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NJCU: President's Report 2016

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Transformational Impact

2016 Report from the President

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Enter to Learn. Exit to Serve.

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CONTENTS

Our Economic Imperative .......................................................

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NJCU at a Glance........................................................................

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Academic Excellence.................................................................

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University Grants........................................................................

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Capital Projects...........................................................................

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Student Success.......................................................................... 13 Community, National, and International Connections.......

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Gothic Knight Athletics............................................................. 19 Global Outreach......................................................................... 22 Student Achievements............................................................. 25 NJCU Foundation....................................................................... 29 Financial Support.......................................................................

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NJCU Board of Trustees............................................................ 33 NJCU Foundation Board of Directors..................................... 33

5 2016 Report from the President


Sue Henderson, Ph.D., in her fourth year as president has spearheaded transformational change including the implementation of a $400 million West Campus development plan.

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Our Economic Imperative

By Sue Henderson, Ph.D., President, NJCU

n the final analysis, the purpose of a college education is to give students the wherewithal to thrive in the future—the exact nature of which is unknown to us all. We know that certain skills can quickly become obsolete. We also know, as former President Bill Clinton said: “We are currently preparing students for jobs that don’t yet exist using technologies that haven’t been invented in order to solve problems that we don’t even know are problems yet.” For this future, we do know that being able to think creatively and critically, articulate ideas effectively, being quantitatively astute, and intellectually curious will be abilities that will put students in good stead. That is precisely what a first-rate liberal arts education provides.

Among the biggest challenges facing American higher education today is our failure to provide those who will be the majority of tomorrow’s workforce the education that will give them these skills. Best estimates are that by 2020, 65% of jobs nationwide will require post-secondary education.1 In 27 states and the District of Columbia, the requirements will be higher. Nearly across the board, states have current average attainment levels below those required for the jobs of the future. Closing that gap requires unprecedented success educating students who have been left behind: students who fit the categories of at risk, first-generation Americans, family incomes that place them in the two lowest 1 socioeconomic quartiles, Hispanic and black.


The year 2014 was a watershed in that it was the first time that public schools in America became majority minority with 49.7% of enrollees white and 50.3% black, Hispanic or Asian Pacific Islander. That compares to 63.4% and 36.6% in 1997 and a projection of 45.3% and 54.7% in 2020.2 Higher education overall has not done well with the populations of students whose numbers are increasing. The emphasis upon selectivity, rejection rates, and U.S. News and World Report’s rankings combined with the ever-increasing costs have favored those in the top socioeconomic quartiles who are far more likely not to be the very large group of students who are at risk, first-generation Americans, Hispanic or black. Between 1970 and 2015 the percentage of 24 year olds in the top socioeconomic quartile who attained college degrees soared from 40% to 77% while the percentage of 24 year olds in the bottom quartile barely moved from 6% to 9%.3The numbers of students left behind and unlikely to qualify for the jobs of the future is staggering. Shifting from quartiles to quintiles, currently 44% of 15-24 year olds fall into the bottom (5th) quintile and 24.3% in the 4th, totaling 68.3%. Only 13.7% are in the first and second quintiles.4 Even for those students from the bottom quintiles who make it to college, the deck is stacked against them. Given their academic deficiencies, only the most exceptional of these students be able to do well their first semester. The Educational Advisory Board has found that students whose first year GPA is between 2.0 and 3.0 are far less likely to finish than those who are a 3.0 and above. In fact, they have only a 50-50 chance of graduation.5 Typically, these students suffer from benign neglect since they are in “good academic standing” and they are not the honors students who are provided additional advising and attention. These numbers don’t square with the cherished ideal of America as the exemplar of upward mobility. While justice would require developing policies and taking actions to ensure mobility for all students, ours is a practical consideration. Our future as a dynamic nation and a world power depends on it. The students who are now in the left-behind categories are the rank and file of the workforce of tomorrow. They will be our health care providers, cultural and civic leaders, entrepreneurs, business executives and so much more. Between 2012 and 2020, for every 100 new jobs, 28 will be Hispanic, 10 black and 24 Asian. Only three will be white.6 We in higher education must make it the highest of our priorities to find new ways to succeed with all the students we now leave behind. Fortunately, much good work is being done. More is needed. Our country’s future depends on it.

