — dynamics between parents and children and business and family is a daily dynamic with the Leman family tree. And sometimes its success is easier said than done.

“It’s the school of ‘excellence,’ not perfection,” Leman said. “Your business needs to be a fun place where people and (employees) feel part of your mission.”

Many in attendance shared similar missions and goals. The information overload and thought-provoking concepts were too numerous to keep track of in an eight-hour time frame, but plenty in attendance found plenty of information worthy of reflection.

“I’m not a big sports person, but I knew the Colangelo name,” said Wendy Avant, who recently left the corporate world after 20 years to begin her own home business in Tucson. “He was fantastic.”

The 45-minute panel concluded the day’s events with discussions on everything from tithing, successor and estate planning, communication with family between business and personal, work-life priorities and “opportunity” vs. passion.

“Provisions is a terrible reason to do anything,” Rick Betenbough said. “Passion-less work is a disaster.”

For several in attendance, both Colangelo’s and Mueller’s speeches resonated with attendees. This was partially because of the “entrepreneurial spirit” they both emphasized as being part of GCU’s values, and partially because of the illustrious careers and leadership of both Mueller and Colangelo.

“I wanted to be in charge and decide things on my own terms through God,” said James Sizemore, who also left the corporate world after a decade to start his own business in Phoenix. “You learn so much from these speakers. Everyone’s journey is different, but there will always be a lot of similarities among us.”

Mark Heller can be reached at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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Career fairs coming to GCU in November and beyond

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

There is no substitute for real-world experience, and Grand Canyon University students have several opportunities to hand out (and lengthen) resumés and improve interview skills during the next month.

Following the recent Counseling and Practicum Fair in partnership with the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, the Career Impact Center is collaborating with the College of Science, Engineering and Technology to offer another event for GCU students.

The IT Career Consortium is scheduled for 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 2, outside Building 57 and will feature companies from the information technology and computer science industries. Students will be able to discuss both job and internship opportunities with the recruiters at the event.

GCU Career Impact Center Executive Director Jacqueline Smith advises students to take advantage of the opportunity to interact with employers.

“Dress professionally, bring resumés, have confidence and be well-spoken,” she said. “You’ll be one step closer toward landing a job.

“That’s what it’s all about: networking, networking and more networking.”

Smith called next week’s career fair a “first step” in creating a pipeline between GCU students/graduates and Valley companies looking to hire for computer, technology, math and science positions.

“There are many positions within the CSET and STEM fields thathaven’t been created yet,” Smith said. “Our students are prepared for these roles because they are creative, passionate, inquisitive, able to think critically and make a great first impression.”

She encouraged other GCU colleges to contact the Career Impact Center to help set up career fairs and promote job/internship opportunities. She also encouraged students to seek out the Career Impact Center for job and internship resources, including many available on-campus positions, where a “safe to fail” environment is fostered vs. the often harsh real world.

“We provide resumé reviews and mock interviews, but (job fairs) are more impactful,” Smith said. “We don’t want to wait until students are ready to graduate before introducing them to employers. We want those relationships and great resources available to anyone who’s motivated, professional and ambitious.”

The Career Impact Center has quite a few events lined up for the remainder of the semester and academic year, including:

  • GCU Wants to Hire You is a job fair in collaboration with the GCU Human Resources department for future graduates and recent alumni interested in working for the University. This event will take place from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. Nov. 9 at the Career Impact Center office, located inside Saguaro Hall (Building 46).
  • More than 150 organizations will be on the Promenade for the annual Career Week Job/Internship Fair from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. March 2.

Individual companies also will be on campus throughout November looking to hire full-time, part-time and internship positions, including:

  • Nov. 1-2: Enterprise
  • Nov. 7: Edward Jones
  • Nov. 8: Hubbard Family Swim School
  • Nov. 9: U.S. Bureau of Prisons
  • Nov. 14: Dish Network
  • Nov. 15-16: USAA
  • Nov. 28: Northwestern Mutual
  • Nov. 29: CenturyLink
  • Nov. 30: Drury Hotels

For more information about events and job fairs, refer to the Career Impact Center website.

Mark Heller can be reached at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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Mueller named Business Leader of the Year

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GCU President Brian Mueller (center) holds the Business Leader of the Year Award, which he received from Steven Zylstra (left), president/CEO of the Arizona Technology Council, and Sandra Watson, president/CEO of the Arizona Commerce Authority.

GCU President Brian Mueller (center) holds the Business Leader of the Year Award, which he received from Steven Zylstra (left), president/CEO of the Arizona Technology Council, and Sandra Watson, president/CEO of the Arizona Commerce Authority.

