The alumni newsletter of Antioch College  Spring 2004

Meet the ASC

Tucked up in the corner of the fourth floor of South Hall you'll find a place where lamps glow softly in striking contrast to the fluorescent lights of the hall. There are comfy thrift store chairs and salvaged coffee tables. On a bookshelf rests a dictionary, the MLA style guidelines and the updated edition of Diana Hacker's Writer's Reference. There are several computer workstations scattered around the room, and a bowl of ginger snaps on a round table. A coffee maker gurgles for those who need help staying alert; beside it is a box of "tension tamer" tea for those who need to calm down.

Dr. Liz England-Kennedy
Director, Academic Support Center

Welcome to the ASC, or the Academic Support Center to the uninitiated. This student resource fulfills a variety of functions. It is a friendly environment for students to compose papers or catch up on reading. It is also the office that helps make the campus accessible for people with disabilities. It is a place to find assistance, whether you need to talk out a complex issue in your senior project, get an assigned reading on tape, or take a study break and nibble on some chocolate. Director Dr. Liz England- Kennedy and Assistant Director John Smith lead a staff of co-op students, Federal Work Study Students, and Community Responsibility Scholars who provide tutoring, time-management, proofreading and disability services to the community. "We are also one of the leading providers of free snack food on campus, which guarantees a brisk traffic," John comments.

The ASC is a campus hot spot during senior project season, when it is likely you will see the wall-size dry erase boards covered by a web diagram outlining the ways in which disabilities are portrayed in romance novels. There may even be an exhausted but prolific fourth year camped out at a computer on an 18-hour writing spree. In their adjoining office, Liz keeps samples of organizational supplies to help students keep track of their work and manage their time. "I find giant calendars are really helpful with senior projects," she laughs.

"In the spring, the ASC puts on a workshop nicknamed "Senior Project 101," which covers the basic process of doing a senior project, stress and time management, and organizational tips. "

In the spring, the ASC puts on a workshop nicknamed "Senior Project 101," which covers the basic process of doing a senior project, stress and time management, and organizational tips.

The ASC is also the home of some specialized software programs. Some of the programs available cannot be found anywhere else on campus, such as SPSS, a statistical analysis program for the social sciences. There is also a program for qualitative data analysis, and QuickBooks for students in accounting classes and campus entrepreneurs. Via Voice is a popular dictation program that can assist students with learning disabilities such as dyslexia, and Jaws is a screen-reading program useful to those with visual impairments.

Last fall, the ASC, in collaboration with one of Community Government's diversity coordinators, put together a newsletter called Antioch Access. Though it was educational for everyone, it was geared primarily toward the faculty. "We received feedback from several faculty members that it helped them create a better classroom environment," says Liz. In addition to the newsletter, the ASC presents a disability fact at Community Meeting each week, and has held workshops to better educate the community on issues of accessibility. They recently held a training on video description for the blind and visually impaired.

John Smith
Assistant Director, Academic Support Center

Tutoring is the other primary function of the ASC. Though the tutoring staff varies from term to term, English and math are always covered. If there isn't a tutor on staff specializing in a certain subject, the ASC will arrange for a volunteer tutor on a case-by-case basis. "We have difficulty maintaining a group of people who can tutor in all the languages offered, but it's fairly easy to find a student who is not employed by the ASC to help," Liz comments. "We're also working in cooperation with the sciences to have some of their TA's spend some time tutoring over here, which expands our staff and capabilities."

By summer, the ASC will have expanded its facilities from the fourth floor of South Hall to an additional space in Main Building. John explains, "It's going to be a place to do work. South Hall will still be the office part, the nerve center as it were, and then the new space will have computers and it'll have places to study. It will also have rooms that can be closed off, so people can do their work in relative quiet. People can plan projects there, too."

Every term, two-thirds of the students on campus utilize the ASC and its resources. When asked for her observations on Antioch students, Liz replies, "They take risks. Even when they're scared, which I think is very commendable. This place is very stressful; it places more demands on students than any place I've ever seen. They are very resilient, they're creative, they're fun, they want to be challenged more than they want an easy road."

 

 
page last updated: April 30, 2004