1 Recovery, Job Growth and Education Requirements through 2020. Georgetown Center on Education and the Workforce. 2 Pew Research Center 3 Pell Institute, 2015. Indicators of Higher Education Equity in the United States. 45-Year Trend Report 4 U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey: 2015 Annual Social and Economic Supplement 5 The Murky Middle Preliminary Findings. Fall 2014. EAB Student Success Collaborative. 6 http:www.bls.gov/emp/ep_table_303.htm

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NJCU at a Glance NJCU AT A GLANCE

University Facts

Undergraduate Ethnicity

1927

14%

Founding Date

Other

Official Colors GREEN & GOLD Mascot

Gothic Knights

Programs of Study

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Undergraduate Degree Programs Master’s Degree and Graduate Diploma Programs

23% White

21%

35%

Black

Hispanic

Doctoral Degree Programs

Colleges/School Maxwell College of Arts and Sciences College of Professional Studies School of Business

Lowest Debt at Graduation Our students have the lowest debt burden of all public 4-year colleges and universities in NJ

Wolfe College of Education

Additional Locations

Popular Majors of Degree

Harborside Waterfront, Jersey City, NJ: Business

Undergraduate

Brookdale, Wall Township, NJ: Accounting, Criminal Justice, Finance, Fire Science, Management, Marketing, National Security, Nursing

Nursing Psychology Criminal Justice Business/ Management

3 3

7%

Asian

Degrees Conferred

Accounting

15% 14%

Graduate Urban Education Special Education

13% 13%

Counseling 10% 9% Early Childhood/ 8% Special Education 9% Accounting 7% 7%


NJCU Rankings

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AMERICA’S SCHOOLS EAST

NURSEJOURNAL.ORG

NJCU Nursing Program Among NJ Public Four Year Nursing Programs

R EGE ANKI LL

BEST

S NG

CO

Nurse Journal, 2015

2015

“Best Bang for your Buck” Schools in the North East Washington Monthly, 2015

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R EGE ANKI LL

R EGE ANKI LL

BEST

S NG

CO

CO

S NG

Bang-for-the-Buck Colleges

2015

CO

S NG

Bang-for-the-Buck Colleges

R EGE ANKI LL

COLLEGES 2015

Serving Students in Need Among Colleges in NJ Washington Monthly, 2015

Best Public School in NJ for Ethnic Diversity

US News & World Report, 2015

TOP

10 Music Business Program Ranks Top 10 in the U.S.

Billboard Magazine, 2015

2016 Military Friendly® School Designation For the Support of Veterans and the Military Community

NJCU AT A GLANCE

BEST NURSING

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Where Our Graduates Work Apple Inc. Arc of Essex Axe Advisors Bayonne Medical Center Best in Care Solutions Cablevision Cambridge Security Core Services CoynePR Department of Children and Families Enterprise Express Employment Fidelity Freelance Graphic Artist Harrison Board of Education Hudson County Sheriff Department Hybridge Learning Group International Rescue Committee Internship at Library of Congress US Postal Service Jersey City Board of Education Kearny Fire Department Khuene Newark Public Schools News 12 New Jersey New York Daily News Nordstrom Omega Biochem Labs Owen Port Authority of NY and NJ Price Waterhouse Coopers LLC River Side Preschool Saint Barnabas Health SOAR For America 5 5Teach

Top

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Majors at NJCU 1. Nursing 2. Psychology 3. Criminal Justice 4. Management 5. Accounting 6. Biology 7. Securities 8. Sociology 9. Art 10. History


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ollowing two national searches, NJCU welcomed two highly qualified deans. Dr. João Sedycias was named as the new Dean of NJCU’s William J. Maxwell College of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Sedycias brings to NJCU over 12 years of successful domestic and international senior administrative experience at five equally large and dynamic institutions of higher learning, two in South America and three in the U.S. Dr. Sedycias most recently served as Dean of the School of Arts and Humanities at the State University of New York College at Oneonta. A Dr. João Sedycias, Dean, William J. linguist with an impressive knowledge of seven Maxwell College of Arts and Sciences languages, Dr. Sedycias’ expertise in academic leadership will serve NJCU well as we look to strengthen and broaden the work of the departments in the College of Arts and Sciences. In addition, the University named Dr. Bernard McSherry founding Dean of the NJCU School of Business. Dr. McSherry is a former governor of the New York Stock Exchange who brings three decades of experience as a business leader and entrepreneur. He has served as a faculty member and interim dean of the NJCU School of Business since June 2014. In this role, he successfully moved the School of Business to our waterfront location in the heart of the Jersey City financial district, and worked with the faculty to develop a number of new minors poised to meet the needs of the businesses in the region. Dr. Bernard McSherry, Dean, NJCU School of Business

ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE

New Dean Faculty Appointments and Academic Partnerships

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ACADEMIC EXCELLENCE 77

New Faculty

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his fall, NJCU welcomed 21 new faculty who hail from institutions including Brown University, Tulane University Law School, and University of Putra Malaysia, and is hosting an American Council of Education Fellow Dr. Jake Zhu, a professor and Interim Associate Dean of College of Business and Public Administration at California State University, San Bernardino. As a faculty member, Dr. Zhu was passionate about students’ learning, and played key roles in creating a Cyber Security concentration in his department. He co-founded a university Cyber Security Center and became a co–director of the center, which was designated as a Center of Academic Excellence (ACE) in Cyber Defense.

Strategic University Partnerships in Computer Sciences, Arts Co-Ops

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he University completed two important partnerships. Northeastern University, an institution known for its robust co-op programs is offering a computer sciences program for students who do not have a computer science background. Students chosen by NJCU will attend the first semester free and will then be eligible for scholarships and robust paid internships that can go far in covering the cost of the education. In addition, NJCU completed an agreement with the University of Florida for its students in the arts. In both cases, the result will be a flow of students in both directions, enriching the educational experience for NJCU students and their counterparts.


Grants

NJCU AWARDED $5.7 MILLION GRANT FOR PROJECT STEM: EVIDENCE-BASED APPROACHES TO STEM ENROLLMENT, RETENTION AND GRADUATION AT AN URBAN PUBLIC HISPANICSERVING INSTITUTION Under the direction of NJCU project director and biology professor John Grew, New Jersey City University will undertake a $5.7 million program of interventions intended to increase the number of Hispanic and low-income students attaining degrees in six STEM fields at NJCU. This goal will be achieved by improving the 6-year graduation rate for first-time, full-time students and the 3-year graduation rate for first-time, full-time students. A total of 56% of NJCU’s undergraduate students belong to underrepresented minority groups, and 52% of NJCU’s undergraduates are transfer students, largely from six nearby minority-serving community colleges. Projects will include promotion of retention & graduation via academic interventions and improvement of instruction and increased retention and graduation through robust learner support and faculty development.

NJCU AWARDED $1.4 MILLION NSF GRANT The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a Robert Noyce grant in the amount of $1,444,698 to NJCU for support of its project, “Recruiting and Preparing STEM Majors as Secondary Teachers for High-Need School Districts in New Jersey.” Beginning in summer/fall of 2017, the project will award scholarships and stipends to NJCU STEM majors who are obtaining teaching certifications in their fields. Funds will be available to undergraduates for their junior and/or senior years, and postbaccalaureate STEM majors may receive one-year stipends to complete their teacher certification requirements. Participants will be provided with mentoring, supplemental instruction, and professional development. Awards are competitive, and scholarship recipients will be selected primarily on the basis of academic merit and commitment to teaching. The Noyce Scholars must commit to teaching in high-need school districts for two years for every year of funding they receive.

UNIVERSITY GRANTS

Grant funding at NJCU is on an upward trajectory. From FY14 to FY16, the number of proposal requests submitted increased by 53%, and the number of new grants awarded to the University increased by 43 percent with a total of $9,529,646 in funding received. These project-based grants translate into opportunities to further engage and serve a range of constituents, such as the following:

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UNIVERSITY RECEIVES $545,000 YOUTH CORPS GRANT NJCU received a Youth Corps Grant in the amount of $545,000 from the Department of Labor and Workforce Development. The grant will fund a continuation of the Working Scholars Program. New Jersey Youth Corps at New Jersey City University and the Jersey City Employment Training Program in partnership with the City of Jersey City will work with at-risk youth from Jersey City. Jersey City residents between the ages of 16-24 without a high school diploma and not currently enrolled in school are eligible for the program, with priority given to youth who are homeless/runaway, pregnant or parenting, involved in the juvenile or adult justice system and individuals with limited disabilities. Performance objectives are the following: • • • • • •

Raise their basic skills two (2) grade levels per 100 hours of instruction Receive their high school diploma Develop entry level employment soft skills Build their resume Learn civic responsibility through community service Develop entrepreneurial skills

In addition to the above, students will receive instruction in leadership development and financial literacy. Upon successful completion of the program, students are be placed in either paid employment or post-secondary education.