By Rick Vacek
GCU News Bureau

An event on Thursday night at the Phoenix Convention Center made it easy to see why Grand Canyon University has placed such an emphasis on technology education.

Steven Zylstra, president and CEO of the Arizona Technology Council, said it’s easy to see why GCU President Brian Mueller has made that push successful.

Mueller speaks to the audience after receiving the award.

Mueller speaks to the audience after receiving the award.

The occasion was the Governor’s Celebration of Innovation, where Mueller received the Ed Denison Business Leader of the Year award. Afterward, Zylstra recalled a 2008 meeting that occurred soon after Mueller came to the University.

“We talked about the need for more engineering programs and more programs in the IT area. Now GCU has everything. It’s incredible,” Zylstra said. “We’re really excited about the programs it has for the tech industry. I think GCU is beginning to become known for that.”

Mueller, who flew back to Phoenix from Colorado late Thursday afternoon to be at the ceremony, reflected on how much has happened since he took over.

“It’s really the culmination of a lot of people working really hard at a very innovative concept that has exceeded all our expectations,” he said. “We had big plans. It was a major risk that we took. But it’s an amazing example of how, when you bring a group of people together and you trust that God will be in your efforts, here’s what can happen.

“Not only is it just incredible what’s happened, it has happened in such a short period of time. It gets you thinking about what might happen in the next eight years.”

Mueller said a big part of the success on the ground campus is the 17,500 students who are “good students and great kids and so willing to give of themselves and participate in the things that are going on.”

“What will happen when that number is 30,000 students and we have 5,000 employees instead of 3,500 employees? If God continues to bless us in this way, there literally will be thousands and thousands of people who will be blessed as a result of it.”

An important part of the equation, Mueller added, is the fact that 70 percent of GCU students are studying in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) fields as well as business and entrepreneurship. That puts the University in step with what Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey is trying to accomplish.

“It’s a state that has shown it’s open for business, especially in science and technology,” Zylstra said in his opening remarks at the event Thursday, adding that venture capital investments in the state were $123 million in the first half of this year, $4 million more than all of 2015.

Sandra Watson, president and CEO of the Arizona Commerce Authority, said that on a recent trip to the San Francisco Bay Area’s Silicon Valley, all the talk was about what’s happening tech-wise in Arizona.

“We are becoming recognized around the country as a hotbed of entrepreneurial activity,” she said.

Said Mueller, “It’s inspiring in a lot of ways, but especially for those of us who are committed to Arizona and want to build our businesses and raise our families and our grandkids here. It’s so exciting to be in this state, with everything that’s happening.”

It was particularly inspiring to listen to the projects of the four high school students who were honored as the Future Innovators of the Year. The only thing more complicated than the names of their projects, such as “The Effect of the Algal Extraction Method on the Amount of Crude Lipid Recovered for Economically Feasible Biofuel Production,” is how they went about fixing the problems.

Zylstra is working with GCU leaders, especially Dr. Michael Mobley, executive director of the Center for Integrated Sciences, Engineering and Technology, to help bring students like that to the University and challenge them with cutting-edge programs. But, he said, he knows where the tech push originates at GCU.

“Brian Mueller is known as a great leader around the town. Everyone knows that,” Zylstra said. “Whatever he touches seems to turn to gold.”

And Mueller is bullish on making that continue for GCU in particular and the state in general.

“The future is really bright for Arizona regardless of what happens in political elections and what happens in Washington and whether you’re optimistic or pessimistic as a result of that,” he said. “Good things are going to happen here.”

Contact Rick Vacek at (602) 639-8203 or rick.vacek@gcu.edu.

 

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Female theologians discuss women’s place in ministry

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By Laurie Merrill
GCU News Bureau

Grand Canyon University’s third Ministry Forum topic, “Does God Call Women into Ministry?”, might seem like a rhetorical question considering the College of Theology panelists:

  • Dr. Valerie De La Torre, doctor of ministry, instructor
  • Margaret Koontz, master of divinity, instructor
  • Michele Pasley, master of arts in theology, instructor
  • Adrian Strong, master of divinity, adjunct faculty member
Anna Faith Smith

Anna Faith Smith

Add in the moderator of the Monday session, Anna Faith Smith, master of divinity and COT associate dean, and there appears to be a clear argument for a “yes” answer.

But the classroom audience was split four ways on the poll question, “Into what role does God call women to serve?” The choices were: To any office of the church or ministry, to missionary service, to a support role if the pastor or leader is male and to a ministry to women and/or children.

“Interesting,” Smith said. “We have a spectrum. … We welcome people who are serving God no matter where they are on the spectrum.”

