Excelsior College Bids Farewell to Third President

Albany, NY —James N. Baldwin, the president and chief executive officer of Excelsior College, will retire on July 31, 2020. Baldwin was appointed to the role by the Excelsior College Board of Trustees in October 2016, after serving as the executive vice president of the College since September 2014. Baldwin was only the third president in the College’s 49-year history.

Jim Bladwin 20202 Commencement

Baldwin’s fundamental belief in the transformative power of education has shaped Excelsior College. His tenure introduced the concept of servant leadership to the College, where the leader has a service-first mindset and actively seeks to develop and align an individual and a collective sense of purpose with the mission and values of the organization.

Baldwin has spent most of his career working in education, first in public schools and then as chief of staff and acting deputy commissioner for higher education in the New York State Education Department. He was also the executive deputy secretary of state for New York from 1983 to 1995. Before joining Excelsior, he served as district superintendent for Questar III Board of Cooperative Educational Services. In that role, he was a regional representative of New York’s commissioner of education and the CEO of the educational cooperative that helps school districts operate more efficiently and effectively by pooling their resources and sharing costs.

Baldwin came to the College during a unique time. “Jim was faced with challenges that, with the help of his team, he turned into opportunities and set the College on a path of transformation,” says Helen Benjamin, chair of the Excelsior College Board of Trustees. “I could not be more pleased with the service Jim Baldwin has rendered on behalf of the College during his tenure.”

Baldwin has left the next president of Excelsior College, David Schejbal, PhD, with a solid foundation on which to build the future and a team of capable leaders and colleagues committed to working with his successor.

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About Excelsior College

Excelsior College (excelsior.edu) is a not-for-profit online college focused on helping adults complete their degrees and advance their careers. The college contributes to the development of a diverse, educated, and career-ready society by valuing lifelong learning with an emphasis on serving individuals historically underrepresented in higher education. Founded in 1971, Excelsior meets students where they are — academically and geographically — removing obstacles to the educational goals of adults pursuing continuing education and degree completion. Our pillars include innovation, flexibility, academic excellence, and integrity. Learn more at excelsior.edu.

Media Contact: Alicia Jacobs

Email: ajacobs@excelsior.edu

Phone: (518) 410-4624

Nursing Behind Bars

Melissa Moore chooses a career in correctional nursing

If you were—or are—a nurse, what would be your dream job? Would it be working as a neonatal nurse? As a school nurse? In the ER? In any case, working in a prison infirmary probably isn’t at the top of your list. For Melissa Moore, of White Hall, Arkansas, however, it was the place she finally felt she belonged.

“It’s really not that scary,” Moore says about working in the infirmary at the Tucker Unit of the Arkansas Department of Corrections in Tucker, Arkansas. As director of nursing, Moore oversees a staff of 12 nurses, three certified nursing assistants, and three ancillary staff members. In her role, she assists the nurse practitioner and physician. The infirmary at Tucker has a full dental clinic and provides vision exams, medication passes, and minor surgery.

She says that most of the inmates she sees are respectful and are even eager to help out. Of course, they don’t like hearing the word “no,” says Moore, but they’ll go so far as to assist the nurses when restraining other inmates having seizures so they can be safely transported. Some inmates are also just looking for a reason to leave their cell and don’t really have a medical need, so Moore says she needs to be strict in weeding out who actually requires treatment. And some of the inmates—the patients—really do need it.

“A lot of these guys have never had quality medical care because they have addiction problems or they’re in and out of the system…They don’t know how to advocate for themselves, so we have to advocate for them,” says Moore.

Moore, who will soon have her third degree from Excelsior College, believes she has an important role to play in the lives of her patients and the nurses she oversees. Not only is it rewarding to care for people who otherwise might not be able to find care, Moore enjoys how much education is involved in her role. “I absolutely love working with younger nurses and sharing my years of knowledge and experience with them and seeing them learn something new and to experience something new for the first time,” she says. She adds she would even consider being a nursing instructor at some point in her career because she loves sharing her knowledge. In the short term, she hopes to help grow the nurse training and education program within her region of the Arkansas Department of Corrections.

Moore never saw herself working in corrections, but when her husband got sick, she started working at the infirmary on the weekends and grew to enjoy it. She says when she came to the Tucker Unit she discovered it was the right position for her, where she could use all her nursing skills in a unique environment with patients with a variety of medical conditions. Up until that point, she had moved between nursing jobs, working in urology, with orthopedic patients, in the OR, and as an OB/GYN nurse. She spent some of those years as an LPN and some of those as an RN. She earned her associate degree in nursing from Excelsior College in 2013.

“I chose Excelsior for a couple of reasons. One, it was completely online …And because it had a good reputation, and my state board approved it, and they recommended it actually,” Moore says. She wasn’t sure she could finish the Associate Degree in Nursing program, but she credits strong discipline and determination with completing it. After having such a good experience earning her first degree at Excelsior, Moore decided to return for the bachelor’s in nursing program. She credits Excelsior’s online Facebook nursing community with helping her stick to her studies and maintain confidence. “Facebook and the message boards and Excelsior—just felt like they were always there. There was always someone to kind of keep you motivated,” she says. She earned her bachelor’s degree in 2017 and is currently enrolled in the master’s in nursing education program.

Moore stays motivated in her job because she has always wanted to help people. Being adopted as a sick child, she always wondered what her purpose was. It wasn’t until she was able to care for her parents in their final days, like they had cared for her, that she knew she was needed. She believes her patients also need her and even though corrections is almost a taboo subject, she believes she can make a difference in the lives of the inmates. “It’s really rewarding to know that at the end of the day, you helped somebody that most of society turned their back on,” she says. Learn more about Excelsior College’s Associate of Applied Science in Nursing.

More from Melissa Moore:

What’s the biggest difference between bedside nursing and correctional nursing?

“The whole aspect of compassion is different. You know, there’s no therapeutic touch, there’s no sharing personal stories. You have to learn to still show compassion without overstepping those bounds. So a lot of active listening. A lot of, you know, stick to your word. If you say you’re going to look into something, then actually look into it. Those are the ways that we’re able to show compassion and care to our patients.”

What is the most important trait that you need to succeed in your job?

“You really have to be confident in yourself…you have to be confident that you’re going to make the right decisions and that you know how to be a team player.”

What is the best advice you’ve ever received?