53% 43%

FY14 to FY16

99

increase in proposal requests

increase in new grants awarded to the University

UNIVERSIT GRA


TY GRANTS ANTS

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CAPITAL P


Capital Ideas NJCU SCHOOL OF BUSINESS RELOCATES TO JERSEY CITY FINANCIAL DISTRICT In September 2015, NJCU relocated its School of Business to a custom-designed facility in a 68,348-square-foot space at Harborside Plaza 2 directly on the Jersey City waterfront, adjacent to the Exchange Place PATH station. The location has centralized NJCU’s growing undergraduate and graduate business programs and provides students with convenient access to corporate employers both in Jersey City and New York City. The School’s proximity to Wall Street positions the University to attract top faculty and to give students a competitive edge for global experiential learning. The architectural design of the NJCU School of Business features cuttingedge technology, a simulated trading floor, data center, classrooms, faculty offices and a conference space with stunning views of lower Manhattan. Business is NJCU’s academic area with the largest number of majors. The Harborside facility ensures that the University can physically meet enrollment demand.

UNIVERSITY PLACE DEVELOPMENT AND NJCU’S ROLE IN THE RENAISSANCE OF JERSEY CITY’S WEST SIDE Working with the local community and its partners, NJCU is creating a new and much-needed asset: a “college town” community . The University Place development will impact the economic growth of Jersey City by providing over 1,900 constructionrelated jobs and over 1,000 permanent jobs in retail, service and related areas. The construction related activities alone will generate over $520 million in economic activity in Jersey City/Hudson County and $205 million in labor income, generating over $19 million in local and state taxes over the multiple years of construction. Once completed and fully operational, the project will increase economic activity within Hudson County/Jersey City to $260 million and generate over $12 million in state and local taxes. University Place, a $400 million redevelopment project which will greatly enhance Jersey City’s west side and have an enormous economic impact, will provide students, faculty and neighbors with a welcoming place to live, work, dine, and shop in this vibrant urban community. The first project to be completed at University Place is the West Campus Village Residence Hall which opened for the fall 2016 semester.

PROJECTS

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OUR COMMITMENT TO STUDENT SUCCESS At the core of NJCU’s mission is Student Success. Each member of the NJCU community is personally dedicated to and accountable for ensuring that each and every student receives a high-quality education and first-rate experience that leads to timely graduation with minimal debt, an academically rich degree, and a meaningful future upon graduation. The student success initiative is bringing together numerous individual projects and activities under one umbrella for a cross-divisional, coordinated, efficient, and effective approach. This summer, a core group of administrative student services offices met for a two-day retreat. The result is a comprehensive set of projects that have commenced for academic advising, financial aid, the registrar, and student accounts/bursar and more.

NJCU Debt-Free Promise Program Is Making College Education More Affordable

NJCU has launched the NJCU Debt-Free Promise Program designed to make college education accessible and affordable for New Jersey residents who are pursuing their first undergraduate degree as incoming full-time freshman students. The goal of the program is to eliminate the need for students to take out loans to cover the cost of tuition and fees. Starting in fall 2016, all New Jersey residents who are admitted to NJCU from high school and attend full-time, with a family household income of $60,000 or less, will be offered a scholarship in lieu of having to take out a loan (after federal and state financial aid is awarded).

425 + 68,348 + 5 = NEW BEDS

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SQUARE FEET AT NJCU SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

STORY ADDITION TO SCIENCE BUILDING

Meeting Student Demand & Ensuring Student Success


STUDENT SUCCESS

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STUDENT STUDENT RESEARCHERS JOIN SMALL WORLD INITIATIVE TO TACKLE ANTIBIOTIC SHORTAGE

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very one of NJCU’s 100 first-semester biology majors is working to address a critical worldwide health crisis—the diminishing supply of antibiotics. The budding scientists are among hundreds of students and microbiologists from 109 schools in 32 U.S. states, Puerto Rico, and eight other countries who are part of the Small World Initiative (SWI), an international collaboration that is harnessing the collective power of student researchers across the globe to discover new antibiotics from soil microorganisms.