For an hour, the panelists discussed the role of women based on five topic questions Smith posed.

Dr. Valerie De La Torre

Dr. Valerie De La Torre

The first was, “God has used women in ministry and leadership from Old Testament times to the present, notably Deborah, Ruth, Esther, Priscilla, Lydia, Timothy’s mother and grandmother, Paul’s coworker Phoebe (Romans 14) and the women who labored alongside him in Phillippi, and countless missionaries over time.”

Even in the Old Testament, women had positions of leadership, said De La Torre. She said that women and men started out as complementary, but the roles became distorted until Jesus restored the order.

Margaret Koontz

Margaret Koontz

The women, Koontz said, “serve as positive role models. … I too grew up in a church in which the women did what was needed, when it was needed. There was a sense of obedience. ‘The harvest is plenty but the workers are few.’’’

“I see God calling women to do what needed to be done … fulfilling what God has called them to do,” Pasley said.

“When I did learn about these women, I knew God was calling me to learn, that God was calling me to teach,” Strong said.

Michelle Pasley

Michelle Pasley

Another topic was, “Based on I Corinthians 14, women should be silent in the church?”

Strong’s response to this was, “Absolutely not. We all have gifts.”

Adrian Strong

Adrian Strong

“Does that mean women shouldn’t sing? That women shouldn’t stand up to make announcements?” Koontz said.

The panelists also discussed interpreting scripture using contexts and definitions that can change with time. Koontz, for example, said we should avoid our desire to “rip a verse bleeding from its contexts.”

After the hour was up, Faith posed the same poll questions to the student audience. The result? Nearly the same.

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

 

 

 

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Justice Courts officials say ‘thank you’ with trophy

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From left, Tim Dahlstrom, justice courts director of operations, Jeff Fine, court administrator, Sherman Elliott, dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences, and Kevin Walling, instructor.

From left, Tim Dahlstrom, justice courts director of operations; Jeff Fine, court administrator; Dr. Sherman Elliott, dean of the College of Humanities and Social Sciences; and Kevin Walling, CHSS instructor.

Story and photos by Laurie Merrill
GCU News Bureau

Maricopa County Justice Courts officials gave Grand Canyon University an award for hosting its Staff Training Conference in July as part of a “mutually beneficial and collaborative relationship.”

“We are hoping to assist each other and can continue to engage with the students — who are our future workers,” Jeff Fine, court administrator, said Tuesday after bestowing the trophy.

An award of thanks

An award of thanks

The award names GCU President Brian Mueller, College of Humanities and Social Sciences Dean Dr. Sherman Elliott and CHSS instructor Kevin Walling.

“This is an advantageous relationship not just for everyone in Maricopa County, but also for society in general,” Elliott said.

The win-win relationship benefits students because it makes GCU one of the primary institutions that the Arizona court systems look to when hiring personnel, Elliott said.

Nearly two dozen GCU students had the opportunity to hobnob with more than 250 attorneys and court staff during the MCJC annual conference July 19-21.

Elliott praised Walling for cementing the arrangement.

“It provides our students an opportunity to meet with court personnel, including administrators, judges, probation officers, etc. and learn from their expertise,” Walling said. “Students are currently working as interns and have also been placed into jobs with the local court system.”

The justice courts hear civil, traffic, loan defaults, eviction, protective order and HOA cases, among others, and officiate at weddings, Fine said. Fine, former Justice of the Peace, said he heard about 24,000 cases in just one year.

Contact Laurie Merrill at (602) 639-6511 or laurie.merrill@gcu.edu.

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Two GCU students in finals for $100,000 award

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

 

An ounce or two of copper could be worth thousands toward illness prevention and better health.

Grand Canyon University students Michael Garcia and Vaugn Devera are on the cusp of turning one of Arizona’s abundant natural resources into an antimicrobial or anti-bacteria agent — and could earn up to $100,000 of future funding in the process.

Their patent is called “HandleTech.” The idea earned Garcia, a senior Health Care Administration major, and Devera, a recent GCU Biology and pre-med graduate, a spot in the finals of the BioAccel Solutions Challenge.

The Challenge is an annual competition designed to combine market need and innovation to stimulate further development of medical technology through entrepreneurism.

DSC02736cropped

Vaugn Devera (left) and Mikee (Michael) Garcia are finalists for a $100,000 investment in the BioAccel Solutions Challenge, an award for entrepreneurism and innovation that could improve community health and well-being.

Based on research, Garcia and Devera said copper is considered antimicrobial and an element found in large quantities throughout Arizona. The HandleTech concept is a spray or liquid that contains small amounts (traces) of copper, which is expensive but recyclable.