“It actually came from my dad. He said to always further your education; that nobody gets anything out of your education but you, and that’s always kind of stuck with me…And if you ever stop learning, that’s when you get yourself in trouble.”

5 Tips for Positioning Yourself as a Leader in the Cannabis Industry

It’s difficult to rise above the noise of your fellow cannabis industry professionals due to the popular and fast-paced nature of the industry. Some individuals have the advantage of being industry leaders due to success with creating a company that sells unique products that became instant hits, or because they were associated with a particularly successful company through networking or previous employment. This type of experience can get them far, but it isn’t the only way to land a career in cannabis. So how do you position yourself as a leader in the cannabis industry when you’re just starting out?

1. Creating Original Content for the Cannabis Industry

The best way to get started on making a name for yourself in the cannabis industry is by creating original content. When you create original content, you demonstrate relevance and provide value to other cannabis industry professionals. Remember, you don’t have to reinvent the wheel. So instead of trying to come up with never-before-talked-about topics, take a conversation and give your own spin and insight on it—turn it into something that’s your own. Try podcasts, blogging, or hosting webinars.

2. Build Cannabis Industry Thought Leadership

Building depth of thought leadership is important for positioning yourself as an expert in your field, especially in the cannabis industry. Creating thought leadership content helps with both B2C (business to consumer) and B2B (business to business), allowing potential partners and potential clients to see where you stand on issues, your thoughts on current events, or other relevant industry information. You can engage in thought leadership by doing research and positioning yourself as an expert in a field. Work to develop insights on cannabis industry trends and the direction you think the industry is headed.

3. Promote Yourself Within the Cannabis Industry

The more you get your name out there, the more people will begin to recognize you and your expertise. Easy ways to do this are by speaking at public events like conferences or summits, as well as submitting your name for awards that you are qualified for. Remember, when promoting yourself, you have the ability to show others your value and the value of your work. Promoting yourself as an expert allows others to recognize you and your work, and potentially build partnerships and career opportunities.

4. Talk About Your Journey into the Cannabis Industry

One of the biggest ways to get the attention of others is to share your story. How did you get into working in cannabis? What steps did you take along the way? What type of hardships or obstacles did you encounter? People enjoy being able to relate with others through storytelling, as it helps create a deeper mutual understanding. When this happens, it’s much easier to bridge a relationship between a listener and you. It’s also a great opportunity to promote your accomplishments.

5. Build Your Career as a Cannabis Leader with Education

Backing your expertise with an educational pillar is essential. The rise in cannabis education programs is a way cannabis career seekers can gain a certified leg up against their competition.

Interested in these programs? Excelsior College is offering one that provides the industry background and tools needed to advance in a professional cannabis career. See our program information for details if you’d like to learn more.

Servant Leader

James N. Baldwin’s tenure as president of Excelsior College transforms the institution with his focus on expanding educational opportunity, improving the student experience, telling the Excelsior story, and ensuring long-term stability


“If Excelsior College didn’t exist, someone would have to create it.”

That is a statement James N. Baldwin, president of Excelsior College, has said many times. It captures in a few words both his commitment to the College’s mission to provide educational opportunities for adult learners and his belief that Excelsior, a degree-completion college, serves a unique — and essential — purpose in higher education.

Throughout his leadership of Excelsior, Baldwin has worked to preserve that mission and shore up the College to serve adult learners well into the future. His tenure as president ends July 31, 2020, after serving in the position since May 2016.

Baldwin has spent most of his career working in education, first in public schools and then as chief of staff and acting deputy commissioner for higher education in the New York State Education Department. He was also the executive deputy secretary of state for New York from 1983 to 1995. Before joining Excelsior, he served as district superintendent for Questar III Board of Cooperative Educational Services. In that role, he was a regional representative of New York’s commissioner of education and the CEO of the educational cooperative that helps school districts operate more efficiently and effectively by pooling their resources and sharing costs.

He has a profound understanding of the impact of ensuring access to education and then building on that access to ensure competency and mastery of the subject matter so that learners can accomplish their goals. Helping adults to fully realize their potential is something of great interest to him, from the professional as well as from the personal point of view. Education, he says, is the source of his own personal success.

“Everything I have been able to do, to accomplish in my career, to provide for my family, and to contribute to my community has been because I was able to get an education,” says Baldwin.

James N. Baldwin
James N. Baldwin was officially installed as the third president of Excelsior College during Commencement in 2017. In his inaugural marks, Baldwin stated his vision for Excelsior College. “… I promise you this: We will be relentless in providing access, affordability, and an exceptional student experience. We will reclaim our place as a leader and innovator in higher education based on Excelsior’s mission and Excelsior’s values. And we will do it all with good and faithful stewardship of this institution and its mission, one day handing it off to our successors stronger and even better.”

Photo: Kris Qua

Originally from Albany, New York, Baldwin grew up in an ethnic, immigrant neighborhood, and his worldview was shaped by the values instilled in him from his parents, extended family, and Roman Catholic elementary school education. He was a first-generation college student and graduated from Union College, in nearby Schenectady, New York, with a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science. He went on to earn a Juris Doctor from Albany Law School and a Doctor of Education in Organization and Leadership from Teachers College, Columbia University.

Baldwin’s fundamental belief in the transformative power of education has shaped Excelsior College, where his leadership espouses an obligation to expand educational opportunity and to support learners at each step of their educational journeys.

“Education fused my intellectual development with my emotional, personal, and spiritual experiences. It broadened my perspective, opening my eyes to the larger world,” he said during his remarks at his inauguration. “Over time, I saw how transformative education can be, discovering the connection between the opportunity to be educated, the pursuit of learning by the individual, and how an educated society advances social and economic justice and the human condition.”

Baldwin’s fundamental belief in the transformative power of education has shaped Excelsior College, where his leadership espouses an obligation to expand educational opportunity and to support learners at each step of their educational journeys. His tenure also introduced the concept of servant leadership to the College. In this leadership model, the leader has a service-first mindset and actively seeks to develop and align an individual and a collective sense of purpose with the mission and values of the organization.

Baldwin uses the term “colleagues” purposely because he views all of those employed by the College as his peers, his colleagues. He has encouraged them to activate their own purposes, as well as their creative and innovative dispositions, in their work at the College. This translates to leadership coming from employees throughout the organization to address opportunities and challenges.

“The work gets done where we meet our students,” says Baldwin. “It’s another reason why servant leadership is so important. I’m not the one on the phone with our students every day. I’m not relating to them in a course. I don’t necessarily have the answers; those closest to our students probably do. I work with them to articulate, clarify, and reinforce our organization’s mission and values. And I work to make sure they have what they need to serve our students.”