The global effort to discover novel antibiotics involves laboratory and field research to isolate new bacteria from soil collected from local environments. The NJCU students are working with soil samples they have collected around New Jersey. The urgency of this quest for new drugs has intensified steadily since the mid-1980s when pharmaceutical companies first began to abandon this line of research. The NJCU students are working with an interdisciplinary faculty research team comprised of biochemists, geochemists, cell biologists, and a microbiologist. The biology students pass their work to geoscience students for analysis and extension and then on to upper-level biology and geoscience majors for phylogenetic, biochemical, and geochemical characterizations.

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Last summer Dr. Cindy Arrigo and her colleagues, Dr. Nurdan Duzgoren-Aydin, interim assistant provost, then chair of geoscience, and Dr. Natalia Coleman, an assistant professor of biology, attended the National Academies of Science Summer Institute on “Research-inthe Classroom” at the University of Texas, Austin. While there, the NJCU team was inspired to bring the SWI project home by embedding the research into their courses. Biology Department faculty members Dr. Reed Carroll and Dr. Meriem Bendaoud, associate and assistant professors respectively, added their expertise and their classes to the project which allowed all incoming biology students to start their major program with an individual, authentic, hypothesis-driven research project focused on a real-world, pressing biomedical question.


T SUCCESS

The idea that regular undergraduate students, especially ‘beginner biologists,” may be able to contribute to research that can lead to new discoveries in the creation of novel medication is exciting and I am glad to be part of it. — Uzma Sandhu

IN STUDENTS’ WORDS

As a senior biology student at NJCU I am so excited for what is happening within the department and with this new project. The new coursework not only allows for active student learning through early hands-on and authentic scientific research, but allows students to be part of a larger global initiative to solve a real life problem...how exciting for young scientists. — Lina Marcella Henao The labs are very interesting. It’s not just a simple step-by-step lab that we follow. The students are actually doing their own research and coming up with their own ideas… We are treated like actual scientists. — Trever Hill

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COMMUNITY, NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL CONNECTIONS

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NJTV/NJCU PARTNER ON WEEKNIGHT BUSINESS NEWS BROADCAST FROM NJCU SCHOOL OF BUSINESS

NJTV, New Jersey’s public television network, and NJCU have partnered on a new business update segment broadcast from the NJCU School of Business as part of NJTV’s weeknight newscast, NJTV News with Mary Alice Williams. The updates are produced on location at the Strategic Development Group Studio at the NJCU School of Business. The new studio was celebrated at a ribboncutting event in June with network and University principals, business leaders and local dignitaries in attendance. Broadcast financial journalist Rhonda Schaffler, the business segment host, is also editor-at-large of TheStreet. The NJTV segments covers New Jersey business and financial news from a state-of-the-art studio space that overlooks the Hudson River and Wall Street. The studio was made possible through major gifts from the Strategic Development Group (SDG).


The Arts have long been at the center of NJCU, and this year, the University has formalized its new NJCU Center for the Arts to officially bring all arts activities under one creative umbrella. With New York City just across the river, NJCU attracts gifted students and talented instructors who are outstanding professional artists. NJCU faculty in music, theatre, visual media, and literary arts share their knowledge and passion with students, and on any given day or evening, NJCU’s theaters and galleries host a rich selection of performances and exhibitions. NJCU looks forward to sharing this inspiring work on campus and in the community. To browse the arts calendar visit njcu.edu/arts. This fall, the University will present the next generation of talent in the sci-fi musical Little Shop of Horrors and Johann Strauss’ Viennese operetta Die Fledermaus, and various concerts. Numerous art exhibitions will be shown in both of the University’s visual arts galleries. In keeping with the University’s focus on the arts, NJCU’s headlining 2016 Presidential Lecture speaker is Tony Award-winning choreographer Bill T. Jones, who will reflect on his 40+ year career and what it means to be an artist. The NJCU Alumni Jazz Big Band, joined by guest artists Randy Brecker and “Blue” Lou Marini, opened the fall lineup with a free Tribute to Lew Soloff concert at Exchange Place on Jersey City’s waterfront.

A conversation with author and curator Sally Berger, who was an Assistant Curator in the Department of Film at the Museum of Modern Art for 30 years. Musical Theatre: NJCU performs Little Shop of Horrors

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GOTHIC KNIGH MEN’S BASKETBALL TEAM CAPTURES RECORD SEVENTH ECAC CHAMPIONSHIP NJCU’s men’s basketball team culminated a memorable 2015-16 campaign in March when it captured its seventh Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Division III championship—the most by any program all-time. In the championship game, junior shooting guard Jalen Harris scored 24 points, and freshman small forward James Frazier added 21. Mr. Harris scored 45 points in NJCU’s three-game run to the championship and was named the Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player. Senior small forward Khalid Muhammad added 11 points to finish his career with 1,257 points.

