Home » 2006 » September » Page 2

Section Navigation


Archive for September, 2006

Sept. 11 impetus for new courses

Colleges teaching homeland security

Winston-Salem Journal - The homeland-security class at Appalachian State University is held in a classroom like any other on the rambling, mountain-valley campus.

It’s a little too hot. It’s packed with students crammed into small desks, hunched over, taking notes.

Then there’s the textbook - Homeland Security: A Complete Guide to Understanding, Preventing and Surviving Terrorism, a dictionary-thick tome with a photograph of the burning Pentagon on the cover.

“So why is al-Qaida so angry at our country?” Andrew Ferguson asks his class, pacing in front of a PowerPoint slide showing a photograph of a man in a headscarf. Read the full article

Exceptional children’s teacher nabs top honor

Catawba County Schools names Cynthia Haas its new Teacher of the Year.

Hickory Daily Record - Cynthia Haas first tried to teach her sisters. When they got bored playing school, she settled for instructing the shrubbery outside her rural North Carolina home. “My only consolation was that they didn’t talk back as much,” Haas wrote in her Teacher of the Year portfolio. Haas was born to teach. Her affirmation came when she was 17. She read a book called “A Circle of Children.” That lead to an internship her senior year in high school. She worked with mentally handicapped clients. “I fell in love and began a career which has lasted 18 years, so far,” Haas wrote. On Friday, Haas was named Catawba County Schools teacher of the year. Haas, an exceptional children’s teacher at Mountain View Elementary, was stunned. “It’s such a privilege and a blessing,” Haas said. “I feel like I’m at the top of the pyramid, and it’s such a great feeling. There are so many people supporting me.” Haas received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from Appalachian State University. Read the full article

Editorial: Opening doors, eyes

Salisbury Post - Appalachian State University has found a way to help counties in its region gear up for the future by increasing graduation rates and enabling more young people to go to college.

Maybe App can inspire other communities to try the same approach.

With a six-year, $6.8 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education - and local funds to match - the Appalachian GEAR UP Partnership is working this year with nearly 3,500 students in Alleghany, Burke and Avery counties and the city of Hickory, according to a university publication, Appalachian Today. Read the full article

3-D avatar environment wins innovator award

ZD Net - A three-dimensional computer environment created by Appalachian State University professors has received the 2006 Campus Technology Innovators Award, reports Appalachian State University News

The Appalachian Education Technology Zone program is utilized for online courses in instructional technology, library science, educational leadership, and curriculum and instruction programs.

“We were concerned that the planned and serendipitous interactions among students and faculty weren’t there,” Riedl said. “We wanted to do more than just push content,” commented professor Richard Riedl, one of three creators of the program. Read the full article

Biologists balance nature, visitors at Sandburg home

Asheville Citizen Times - Biologists are developing plans to protect the fragile rock outcroppings at the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site in Flat Rock.

The plans are aimed at protecting the areas from non-native, exotic plants and protecting mosses and lichens on the sites from trampling by visitors.

“A problem the park faces is they have to manage for plants and for visitors,” said Gary Walker, biology professor at Appalachian State University. “We try to mediate those two and accommodate visitation. We want the historical aspect preserved for people as well.” Read the full article

Retirees expected to flock to N.C. mountains

Elderly population growing markedly, census finds

Winston-Salem Journal - The elderly population in Northwest North Carolina mountain counties is growing markedly, according to recent census estimates.

The numbers support a common perception that a lot of retirees are moving to the area. Experts say that improved medical care also promotes longer life spans that account for part of the increase.

Census data in a statistical area made up of Ashe, Watauga, Avery, Mitchell and Yancey counties show that 17.6 percent of the household population now is older than 65. That compares with 11.7 percent of household population older than 65 in North Carolina as a whole.

A recent study that ranked states according to the number of new elderly residents showed North Carolina in third place, after Florida and Arizona, said Ed Rosenberg, the director of the gerontology graduate program at ASU.

Census estimates show an 11.8 percent drop in ages 35 to 44 in Ashe, Watauga, Avery, Mitchell and Yancey counties. Those figures are more a reflection of cycles of births and the age groupings of the statistics than an exodus of young-er people leaving the mountains, Rosenberg said.

He said, however, that the aging mountain population will more than double in the coming decades.

Rosenberg has gathered figures that predict a 150 percent increase by 2030 in the number of people 65 and older in Ashe, Burke, Avery, Caldwell, Wilkes and Watauga counties. There is a similar increase for the population of people 85 and older.

“We’re going to look very different in the Western part of the state in another 20 to 25 years,” Rosenberg said. Read full article

Get energy priorities straight: Duke’s massive coal-fired plan would be environmental mistake

Charlotte Observer - Ask Jim Rogers, the chief executive officer of Duke Energy. He has stated publicly that carbon emissions contribute to the phenomenon of human-induced global warming. Yet in his new position at the Charlotte-based utility company, Rogers is aggressively pursuing the addition of two massive coal units at the Cliffside power station in Rutherford and Cleveland counties….

Energy efficiency alternatives are readily available and full of economic potential for the state. Appalachian State University calculates that energy efficiency programs in North Carolina could save $3 billion per year and support over 150,000 jobs at an annual salary of $42,000. Read full article