Sustaining the Institution

From the start of his tenure, Baldwin recognized that, in an ever-changing global economy, pathways to degree completion for adult learners and the historically underserved are needed more than ever. He believes Excelsior serves a public purpose in meeting this need. He noted that since its inception, the College has served as a beacon of hope for those left behind by traditional educational institutions. He also recognized that for Excelsior to endure and fulfill its promise, it needs to focus on its core mission and execute on its strategies.

The year he became president, the College faced a serious financial crisis, and Baldwin made a commitment to do what was required to create a foundation on which the College could build its future. Consulting with and retaining a variety of experts, he led the College through difficult, often painful business decisions.

“Jim stepped into the presidential role at a time of great uncertainty, and with that came great responsibility,” says alumnus Jerry L. Neff, chair of the Excelsior College Board of Trustees from 2014 to 2017. “He displayed the type of values-based leadership we needed to carry the College forward, and the board of trustees and the College community had the utmost confidence in his ability to do so. Jim was the right person at the right time to take the reins as president and CEO of our College.”

That challenging time resulted in renewed and strengthened board governance, creation of the Office of Risk Management with an internal auditor reporting to the board of trustees, the consolidation of operational units under the direction of a chief operating officer, and key performance indicators (KPIs) for each activity of the College. The budget development and management process was completely transformed with the implementation of training for budget managers, strengthened internal controls, increased accountability, and improved efficiency across the College.

While efforts were underway to return the College to financial stability, resources were redeployed to areas that would strengthen the College for the long term. A new strategic plan focused on three areas: (1) rigorous, engaging academics and an improved student experience, (2) technology investments, and (3) marketing initiatives to enable the College to “tell its story.” Progress in each of these areas was underpinned by a strengthened financial position.

The strategic plan was developed through an inclusive process that involved people at all levels of the institution and the board of trustees. Updated annually, it serves as a roadmap for the College and generates alignment and organization-wide support for strategic initiatives. With focus on the execution of specific objectives and regular reporting on KPIs, there is steady progress on initiatives that move the College forward. As it did last year, the College will conclude this fiscal year, ending June 30, 2020, with a significant surplus that will be invested in its strategic initiatives going forward.

In addition to the financial turnaround, Baldwin’s tenure has seen major accomplishments in the areas of academic programs, student experience, technology, and marketing and business development.

Academic Programs

Excelsior has refocused on its core mission of providing learners with opportunities for degree completion. The restructuring of schools and student services in 2018 reduced the number of schools from five to three and phased out less popular degree programs and concentrations, putting the emphasis on in-demand programs that correspond with employment opportunities as well as with student needs and interests.

To address readiness for academic success, the College now requires completion of a Cornerstone course in its undergraduate programs. The first course of each degree program, the Cornerstone ensures that students have a “smart start” to their Excelsior experience and lays the foundation for their success.

Baldwin worked with Excelsior’s School of Nursing to focus its nationally recognized associate degree program to certain geographic areas, invest in remote “on-the-ground” capacity to better support and engage students in clinical settings, and to make better use of technology through virtual clinical simulation in courses.

To dramatically improve student engagement and the academic experience, the College retained Ellucian, a technology company that provides software and services to the higher education sector, to work with its faculty and academic leadership to transform its degree programs and courses. The transition to the Canvas Learning Management Platform, which offers far greater opportunities to develop and deliver engaging content, was completed.

Baldwin talks about the potential for an “academic ecosystem” at the College, where transfer credits, credit for prior learning, exam-based credit, and credit from online courses are combined as part of individualized learning plans to help students earn their degrees.

Student Experience

Baldwin insists College employees put students first. Progress toward a more student- and academic-centered culture has been significant. By viewing the student experience as a continuum from inquiry to degree completion to alumni status, the College focuses on expanding support for students at every step of their educational journeys. Baldwin sees more work to be done in this area.

“We’ve made progress, conversions have improved, transcript analyses are more responsive and complete in several days instead of weeks, and financial aid is packaged once per year so students can smoothly register for courses in the College’s six terms,” says Baldwin. “But we must adjust our advising and counseling model and make better use of available technology in improving the student experience and our capacity to intervene and offer help where needed. We need to maximize the value that our colleagues bring to their interactions with students by using technology to free them for more person-to-person interaction.” Improved technology will enable students to self-serve where they are able to and seek support from their academic advisors when needed.

A commitment to student service also led to an emphasis on student advocacy and the creation of offices to support students with disabilities and ensure fundamental due process to students. In addition, the College adopted the CARES credo (each employee is compassionate, agile, respectful, and committed to excellence and service) that guides interaction with students. All student-facing services are led by an associate provost, who is responsible for the delivery of a high-quality and responsive student experience.

Technology

With an initial focus on addressing millions of dollars in deferred investments in technology and reinventing the College’s website, the College now has a technology plan that requires investments in technology as an ongoing priority. Since Excelsior is an online institution, Baldwin sees the technology infrastructure as the College’s campus. “We don’t have a campus in a physical sense, and we don’t need one,” he says. “Our technology infrastructure is our campus, and it must be robust and constantly improving.”

New systems have improved the operations of the College. These include a new financial information system and a human resources management system, changes in business practices and functions, and the centralized availability of data in a new data warehouse. In addition, regular improvements have been made to other information systems integral to the online learning experience. Achieving the goal of an enterprise resource planning (ERP) system, the centralized system that integrates enterprise functions, has been a challenge and remains a work-in-progress. The process of working toward the creation of an ERP has created opportunities for the College to question its policies and business practices, which is viewed as a positive step toward a successful future implementation.

Marketing and Business Development

Baldwin often refers to Excelsior as “the best kept secret in higher education” as he relates the need to tell the Excelsior story and the stories of student success to more audiences.

Marketing has been a strategic area of focus since 2017, and efforts have centered on building the Excelsior College brand and the brand story. The College researched, developed, and launched a brand campaign with the tagline “Life Happens. Keep Learning.” Messaging has focused on the College’s generous credit acceptance and ability to evaluate and award credit for military and workplace training. The College’s redesigned website is constructed to target prospective students. A cost and time-to-degree-completion estimator shows them how starting with more credits can shorten the time to earning a degree and gives them an idea of what expenses will be. A robust content strategy and public relations efforts promote College activities and the achievements of students and alumni.

