Page 24 - BusinessWest January 20, 2025
P. 24

Balancing School and Life
New Center on HCC Campus Caters to Adult Learners, Parents
BY JOSEPH BEDNAR
[email protected]
Amy Woody knows something about adult learners — students who enroll in college later in life than the typical 18-year-old high-school graduate — because she was one.
When she started at Holyoke Community College in her 20s, she had a 1-year-old son, so she also knows what it’s like to be a student and parent at the same time. So it’s been personally gratifying for her to see the development of a new support program for adult learners and student parents at HCC, which opened last month.
The Marieb Adult Learner Success Center and the Parent Learn- ing Center are funded through a $1 million gift from the Elaine Nicpon Marieb Foundation, established by the late Elaine Marieb, an HCC alum and long-time member of its biology faculty who went on to become a bestselling author of anatomy and physiology textbooks.
“She herself was an adult learner and understood the unique challenges adult learners face as older students. She firmly believed that they needed dedicated programs and spaces on campus to be successful in their studies.”
“In her generosity and love of lifelong learning, she earmarked this money for the adult-learner and student-parent community,” said Anne Medina, HCC’s associate director of Enrollment and Recruit- ment. “She herself was an adult learner and understood the unique challenges adult learners face as older students. She firmly believed that they needed dedicated programs and spaces on campus to be successful in their studies.”
Woody agrees. As coordinator of the Marriott Adult Learner Suc- cess Center, she told BusinessWest that, as the college began to see an influx of adult learners coming in from MassReconnect — a state program launched in 2023 offering free community-college tuition to students over age 25 — one of the things it was missing was a space where students could be on campus with their children. The Parent Learning Center fills that need.
“We were finding they had gaps in their schedules, and they just
wanted some place where they could go be with their kids and study,”
Woody said. “So we realized this could be a valuable place for stu-
dents to be on campus, include their children in a family-oriented
space, and not feel as though they’re distracting others, or that their
kids don’t have a place here. We really believe that education is a family affair, so we’re trying to create spaces and programming that bring the whole family in and not just the student.”
Meanwhile, the Marieb Adult Learner Success Center is for older stu- dents in general, not just parents, she added. It’s a more quiet space where students can study, have coffee and snacks in the kitchen, but also access academic advising and workshops to support both academic and life skills.
“It’s not just about turning your work in on time, but how do you manage that with your entire life, your kids and your family and your cooking and your cleaning and all of that fun stuff?” Woody said. “So we try to do pro- gramming that honors the adult learner as an entire person and not just a student.”
The Marieb Adult Learner Success Center is a small lounge and study area with adjoining staff offices, while the Parent Learning Center, just across the hall, is a much larger space that contains a desk with a secure play or napping area for small children, as well as a pack and play, changing station, large-screen TV, conference table, art easel, and learning corner with children’s books and toys.
“The Parent Learning Center is a workspace where students can bring their laptops, sit and work on group projects, or just kick back and relax for a while, where they can have their kids with them and feel safe and wel- come,” Medina said.
Left: Amy Woody stands in the new Marieb Adult Learner Success Center. Below: HCC President George Timmons
(third from left) helps celebrate the grand opening with a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Dec. 11.
   Staff Photo
 24 JANUARY 20, 2025
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Evolving Effort
Before the Marieb Adult Learning Success Center, HCC housed a pro- gram in that space called New Directions for Adult Learners, as well as its Pathways program, which is a transfer program mostly focused on adult women learners.
“The New Directions program was relatively small — it was just one aca- demic advisor who was really running that whole program,” Woody said. “Now we have three full-time staff members, and we’ve been able to scale up the program significantly. When the New Directions program ended, there were between 60 and 80 students, and now, in our first year, we have about 200 enrolled in this program.”
More students have expressed interest as well, she added. “so we were able to take a model that was working — offering this extra, holistic support to adult learners — but scale that up to a much bigger level so that we can serve more students.”
Woody feels that having such a resource could encourage adult students to enroll while helping them stay successful on their academic journey.
“That’s one of the big things — can we make it any easier for them? We recognize that they’re sacrificing a lot of time away from their families, so that’s one of the reasons why we wanted to give back with these spaces where the whole family can be
 involved.
“A big part of our program is rec-
HCC
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