MARC BROWN NAMED NJAC COACH OF THE YEAR The NJCU men’s basketball team’s Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC) Division III championship capped an incredible season for ninth-year Head Coach Marc Brown, who was chosen by his peers as the New Jersey Athletic Conference Coach of the Year for the second time in four years and the ECAC Division III Metro Coach of the Year. Coach Brown, who became the second winningest coach in school history during the season, led NJCU to its first ECAC title since 2006. The Gothic Knights won 20 games for the first time since the 2005-06 season and for the 15th time in program history.

ALUMNI DONATE 1,000-POINT BOARD

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After 82 years of men’s basketball and 45 years of women’s basketball, NJCU fans have witnessed many players reach the 1,000- point plateau. Thanks to the generosity of the men’s basketball alumni (Classes of 1962-2007), players who have reached the coveted milestone have permanent recognition. In a project steered by two-time NJCU Athletics Hall of Famer and legendary retired men’s basketball coach Charlie Brown, NJCU recently unveiled its first 1,000-point board for basketball. The display is located opposite the Athletics Hall of Fame in the main hallway of the John J. Moore Athletics and Fitness Center. Currently, the men’s program boasts 28 members of the 1,000-point club; the women’s program has had eight reach the milestone.


HTS ATHLETICS TRIPLE THREATS AT THE TOP OF THEIR GAMES Cassie Lubonski of the women’s soccer team and Andrew Niech of the baseball team, both natives of Middlesex County, made their mark on their respective sports at NJCU as senior captains in 2015-16. Blocking Soccer Goals, Achieving High Academic Goals Cassie Lubonski, the starting goalkeeper for the Gothic Knights, won her second straight Presidential Academic Achievement Award this year—an annual honor bestowed upon the male and female student athletes with the highest overall grade point average. With a near-perfect 3.991 GPA while pursuing a triple major in elementary education, special education, and history, she earned the highest GPA of any female to win the award and the second highest overall GPA since the award was instituted in 1999. She claimed First Team Academic All-New Jersey Athletic Conference distinction for the second year in a row and was this year’s selection as NJCU’s New Jersey Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (NJAIAW) Woman of the Year. A 2014 Capital One Academic All-District® 2 Division III Women’s Soccer First Team selection, . Lubonski has been on the Dean’s List in each of her six semesters at NJCU and has earned a perfect 4.00 GPA in five consecutive semes¬ters. She has also been actively involved in NJCU’s community service outreach, helping to organize two Read Across America events. 20 20


Athletics Division III Teams

Women’s

Baseball Basketball Bowling Cross Country

• • •

Golf Soccer Softball Volleyball

2121

• • •

Men’s

• • • • •

Rewriting the Record Book on the Baseball Diamond Andrew Niech, a Colonia native, was such an offensive trailblazer in his four years on the diamond that the Middlesex County Board of Freeholders honored him with a proclamation on June 16. A serious student as well as athletic standout, Mr. Niech graduated in four years with a 3.1 GPA and a degree in fire science. A multiple-award winner, Mr. Niech was a three-time New Jersey Collegiate Baseball Association All-State selection (First Team in 2014), a 2015 NCAA Division III Mid-Atlantic ABCA/Rawlings All-Region Second Teamer, and the National Col¬legiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) Division III Honorable Mention National Hitter of the Week on March 31, 2016. He was selected twice for the D3baseball.com National Team of the Week and a two-time New Jersey Athletic Conference Player of the Week.

ATHLETICS


GLOBAL OUTREACH

CONFUCIUS INSTITUTE NJCU opened the doors to a Confucius Institute designed to provide education on Chinese language and culture. The Confucius Institute enables NJCU to emphasize international opportunities for students and faculty with a partner university in China, Jilin Huaqiao University of Foreign Languages in Jilin Province, one of the largest private universities in China. An opening ceremony, which featured visiting government and educational leaders from China as well as educational, political and cultural leaders from New Jersey, was held in November 2015 at NJCU’s main campus. NJCU is one of just two universities in New Jersey selected to host a Confucius Institute.