Related to building the brand is increasing inquiries and enrollments. In addition to traditional routes to admissions, Excelsior has partnerships with employers, associations, and other educational institutions to reach more students. Partnership students save on tuition and the overall cost of earning a degree, and this is one way the College meets its mission and increases the number of working adults with a college degree. New partnerships, such as with educational systems in Kentucky and Texas as well as with ReUp Education, which encourages people who have some college but no degree to re-enroll and provides them with coaching and mentorship, help adults earn the degrees they need for career advancement.

Leading Through Change

Through disruption, challenges, and successes, Baldwin has been a motivating force for employees to believe in the mission of Excelsior College and continue to put students first. He meets challenges directly and with steadfast calm, a quality held in esteem by many employees. He prefers to work with others to learn about issues and then develop the most promising solutions. He insists on an interdisciplinary approach, and his tenure has challenged the College to improve collaboration among all areas of the institution, to break down silos, and to execute on decisions. “You can have great ideas, beautiful plans, and dreams. You can chase shiny objects forever, but if you don’t execute and implement, you have nothing,” he says.

Baldwin sees his role as asking the right questions to stimulate thinking and discussion. He wants data-based decisions, and the College has created a data warehouse to facilitate that. He also likes to hear from experts from within and outside the institution. This model regularly comes into play, as evidenced more recently by a task force formed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Consisting of representatives from each area of the institution, the task force met regularly to address concerns about employee health and safety, maintaining business continuity and the student experience, and working to transition operations from on-site to remote locations.

James N. Baldwin
In June 2020, James N. Baldwin participates in the recording of remarks for Excelsior College’s first-ever virtual Commencement celebration. The celebration moved online due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Photo: Mike Hemberger

While the College learns about its capacity to support remote work, Baldwin foresees changes in how people view online learning. He projects that many current high school students will ultimately consider online learning as a first option for college. “That’s why investments in technology, marketing, the quality of what we’re offering, and better student engagement are so critical,” he says. “The students of today and tomorrow are digital natives. They have much higher expectations for what their digital experience ought to be. We must deliver on that expectation.”

Baldwin looks to the future of the institution he righted while reflecting on the opportunities that remain. He describes his tenure as “eventful, challenging, and a privilege” and acknowledges he harbors a few regrets about his time with the College. “We’ve made progress on equity and inclusion but have not succeeded in creating a more diverse institution,” he says. “I regret financial conditions that required us to part with some valued and talented colleagues, and I had hoped we would achieve greater implementation of systems to more rapidly improve student services.”

Just the third president in the institution’s 49-year history, Baldwin came to the College during a unique time. “Jim was faced with challenges that, with the help of his team, he turned into opportunities and set the College on a path of transformation,” says Helen Benjamin, chair of the Excelsior College Board of Trustees since January 2018. “I could not be more pleased with the service Jim Baldwin has rendered on behalf of the College during his tenure.”

Although no one knows exactly how the future of higher education will unfold, change is certain. Baldwin, from his view, has left the next president of Excelsior College with a solid foundation on which to build the future and a team of capable leaders and colleagues committed to working with his successor. “Our leadership team is aligned and highly capable,” says Baldwin. “Our focus on financial stability and strategic priorities is manifest in the progress we’ve made. And you will not find a place more committed to its mission.”

Excelsior College, an institution transformed, welcomes its next president well-positioned to fulfill its purpose.

Gratitude

For Thanksgiving 2019, President Baldwin recorded a message on gratitude that was shared on Excelsior’s Facebook page. His words continue to resonate, regardless of the season.

“… Gratitude reminds us of how fortunate we really are. And when things do go wrong, we can find solace, hope, and optimism in the gratitude that prompts us to reflect on what is good and right about our lives, and to be grateful for what we had … and lost, to learn from setbacks — and to identify the opportunities that adversity presents, to think about how we’ll do better the next time.

When you start or end each day with thoughts of gratitude … it can be transformative.

… I urge you to take a little time to reflect on the power of gratitude in your own life. Finally, let me express my deepest gratitude for all of you in the Excelsior College Community — our students, alumni, faculty, staff, and board of trustees — all of whom contribute to the richness of our work and the realization of our mission.”

James N. Baldwin, with his family in the last photo, has shown dedication to students and graduates as well as to employees, as evidenced by his involvement in various College activities.

 

A Stronger, More Responsive Excelsior

In 2016, I became president of Excelsior College and assumed the awesome responsibility of sustaining the institution — with its outstanding history of supporting students as they work toward degree completion — and preparing the College for a robust future, during a dynamic period in higher education.

Now, as Excelsior approaches its 50th anniversary, we are financially stronger; far more accountable and efficient; and laser focused on providing the most engaging, personalized, and responsive student experience possible.

Guided by our insistence on integrity, transparency, and accountability, with a steadfast commitment to financial stability and “students first,” we have affirmed the mission and values of the College by:

  • Shifting focus to our academic programs and improving the quality of those that best serve the needs of our students and represent our future.
  • Reframing our organization and business practices to be student-centered, efficient, responsive, effective, and accountable.
  • Implementing significant and sustained investments in technology that are vital to our future.
  • Daring to question long-held assumptions, experimenting with new ideas, and committing to fulfilling the dream of a fully integrated learning ecosystem for our students.

As I write this letter, our lives have changed dramatically. Health and safety are at the forefront as the world copes with the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, everywhere I look, I see the strength of Excelsior — our nursing and health sciences alumni on the front lines, our MBA graduates leading their companies or departments through change, our military students supporting public health initiatives throughout the country, our colleagues here in Albany moving from office- to home-based work without missing a beat, and our courageous students who persist through the uncertainty toward degree completion.

Throughout my leadership of the College, I have adhered to my belief that the primary obligation of a leader is stewardship of and service to the organization they lead. I have been blessed with a board of trustees and a leadership team that have supported and enacted those leadership values with me.

Serving the College and its students has been a great privilege. What has always been special about Excelsior College is its pioneering work as a completion college and a resolute dedication to its mission.

As I look ahead to the future of Excelsior, it is my honor to welcome David Schejbal as the College’s fourth president. It is now time to celebrate our accomplishments and focus on the opportunities that new leadership can offer.