This liquid or spray would be applied to door handles, hospital beds, knobs, blow dryers and other commonly shared objects around hospitals, medical facilities, schools or possibly homes; any high-bacteria “traffic” area.

“Treatment is much more expensive than prevention,” Devera said.

Finalists present their innovation and business plans Dec. 1 before a panel of prospective investors. The goal is to find an investor willing to donate $50,000 in private funding, a figure that BioAccel will match in additional financial support. The $100,000 in proof-of-concept dollars is used to advance the technology that addresses the health care challenge.

“The best part is it’s such a simple and basic thing, but millions of people are unaware of what and who was there first,” Devera said. “It could help people avoid illness and germs, which could help companies save money in sick time or employee absences.”

The duo has received ample support from (among others) lead faculty Pascale Lee in the College of Nursing and Healthcare Professions, assistant professor Tim Kelley in the Colangelo College of Business, peers such as Storage Together co-creator Luke Amargo, and other faculty from several colleges at GCU.

“Why wouldn’t you want to build something that can save people, prevent illness and uses natural resources?” Garcia said.

After barely beating the deadline to enter into the BioAccel Solutions Challenge, the duo raced against time again to put together a business model and plan for presentation.

Despite frenzied, last-minute labor, they fine-tuned their plan enough to advance beyond the semifinals in mid-October, thanks to peers and faculty who offered what Garcia called “honest, constructive critiques.”

“The guidance, mentorship and resources we’ve received from GCU on such short notice has been beyond anything we thought,” Devera said. “They want us to do more and better by taking initiative and reaching back to us, and it’s challenged us to do more and be better.”

They plan to use any winnings toward hiring an outside lab or company to perform its own research to corroborate (or not) the effectiveness of their product and its contents.

If a few things go their way and further research concurs, a couple ounces of “prevention” could be worth a lot more than $100,000 worth of “cure.”

“It’s been a journey, but everything is happening very quickly,” Garcia said.

To which Devera added: “We’re slowly finding our purpose.”

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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GCU team takes 3rd in BioAccel Solutions Challenge

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By Mark Heller
GCU News Bureau

Knees were shaking early, but by late Thursday night Mikee Garcia and Vaugn Devera had extra funds in their pockets and confidence their plan can take them places.

Garcia and Devera wait to give their presentation in the BioAccel Solutions Challenge.

Mikee Garcia (left) and Vaugn Devera wait to give their presentation in the BioAccel Solutions Challenge.

Garcia, a Grand Canyon University senior, and Devera, a recent pre-med graduate of GCU, earned third place out of 10 entries and won $1,500 in the student/university competition of the BioAccel Solutions Challenge. They presented their plaque to GCU President Brian Mueller on Friday morning.

Armed with additional money to spend on research and development for HandleHealth, a copper-infused spray or liquid that can act as an anti-microbial on doorknobs, beds and other high-germ items in hospitals, schools and beyond, their networking and discussions with potential suitors from the night suggest they’re headed toward better things.

“We got a lot of positive feedback, and even (judges and potential investors) said afterward that we nailed our presentation,” Garcia said. “We were passionate, prepared and knew what we were talking about. We represented GCU very well.

“Copper could be the next gold.”

Left to right, Mikee Garcia with GCU President Brian Mueller and Vaugn Devera.

Left to right: Garcia, GCU President Brian Mueller and Devera.

There have been initial conversations with DignityHealth, St. Joseph Hospital and Medical Center, Kaiser Permanente and others about developing and refining their product. Garcia said St. Joe’s has discussed giving them doorknobs to be used for testing. Following finals and the holiday break, they’ll be back to work conducting research and seeking additional funding.

They appreciated the help they got from Mueller; Dr. Randy Gibb, dean of the Colangelo College of Business; Tim Kelley, CCOB assistant professor of entrepreneurship and economics; Dr. Jon Valla, assistant dean of the College of Science, Engineering and Technology; and Haley Fagerlie, CSET associate director. Their Thursday result was a first step in legitimizing their idea and turning it into a real-world solution.

The annual Canyon Challenge next spring will provide another opportunity to pitch their product, but securing more definitive research conclusions and trials is next. They were ready to answer any questions about their product but were disappointed there was no Q&A portion of Thursday’s presentation.

Then again, answering through science and data from labs will reveal the definitive answers.

“First place, no place, we won no matter what,” Devera said. “That’s a great feeling. We got our feet wet, and now we have to swim.”

Contact Mark Heller at (602) 639-7516 or mark.heller@gcu.edu

 

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