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THE WORLD AS A CLASSROOM

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STUDYING ABROAD

NJCU has dramatically expanded its global initiatives and international partnerships, as a result of extensive work undertaken by faculty and administrators on the international front. NJCU has been recognized by the American Council on Education for its international efforts and now has over 30 partnerships with universities throughout the world. Trips included the NJCU “Tropical Field Ecology” class trip to San Luis, Monteverde, Costa Rica; an Honors trip to Berlin, where students demonstrated both intellectual inquiry and practical navigation; and an excursion for students in the” Politics, Folklore, and Theatre” course to Belfast, Londonderry and Dublin, Ireland. This fall, NJCU welcomed over 50 students from China, many of whom are studying business at NJCU.


Study Abroad

Costa Rica Cuba France Germany India Ireland Israel

Italy Japan Oman People’s Republic of China Poland

South Korea Spain Tanzania Trinidad Turkey United Kingdom 24 24


NJCU RECOGNIZED AS TOP PRODUCER OF FULBRIGHT STUDENTS Four of the five NJCU students and alumni who were named semifinalists for Fulbright U.S. Student Awards for 2016-17 have been named finalists for the prestigious grants through the highly competitive program. Three were awarded the English Teaching Assistantship Fulbright grant to teach abroad

(from left): Nicole Colon, ‘16 (left), who majored in English, was a semi-finalist to South Korea, having been selected from more than 10,000 applicants, an accomplishment in itself; Ivan de La Tour, ‘16, a geography/geoscience major, was awarded the competitive research grant to focus on water purification in Indonesia; Sinia Amanonce ‘15, an English and education major, Czech Republic; Dr. Irma Maini, Fulbright Program Advisor; Jessica Coke, ‘16 majoring in history, Taiwan; and Tasha Egalite, a graduate student in early childhood and special education, Laos.

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STUDENT ACH


NJCU TEAM WINS PRIZE AT INTERNATIONAL MEDIATION AND NEGOTIATION COMPETITION IN VIENNA NJCU’s team was selected as one of three American teams to compete in a prestigious international mediation and negotiation competition in Vienna in June 2016. Just 30 teams from around the globe were selected to negotiate as teams of council and client at “CDRC Vienna – The IBA-VIAC Mediation and Negotiation Competition.” NJCU and Universidad de Jaén (Spain), paired as a negotiating team, were awarded the prize for “Most Effective Opening Address.” NJCU’s Institute for Dispute Resolution team of four students won awards at the International Consensual Dispute Resolution Competition in Vienna for two consecutive years, and the 2016 winners also received a Proclamation from the City of Jersey City for their work.

STUDENT ARTISTS ‘CLASH ON THE CANVAS’ Paula Sierra and Ron Wise battled it out during Clash on the Canvas, a campus contest between student artists who have one hour to create work in front of a live audience. Clash on the Canvas began in 2014 and featured top artists from the New York City metropolitan area. This “Clash” between Sierra and Wise marked the fifth such program but only the second to be exclusive to NJCU students. By an audience vote, Sierra was declared this session’s winner and her painting was sold on the spot. Selected works from Clash on the Canvas were exhibited in the Michael B. Gilligan Student Union Art Gallery in April.

HIEVEMENTS

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7 STUDENTS EARN TOP HONORS AT NATS FESTIVAL OF SINGING

Seven students from the Caroline L. Guarini Department of Music, Dance and Theatre garnered awards in the New Jersey National Association of Teachers of Singing (NATS) 38th Annual Auditions, which drew 76 competitors from across the state and was hosted by NJCU in February. NJCU winners included: graduate students LeAndre Scott, first place, and Sarah Blood, second place, in “Advanced Upper Women/Men”; freshman Kyle Blocker, first place in “Lower College Music Theater Women/Men”; senior Najee Esmond, first place in “Upper College Music Theater Women/Men”; Israel Hernandez, first place, and Al-Jabril Muhammad, second place, in “Junior Men”; and Elizabeth Smith, second place in “Junior Women.” Three weeks later, Ms. Smith placed first and Mr. Hernandez placed second in the Hall Johnson Spiritual Scholarship Competition at NJNATS Regional Conference at Montclair State University, making both eligible to move to the national level in Chicago in July. NATS is the world’s largest professional organization of teachers of singing, representing 7,000 members in more than 25 countries. 27


STUDENTS PRESENTED AT INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS CONVENTION IN MUMBAI AS SOLE AMERICAN TEAM Five students from NJCU’s School of Business traveled to Mumbai, India in December to present at the XXIII International Economics Convention. The students were accompanied by their professors, Drs. Wanda Rutledge and John Donnellan. The Convention was hosted by HR College of Commerce and Economics, December 10 – 12, 2015. Among the competitors were colleges from India, the UK, and Hong Kong. NJCU’s team was challenged to researched the Corporate Social Responsibility programs in Japan.