James N. Baldwin, JD, EdD
President

 

Adult Higher Education Advocate David Schejbal Becomes Excelsior’s Fourth President

Throughout his career, David Schejbal has focused primarily on making education accessible, affordable, and flexible for all students. His vision for inventing ways to reach beyond the traditional higher education model to meet the needs of an increasingly changing student spectrum has made him a leading voice in adult and nontraditional higher education and makes him a perfect fit for the role of Excelsior College’s next president.

The only child of two only children, Schejbal and his parents immigrated to the United States in 1968 from then Czechoslovakia (now the Czech Republic). They arrived two weeks before Soviet tanks rolled through Prague during the period of political liberalization and protest.

Perhaps his unique background has prepared Schejbal to excel at providing leadership and advocacy for online learning, adult students, and increasing access to higher education. He previously served as vice president and chief of digital learning at Marquette University in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Prior to joining Marquette, he was dean of continuing education, outreach, and e-learning at the University of Wisconsin-Extension, working across all 26 campuses of the system to extend the resources of the university to communities throughout the nation.

“I have been familiar with Excelsior for a long time, and my goals and perspective of higher education align well with the history and mission of the College.” –David Schejbal

A graduate of Iowa State University, Schejbal earned a Doctorate of Philosophy and Master of Arts in philosophy from the University of Connecticut. Schejbal has received many awards, including the Julius M. Nolte Award for Extraordinary Leadership, which is the highest award given by the University Professional and Continuing Education Association (UPCEA). His affiliations with industry organizations include serving as a member of the executive committee of the Council of Environmental Deans and Directors (CEDD), a member of the governing board of the Competency-Based Education Network (C-BEN), chair of the U.S. Army War College Board of Visitors, and the past president of UPCEA. Schejbal is a frequent keynote speaker, and his articles about reinventing higher education have appeared in such publications as Innovative Higher Education and Inside Higher Ed.

His resume lists many academic and cerebral accomplishments, but Schejbal also takes time to enjoy recreational activities. You can often find him woodworking, fishing, and spending time outside with his wife Judee. He admits being a couch potato, too; he’s not opposed to watching an old Western on a rainy weekend afternoon.

Schejbal will be the fourth president of Excelsior in the College’s nearly 50-year history as a distance learning institution for adult learners. Here’s more from President-elect Schejbal and how he sees his future with Excelsior:

Q: What drew you to Excelsior College?
A: I have devoted my career to developing programs and services to meet the needs of adult and nontraditional students, and Excelsior College is one of a small group of institutions designed from inception to serve that demographic. I have been familiar with Excelsior for a long time, and my goals and perspective of higher education align well with the history and mission of the College. As the need for a more educated workforce grows and more and more students come in and out of college over longer periods of time, the opportunities for Excelsior are growing commensurately.

Q: What excites you most about the future of Excelsior?
A: What excites me most about the future of the College is that the board, the senior leadership team, the faculty, and the staff are all truly committed to making a positive difference in the lives of Excelsior students and ensuring that students succeed and achieve their goals. The students we serve are not traditional college students, and Excelsior is one of the best institutions in the nation to understand what those students need and to provide them with the programs and services to help them succeed. The need for higher education and a more educated workforce has never been greater, and the College has a tremendous opportunity to expand its impact throughout the nation.

Q: COVID-19 affected traditional education tremendously in the short term. What do you see as its impact long term? How is Excelsior ready to meet those changes?
A: Despite the rapid move to offer education at a distance, it would be a misnomer to say that most of higher education went to online teaching as a result of the pandemic … True online program development takes time and involves collaboration between faculty, instructional designers, media developers, and others to create rich and meaningful learning experiences for students. Hardly any traditional college or university had the time or expertise to do this during the COVID-19 pandemic. However, because Excelsior is a college that offers only online programs, its entire curriculum is already developed as a high-quality learning experience. In this pandemic, Excelsior students do not have to worry about the quality of instruction that they receive, whether they will get the faculty support and attention they need, or how they remain safe and healthy while they study.

A great deal of speculation and related planning regarding the 2020–21 academic year is underway at nearly all colleges and universities across the country. The challenge is three-fold and exacerbated by the uncertainty of the course of the disease: keeping students, faculty, and staff safe and healthy if there is a resurgence of COVID-19; ensuring that the quality of learning and the broader academic experience is high; and managing enrollments and related finances that depend directly on students living and learning on campuses. Some institutions are trying to address these challenges on their own, but many are looking to partnerships to manage these issues … . Once again, Excelsior is extremely well-positioned both programmatically and institutionally and can be a source of great stability and support for learners throughout the nation.

Q: What’s the best career advice you’ve received?
A: In my second year of graduate school, a senior graduate student befriended me. He was finishing his dissertation, and I was still working through coursework. I asked him for advice about getting through the program, and his advice was very direct: Treat school like a job. Show up every day on time, work hard and don’t play during the workday, and go home on time and take the evening off to relax and refresh. I have followed his advice ever since, and it has served me well.

A second piece of career advice that I received was equally instructive: Do what you love well, and success will come. Most people are not good at doing what they do not enjoy. I am one of them, and I have been fortunate to love working in higher education. I find meaning in my work, I enjoy working with colleagues and students, and I am passionate about the role and future of higher education in our society.

 

Excelsior College Welcomes New Members to the Alumni Leadership Council

Three new members will join the Alumni Leadership Council in July: Steven Marciano (left), a clinical standards and policies and procedures coordinator with BayCare Health System; Oliver Queen Jr. (center), president and cofounder of Organizational Cultural Assessment Instrument (OCAI) Professional Solutions Group; and Samuel T. Watkins Jr. (right), a cybersecurity program analyst for the Information Warfare Division, Air Combat Command, at Langley Air Force Base.


Steven Marciano, of Palm Harbor, Florida, is a nursing professional with a vast background in business and finance management, clinical standard and health care policy, leadership, and project management. He is the manager of business operations for St. Anthony’s Hospital within the BayCare Health System. His duties include strategic business partnership with 17 nursing units. He is a certified hospice and palliative nurse, and holds health and life, and property and casualty insurance licenses.

Marciano’s current memberships include the American College of Healthcare Executives, American Public Health Association, American Grant Writers’ Association, Florida Organization of Nurse Executives, Tampa Bay Organization of Nurse Executives, Healthcare Financial Management Association, Hospice & Palliative Nurses Association, and Society for Human Resource Management. He earned a Bachelor of Science in Public Health from Excelsior College in 2018. Marciano was the 2019 recipient of Excelsior’s Michael J. Cooley Memorial Award for high academic achievement in health sciences. He is pursuing a Master of Science in Health Care Administration at Excelsior College.


