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Dec 3

Sneak Peek: December “News from Hope” Column on Hope’s Economic Impact

Working in higher education is a unique experience for many reasons, but chief among them may be the opportunity to live in a community that includes a college or university. There is something special about living in a college town. Businesses, events, people and opportunities to learn exist in college towns that don’t exist in other places.

The value of living in a college town is personal opinion for some and researched fact for others. Blake Gumprecht, author and associate professor of geography at the University of New Hampshire, has found that college towns have higher median family incomes and lower unemployment while at the same time being comparatively cosmopolitan, drawing residents from other states at a rate twice as high as other places.

At Hope College, we are especially proud to call the greater Holland area home. Faculty, staff and students love to live here and alumni around the world fondly remember days and nights spent at the beach, downtown, or at a favorite coffee shop. In this issue you can read about the recent study that quantified the relationship between Hope and the local economy.

In talking with community leaders about the study, many were impressed by the annual $213 million impact, but not at all surprised. They have seen students, faculty and staff serve in the community, but now know that together they volunteer more than 127,000 hours each year. They have seen students frequent their stores and shops, but now know that the average student spends more than $1,300 a year at local businesses.

In the end, the study simply quantified what many Holland area residents experience first hand. In today’s economy it is helpful to measure the financial impact of a college town, but those that have lived in one know that the total impact is, in fact, priceless.

Read the full study.

May 9

April NfHC Column: The Job Market

When it comes to the economy, everyone has an opinion. A quick glance at your local paper, a scan of online headlines and even thorough analysis from your favorite weekly will reveal discrepancies. No matter where you look, opinion varies concerning the scale, span and source of our fiscal state of affairs. Regardless of the latest numbers and the spin of your news source of choice, one thing is for certain: finding a job has never been an easy task.

In the midst of an economic recovery, this is certainly still the case. While organizations like the National Association of Colleges and Employers are predicting a better job market this year, with surveyed employers saying they will hire 13.5 percent more bachelor’s degree recipients this year than last, many recent college graduates are facing competition from experienced candidates who lost their jobs during the recession.

Whether it’s tackling big questions concerning vocation or landing the first job after graduation, we know that the role Hope plays in the lives of both our students and alumni is as important now as it has ever been. In fact, identifying job opportunities for graduates was one of the most important services acknowledged in the 2010 Alumni Attitude Survey. The survey also revealed that many of the services available to students and alumni are not adequately promoted.

With this in mind, here are some tips for taking advantage of the career resources available through the Hope College Alumni Association:

  • Get online and get involved. Check out the event listings at www. hope.edu/alumni for career related events.
  • Don’t underestimate your network. Search by class or city in the alumni directory or join Hope’s Career Resource Network.
  • Keep your resume relevant and ready. Hope has partnered with Optimal Resume to offer online resume management for all students and alumni.
  • Make JobStop a stop for you. From student jobs to internships and entry-level positions, Hope posts job leads at jobstop.hope.edu. Experienced positions are coming soon!
  • Embrace social media. Connect on our LinkedIn group, which now has more than 2,000 members sharing career advice, networking tips and job leads. You can learn more at www.hope.edu/alumni/career

This column was first published in News from Hope College this April.  Download the entire publication in pdf format.

October News from Hope

In the recent News from Hope College issue I modified something I wrote on this blog and used it for the Alumni News column.  You can see what appeared in print below or download the issue here.

As the sun first shines in through my Michigan window, it is shining the last rays of daylight over Australia. I wake up and have waffles made with mix from Seattle, butter from Boston, syrup from Grand Rapids, and a “Belgian” waffle maker whose maker is in China. The waffles sit on German plates which are resting on a table put together in Malaysia. Glancing at a painting my wife purchased at a market in Guayaquil, Ecuador, I head out the door. I pull out of the driveway in a truck partially manufactured in Venezuela by an American company. At the office, I check e-mail from an Alumni Board member living in Germany and another on a business trip in Brazil. I share campus with faculty and students from more than 40 countries around the world, many of them connected in real-time to half a billion people via online social networks. My mobile phone rings. It’s designed by a Canadian firm, manufactured in Mexico, powered by a Japanese battery and banned in the United Arab Emirates. It’s my wife. She’s calling from her Koreanmade device on a network owned by a British multinational. We truly live in a global society. No matter where you are or how you are connected to those around you, here are some tips for staying in touch with your alma mater and the 30,000 alumni that call Hope home:

• Log on to www.hope.edu/alumni to search the Alumni Directory, use the Career Center or access other services, including the quarterly Alumni E-newsletter.

• Write an email, letter or card to an old friend. If you are unsure of what address to use, let us help. In addition to the online directory, alumni can email alumni@hope.edu or call 800-238- 8220 for assistance.

• Follow the Hope College Alumni Association on Facebook at www. facebook.com/hopealumni.

• Get in touch with your favorite Hope professor or staff member at www.hope.edu/admin/peoplesearch.

• Connect in person at Hope events on campus and around the world. For a list of upcoming events visit www.hope.edu/alumni/ events.

August News from Hope Column

Each summer, I read a book by David McCullough, one of my favorite authors. Working on this column has reminded me of a McCullough book I first read a few years ago.

In John Adams, the author includes excerpts from letters written by Abigail Adams to her husband. One written in 1774 includes the piece of Abigail’s wisdom that entered my mind as I thought about this column, written to accompany the alumni survey article on page 22. In her letter she wrote that, “we have too many high sounding words, and too few actions that correspond with them.”

While there have been many high sounding words in articles, presentations and conversations since the largest Hope alumni survey in two decades was completed, I would like to take this opportunity to communicate a few of the many actions taking place because of the valuable feedback Hope has received.

• The Career Center at www.hope.edu/alumni/career will be improved and promoted.

• At Commencement, all graduating seniors now receive information on the benefits and services of the Alumni Association.

• We have improved our international alumni database and will be working to make more connections between alumni abroad and Hope students and faculty.

• Beginning with students and continuing with recent graduates, we will explore new ways to serve and engage Hope’s young alumni.

• Homecoming (October 22-24) will include more student-alumni interaction.

• The Alumni Association is partnering with Admissions to develop improved ways to involve alumni as ambassadors for Hope.

• Alumni priorities and interests identified in the survey will help to shape future articles in this publication and fundraising solicitations.

In addition to the survey, there are other ways we collect alumni feedback, all of which are valuable as the college furthers its mission. Letters, phone calls, event surveys and Alumni Board meetings continually direct the Alumni Association. This cycle of alumni involvement does keep us busy. This, according to Abigail Adams, is just fine as she also wrote, “that a calm is not desirable in any situation in life. Man was made for action and for bustle too, I believe.”

You can read the full issue and the Alumni survey article this column refers to at: http://www.hope.edu/pr/nfhc/current/nfhc0810.pdf