NJCU FOUNDATION MISSION

Mumbai Stock Exchange

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NJCU FOUNDATION 2929

NJCU Foundation’s mission is to support New Jersey City University as it transforms itself into a nationally recognized leader in urban public education while maintaining its commitment to transforming the lives and livelihoods of its diverse student community.

TRANSFORMATIONAL GIVING AT NJCU NJCU is committed to using its academic strength and resources to make the community and the world a better place. Throughout its history, New Jersey City University has relied on the generosity of alumni, friends, corporations, and foundations that endorse the university’s mission of excellence. This support has played a vital role in realizing the University’s vision to empower student success and faculty excellence. Now, more than ever, philanthropic support is essential to sustain this important legacy. The generous support of NJCU donors is transforming lives every day, and we are truly grateful for their benevolence.

RECORD YEAR FOR FUNDRAISING AT NJCU • •

144% growth from FY15 to FY16 $3.3 million in cash and pledge commitments


BLUEPRINT FOR TOMORROW GALA Three leading corporate partners and two acclaimed friends and benefactors of NJCU were honored at the “Blueprint for Tomorrow” Gala at The Hyatt Regency in Jersey City in March 2016. Mack-Cali, the New Jersey-based real estate giant, received the NJCU Corporate Partnership in Business Award. Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation received the NJCU Corporate Partnership Award in STEM. Wyndham Worldwide received the NJCU Corporate Partnership Award in Student Mentorship.

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CHIRAG PATEL CREATES GLOBAL CHANGE THROUGH EDUCATION CHIRAG PATEL ‘89 is a humanitarian whose vision and international business acumen have made him a catalyst for global change through education. Co-CEO and chairman of Amneal Pharmaceuticals LLC, Mr. Patel, is a seasoned executive in the pharmaceutical and information technology industries. Amneal, which employs over 2,600 employees worldwide, is currently the seventh largest U.S. generic drug supplier by prescriptions dispensed with a diversified portfolio of more than 80 products. After obtaining a bachelor’s degree from H.A. College of Commerce (Gujurat University) in India, he arrived in the U.S. in 1987 at the age of 20. Mr. Patel continued his studies while working part-time and received a B.S. in business administration from NJCU in 1989. Mr. Patel credits his business and personal growth

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FINANCIAL


to family values, integrity, risk-taking, and having a broader vision beyond selfish goals. Mr. Patel founded the Niswarth International Foundation, which focuses on education and upbringing of less advantaged children to their full potential. His gift to establish the Patel Scholarship in 2016 brings students from India and New Jersey to the MBA program at NJCU’s School of Business. A member of the NJCU Foundation’s Board of Directors since 2012, he received the NJCU Alumnus of Distinction award at NJCU’s American Dream Gala on Ellis Island in 2014.

You must be the change you wish to see in the world. ­ —Mahatma Gandi

SUPPORT

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NJCU BOARD OF TRUSTEES Rafael Perez, Chair Henry A. Coleman, Vice Chair Cynthia Maner Campbell, Treasurer Marilyn Bennett, Secretary T. Steven Chang Edward P. Fowlkes James Jacobson Collin Officer, Non-voting Student Trustee Vij Pawar Carlos A. Rendo Owen M. Ryan Joseph F. Scott Edward A. Whittaker John J. Moore, Trustee Emeritus Sue Henderson, ex officio

NJCU FOUNDATION BOARD OF DIRECTORS Luke Visconti, Chair Carol M. Preisinger, Vice Chair Peter Hernandez, Treasurer Thomas J. Stanton, III, Secretary Daniel P. Elwell, Executive Director Aaron Aska Anthony V. Bastardi Alex Forrester Sue Henderson Sang Jin Kim Rita Mitjans Edward O’Connor Alfred R. Parinello Caryn Parlavecchio Chirag Patel Dagmar Rosa-Bjorkeson Paul Silverman J. Cole Slattery Judith Wodynski

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