Oliver Queen Jr., of Chantilly, Virginia, is an accomplished senior executive professional and operations and program manager with more than 28 years of acquisitions, procurement, life-cycle logistics, program and project management, operations, global supply chain, sales, and executive training expertise. With OCAI Professional Solutions Group, he was instrumental in the development of a comprehensive IT transition and post-implementation plan that moved the Millennium Challenge Corporation from the Automated Acquisition Management Solutions’ contract-writing tool to the Oracle Contract Lifecycle Management system under budget and on time.

Queen is a member of the Defense Acquisition University Alumni Association, the National Society of Black Engineers, and the Harvard Kennedy School Alumni Association. He is also involved in many community organizations, including serving as the facilities committee chairman at Dawson Corner Community homeowner’s association, a volunteer-assistant boxing coach at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, and a volunteer at the DC Central Kitchen.

In addition to a Bachelor of Science in Liberal Arts from Excelsior College in 2006, Queen earned an Associate in Arts from Valdosta State University, a Master of Arts in Organizational Dynamics from the University of Oklahoma — Norman, a Master of Arts in National Security and Strategic Studies from the U.S. Naval War College, a Master of Business Administration from the Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, and several certificates. In addition, he has completed executive education programs from the Kennedy School at Harvard, the University of Virginia-Darden Business School, and Syracuse University. He is pursuing a PhD in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math Education and Professional Studies at Old Dominion University.


Samuel T. Watkins Jr., of Virginia Beach, Virginia, is an experienced counterintelligence professional with prior military active-duty and private-sector experience in researching, developing, presenting, and publishing intelligence products at the tactical, operational, and strategic level. His background includes project management, requirement analysis, project coordination, and customer technical support. As a cybersecurity program analyst, he supports cyberspace operations, training, and the development and use of cybersecurity weapons systems, capabilities, training requirements, and instructional developments. Watkins served as a lieutenant (ret.) and instructor with the Portsmouth, VA Sheriff’s Office Auxiliary and Training Unit and is a former police officer who began his career in law enforcement in 1998.

Watkins is a member of the International Law Enforcement Educators and Trainers Association, the National Sheriffs’ Association, and the Fraternal Order of Police. He has won the American Police Hall of Fame Life Saving Award in 2009 and was nominated for the Military Intelligence Corps Hall of Fame in 2013. He was the 2009 recipient of the Excelsior College Alumni Association’s C. Wayne Williams Award for outstanding academic achievements and professional, personal, and community contributions.

A 1999 graduate of Excelsior College with a Bachelor of Science in Liberal Arts, Watkins also earned an Associate of Arts in Liberal Arts from St. Leo University and a Master of Science — Criminal Justice Track from Columbus State University.

 

New Certificate Program Prepares Students for Careers in the Cannabis Industry

The growing cannabis industry affects many aspects of society, from transportation, public health, and city services to new businesses, financing, and supply chains. Professionals need a solid foundation in compliance, risk assessment, and interstate and international commerce to do their jobs according to appropriate legislation. To meet this need, Excelsior College is offering a Graduate Certificate in Cannabis Control to prepare individuals who want to enter or expand their understanding of the complex cannabis industry.

According to the New York Department of Health’s report, Assessment of the Potential Impact of Regulated Marijuana in New York State, “…implementation of a regulated marijuana program will require considerable planning as to the regulatory mechanisms needed to protect public health, provide consumer protection, and ensure public safety.” Excelsior’s certificate program will support the demand for increased regulatory clarity and subject-matter expertise.

“We see our advanced certificate as an accessible and flexible option for individuals pursuing career paths in cannabis and other industries impacted by its regulation. And our online delivery modality doesn’t root us to any one specific state or region, which is important as the industry sees the expansion of multi-state operations,” says Scott Dolan, dean of the School of Graduate Studies and member of the team that developed the cannabis control certificate. “Our program is designed to help students navigate the dynamic regulatory environment of the cannabis industry with an academically rigorous and interdisciplinary approach.”

This certificate program spans multiple disciplines, including public administration, business, supply-chain management, public health, and criminal justice.

This certificate program spans multiple disciplines, including public administration, business, supply-chain management, public health, and criminal justice. Students will learn about the opportunities, challenges, and complexities of the legal cannabis market. They will develop a critical mindset so that they can be prepared to face the important issues confronted by local, regional, national, and international markets. The certificate program includes three courses: CBC 600 Implications of Legalization of Cannabis: Policy and Compliance; CBC 601 Interstate/International Commerce: Policy and Regulatory Environment; and CBC 602 Risk Assessment in Cannabis Control..

In CBC 600, students will learn about cannabis control policy and legal compliance, and the impact of legalization on various institutions, entities, and individuals. Students will study the complexities of licensure and regulations for each step of the supply chain.

In CBC 601, students will analyze the differences between interstate and international commerce. Specific focus will be on issues related to cybersecurity, supply-chain management, and inventory control, and their implications for businesses with varying regulations.

In CBC 602, students will learn about risk assessment in cannabis control and gain skills necessary to evaluate risks in the industry related to cultivation, harvesting, genetic testing, containment, water supply, pests, cybersecurity, grants, product-safety labeling, and workplace testing and safety. Students will also discuss harm-reduction strategies when moving from an unregulated to a regulated market.

The certificate program’s curriculum includes realistic case studies to encourage critical thinking skills and enable students to keep pace with the fast-changing environment. Innovative courses that meld industry and practitioner-based readings with scientific-based research enable the program to offer much-needed subject matter expertise in the industry.

Excelsior is one of a few institutions offering a cannabis control certificate program, and, unlike previous certificates offered by Excelsior, this one does not face stiff competition from institutions already in the space. “Cannabis has a need for certification, but there is no widely recognized industry certification. That’s an opportunity,” says Dolan.

All courses in the Graduate Certificate in Cannabis Control program will also serve as concentrations in the Master of Business Administration, Master of Science in Criminal Justice, Master of Public Administration, and Master of Science in Health Sciences program. Students who complete the certificate will have earned 9 credits to apply toward one of these degree programs.

 

Excelsior Broadens Opportunities for Degree Completion Through New Partnerships

Through educational partnerships, Excelsior College and participating corporate, association, government, and academic institutions are able to provide adults with the opportunity to complete a degree. Recently, Excelsior welcomed three new partners into its fold: OnlineDegree.com, ReUp Education, and Study.com.

“Excelsior College has teamed up with partners such as Study.com, OnlineDegree.com, and ReUp to expand our commitment to offering degree completion options,” says Kim Lourinia, regional director of strategic partnerships. “Our partnerships provide lower-cost and accelerated completion options, which provide overall cost savings and reduced time to completion. Through these partnerships, individuals will find streamlined pathways to furthering their education that advance their career and personal goals.” Students coming to Excelsior through the partnerships have access to the College’s 40 degree programs, tuition discounts, and flexible online learning.

OnlineDegree.com is an organization that provides 15 free courses in a variety of academic areas such as business, psychology, robotics, and history. OnlineDegree.com uses open educational resources to help achieve its goal of making academic offerings completely free for students. The company also provides coaching services to students and will assist in marketing efforts to increase Excelsior’s brand awareness, inquiry generation, and enrollments. This partnership is a beneficial way to reach students the College would not be able to reach directly.

Excelsior’s new partnership with ReUp Education will help stopout students — those who have college experience but no degree — return to school and graduate. ReUp Education helps colleges and universities engage and re-enroll stopout students by using predictive analytics technology, data, and personalized coaching. “This is about bringing together technology and mentorship to help colleges re-engage with these learners in ways that reflect — and respond to — their unique needs and challenges,” says Sarah Horn, cofounder and CEO of ReUp Education.

“We have a long history of helping students from all backgrounds not just complete their degrees but also chart pathways to success after graduation.” –James N. Baldwin

According to recent research from the National Student Clearinghouse, more than 36 million Americans have some college experience but have not completed their degree. Excelsior’s partnership with ReUp Education will provide support for students who have some college, many of whom are over the age of 25, and are balancing work and family commitments outside of their studies. ReUp Education’s technology enables a team of coaches to conduct outreach to students and support them through the re-enrollment process, as well as provide guidance as they pursue their degrees.

Enrolling in Excelsior through an organization like ReUp is a different pathway to earning an associate or bachelor’s degree but one that many students have already taken. As of mid-June, 124 students have re-enrolled through ReUp’s partnership with Excelsior. These students will be able to finish the degrees they started and avoid becoming a “forgotten student” and part of an education completion crisis.

James N. Baldwin, president of Excelsior College, remarks on how the partnership complements Excelsior’s mission. “We have a long history of helping students from all backgrounds not just complete their degree but also chart pathways to success after graduation,” says Baldwin. “This collaboration is the next step in our ongoing effort to help adult learners realize higher education’s promise of social and economic mobility and prosperity.”

The third new partnership that Excelsior recently initiated is with Study.com, an online education platform that helps learners succeed academically. Study.com’s online courses, short animated video lessons, and study tools make learning simple for over 30 million students, teachers, and working professionals.

Study.com’s College Accelerator program enables users to cut the cost of college tuition by more than half by taking college courses online. Students can use Study.com to complete courses and then transfer as many as 113 credits to Excelsior College, making it one of the most generous transfer programs in the United States. Students work with a success coach to make a degree roadmap and stay on track.

“Excelsior College has been on the cutting edge of making education accessible by being one of the first colleges to provide online classes — breaking the status quo of university education,” said Chris Mancini, chief growth officer at Study.com. “Our alignment in mission gives us the utmost confidence to accelerate this partnership and work together to flip the current education model on its head.”

With these new partnerships, Excelsior will be able to provide the option for degree completion to students who may otherwise not had the opportunity to finish their studies. “Excelsior’s fully online programs offer a flexible way for students to achieve their degrees while they balance other responsibilities,” says Dawn Gerrain, chief marketing and business development officer at Excelsior. “Building partnerships allows us to reach those students who started on their degree but may not have had a chance to complete it. Completing a degree opens doors for individuals to expand career opportunities and provide more value to our partners.”

 

NSF Grant Success

Simulation courses prepare students for a technology career

In 2017, the National Science Foundation (NSF) awarded Excelsior College $864,000 in grant funding to develop simulations to teach and assess key workplace skills among associate degree technology students. Excelsior partnered with Polk State College in Florida to develop simulations to teach and then assess key skills in power generation and advanced manufacturing to improve the pipeline of technicians into key economic sectors. This was the first NSF grant awarded to Excelsior.

According to Forbes, as of August 2019, there were 7.6 million unfilled skilled labor jobs in the United States. The demand for certain trades, including electrical work, continues to grow. “Educational simulations have the capacity to prepare students, regardless of their proximity to campus, for careers in skilled industry,” says Michael Johnson, who was the associate dean of technology at Excelsior College when the grant was awarded and became its principal investigator. “For the first time, students in online programs will have the opportunity to earn industry certification.”

The simulations were incorporated into three associate degree-level courses within the Nuclear/Power Plant, Electronic/Instrumentation, and Electromechanical concentrations: TECH 180 Personal Protection Equipment for Electrical Work, TECH 185 Blueprint Ready, and TECH 240 Job Tasks and Troubleshooting. Incorporating simulations into these courses closes current gaps in teaching and assessing safety, blueprint reading, and the use of tools and equipment – hands-on skills until now taught only in a laboratory setting.

“Educational simulations have the capacity to prepare students, regardless of their proximity to campus…” –Michael Johnson

In the Personal Protection Equipment (PPE) course, 3D simulation scenarios assist students in understanding PPE identification and selection for electrical and manufacturing work. Students apply hazardous awareness to assess the environmental conditions, and adopt safety procedures and tools to identify and select PPE for performing electrical and manufacturing work. “It [the course] prepares the student for most of the safety aspects that are involved in the industry,” says Randy Holt, the course’s instructor.

The Blueprint Reading course ensures students gain knowledge of blueprint components, facility floor plan diagrams, and blueprint reading; select the appropriate blueprint, and identify facility diagrams based on the failing component. Through simulation, the Blueprint Reading course also prepares students to read the blueprint for lockout/tagout, use lockout/tagout practices, and apply and verify lockout/tagout.

In Job Task and Troubleshooting simulations, students perform hazard analysis, read blueprints, inspect work areas, select LO/TO equipment, troubleshoot, and repair electrical equipment.

Students have responded positively to the simulations; many users have found the experiences motivating for learning content and would take another simulation course. Many users also reported that the simulations were more effective in learning the course content.

Successfully completing these courses allows students to move into the TECH 260 Energy Industry Fundamentals course. Students can then pursue final assessment on their own with the Center for Electrical Workforce Development (CEWD). Earning a credential with CEWD ensures potential workers gain an understanding of the energy industry as a prerequisite to occupation-specific training. It also ensures they gain an understanding of the careers available in the energy industry as well as of the education and training needed to enter and advance in those careers.

“This innovative use of simulation technology is expanding the possibilities for students preparing for new careers by taking fully online programs,” says Johnson.

National Cyber League Competition Offers Real-World Experience to Cybersecurity Students

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2019 Cookie Bandits Team Captain, Melissa Burger. Photo: Jeffrey’s Photographic

The National Cyber League is a cybersecurity competition with offensive and defensive puzzle-based and capture the flag games. Excelsior’s National Cybersecurity Student Association Chapter participates annually. The NCL is a virtual training that prepares high school and college students for potential real-world situations. Students participate in the preseason, individual, and team games at the level of their choosing, giving them opportunities to be successful and expand their skills. The number of Excelsior students participating in the NCL has steadily increased each season since 2017.

Students who participate in the NCL gain cybersecurity experience, prepare for the workplace, and increase their skill levels for more competitions down the road. The spring season is held from March until May; the fall season starts in October and ends in November. Students register three weeks prior to the start of the season and can practice in the virtual gym before the competition begins.

According to Cyber Skyline power rankings, “Every year, over 10,000 students from more than 300 colleges and universities across the US participate in the NCL competitions.” To put into perspective how well Excelsior College has been doing in the NCL, as of spring 2020, Excelsior College is nationally ranked at No. 34; in the fall 2018 season, Excelsior was nationally ranked No. 55. The College ranks No. 13 in the eastern United States. All schools are ranked based on their best team performance, their best individual student performance, and the combined individual student performance.

“Excelsior has consistently ranked on the Top 100 Leaderboard for the past three NCL seasons, which demonstrates how committed our students are in competing on the national level,” says Amelia Estwick, director of the National Cybersecurity Institute at Excelsior College and the NCL coach.

“I think the exposure and skills [gained] are the biggest takeaways. You learn things you would never learn in the classroom. This provides you a way to practice everything you learned, too.” – Melissa Burger

In the NCL 2020 spring season, Excelsior had three teams rank in the top 100. The Oops team placed No. 40, scoring 2,385 out of 3,000 points with a 74.1 percent accuracy rate. In the 2019 fall season, Excelsior had two teams listed as a top performer, placing No. 55 and No. 99 out of the top 100 teams. The Excelsior Gunters team scored 2,195 out of 3,000 points, with an accuracy rate of 89.23 percent, placing them on the leaderboard as No. 55. Excelsior’s Cookie Bandits team scored 1,850 out of 3,000 points with an accuracy rate of 66.23 percent, placing them on the leaderboard at No. 99.

Excelsior graduate Melissa Burger, who earned a Associate in Science in Liberal Arts in 2017, a Bachelor of Science in Liberal Arts in 2018, and is pursuing a Master of Science in Cybersecurity, has competed in the NCL with the NCSA chapter. This past fall, she was the captain of the Cookie Bandits team. “I think the exposure and skills [gained] are the biggest takeaways. You learn things you would never learn in the classroom. This provides you a way to practice everything you learned, too,” Burger says of the experience.

 

Excelsior College Responds to the COVID-19 Pandemic

The past few months unfolded in a way and at a pace that many institutions planned for but hoped would never happen. COVID-19 had an impact on communities in new ways almost daily. As colleges and universities across the world worked fervently to protect the health and safety of students, faculty, and staff, new challenges emerged.

Social-distancing procedures closed many campuses for the rest of the spring semester. Excelsior College is a distance-learning institution, and courses continued smoothly as students continued working from their own spaces. However, nearly 375 employees work on site in Albany, New York. In mid-March, Gov. Andrew Cuomo issued workforce reduction orders for nonessential businesses. First, he issued a 50 percent reduction, then 75 percent, followed quickly by a 100 percent work-remote order. The College converted to fully remote within days. Student services and course instruction remained consistent as staff transitioned to the new normal.

The new physical distance of employees turned thoughts to connecting with the larger college community. Institutions were moving traditional classrooms to digital, and some faculty and students struggled in the online space. Excelsior is proud of its history in distance learning and found a way to support other institutions through a COVID-19 Peer Resource webpage: a compilation of articles and resources to ease the transition to the landscape of digital classrooms.

Confident in Excelsior’s place as a leader in online education, the College shares freely with other institutions so that everyone is stronger in the end.

In an effort to help colleges and K–12 schools build their online courses quickly, Excelsior created a landing page with resources on best practices in online teaching and online learning. These landing pages saw web traffic climb, and President James N. Baldwin and Provost John Caron positioned the College to be a thought leader and a resource for distance education. For example, University Business and Evolllution published Baldwin and Caron’s articles on strategies for faculty and institutional leaders to elevate their online teaching and online learning. “The ramp up to online [teaching and learning] that many colleges and K–12 schools did in response to COVID-19 was impressive. But, as schools move out of emergency mode, they will have to look beyond the basic conversion of face-to-face content and think about how they can create a sustained presence, engagement, and interaction in an online environment,” says Caron.

In other outreach, faculty program directors were interviewed by EAB, a provider of technology, research, and services for educational institutions, for advice on building an online community. Excelsior also partnered with Ellucian, a technology company that provides software and services to the higher-education sector, to host a webinar on the benefits of online learning, evaluation of online teaching and learning, support for online students, and enrollment management.

As news of the crisis that health care workers face unfolded, the College shipped 20,000 exam gloves from its nursing program to New York City for the Javits Center, and, outside of work, some staff members made fabric masks for first responders. Excelsior’s partnership team coordinated meal deliveries to six local hospitals for health care workers. Pizza Hut partners exclusively with Excelsior for education and partnered again to bring their best pizzas to hospital staff. Photos and messages of appreciation poured in from hospitals. Excelsior employees honored Excelsior-educated nurses on the front lines, combatting the virus.

Physical distancing has changed Excelsior. Remote work is still the norm, and staff have a deepened appreciation for students learning and faculty teaching at a distance. The College also shined a light on the strong teaching model, robust courses, and the commitment of students. Confident in Excelsior’s place as a leader in online education, the College shares freely with other institutions so that everyone is stronger in the end. This community pulls together for support, growth, appreciation, and gratitude. This community is Excelsior proud.