Where to buy The News-Press

The following stories can only be found in today’s print edition of The News-Press. On Tuesday, these exclusive stories will be posted on our Web site, news-press.com.

Real estate

Do you know your home?s history? People who occupy area properties where heinous killings occurred discuss what it?s like to live there now. Some are traumatized, while others are unaffected.

Database: See monthly Lee County home sales and median prices since 2002

Special page: Learn about properties for sale in Southwest Florida and get the latest real estate news.

Trafficking of domestic victims

Originally perceived as crimes affecting mostly foreigners, in recent years, the portrait of human trafficking victims has broadened to include Americans, particularly children who are sexually exploited for gain.

The number of people tagged as victims in Lee County has been growing in the last year and the majority of related arrests were Americans. One case involved a 15-year-old girl who told investigators her mother made her prostitute herself. Fort Myers mother, Noemi Ramos, was arrested by Lee sheriff?s office in October, and also accused of forcing her four daughters to buy drugs.

But services for American victims have not caught up. Local people in the fight against human trafficking said foreign victims have easier access to help because there?s more federal dollars for them.

Coming Tuesday: Read Lee County Human Services Task Force Program Evaluation.

Sports

Pro hockey has always found a spot for players more adept with their fists
than their skates. But hockey?s brute-only enforcers ? known fondly as goons ? are becoming an endangered species in the sport.

Coming Tuesday: The Florida Everblades provide an education on hockey
fighting and talk about its role in the game at news-press.com/video.

Only in today’s print edition

Patty Rojas, 14, stands in front of a whiteboard before a small group of her peers looking at the question she had written on the board.

“Can any of Thailand’s strategies to slow down birth rates and population growth be applied in other countries like the U.S. and China?” she reads. She works through the problem as her fellow students ask her questions.

“The problem is Thailand had a carrying capacity, which means the availability of resources was limited. It’s like when you have a party and you have food for seven people and 200 show up,” she said.

But sometimes the explanation, which includes comparing Thailand’s Population and Community Development Association with U.S. organizations like Planned Parenthood, leave her with more questions.

“This has so much publicity in Thailand. How come this one does not have so much sparkle?” she asked.

Her teacher, Jennifer Gaddis, poses a question back.

“Maybe at this point, the United States doesn’t have the need?” she said.

She might not have all the answers, but Patty’s way of getting to her answer is just one way Collier County is hoping to change the culture at local high schools.

The district is taking a new approach to education for some students by using a national program called AVID. Advancement Via Individual Determination, or AVID, is a college-readiness system designed to increase the number of students who enroll in four-year colleges by focusing on the least-served students in the academic middle.

The formula of the program sounds simple: Raise the expectations of the students and, with supports in place, the students will rise to the challenge.

The purpose of the AVID program is to identify students in Collier County and ensure that they have every opportunity to be college-ready, according to Irene Benfatti, director of advanced students and gifted learners at the Collier County School District.

“It is about giving them the opportunity,” she said. “We don’t know how many students will go to college. … But we want to raise the level of conversation and engagement.”

The program, which is available in several other counties in Florida _ including Lee _ is open to all students, but district officials acknowledge it is directed at students who have potential and who are committed to hard work.

“They have to apply, they have to sign a contract. There are commitments on the part of the parent,” said Benfatti. “You have to jump through some hoops if you want this.”

Krystal Ayres, the district’s AVID co-director and Springboard trainer, said district officials recruited students in middle schools last year at those schools that fed into the four pilot schools. Students must have at least a 2.0 grade point average to participate.

Sarah Bond, co-director of the AVID program and a gifted specialist with the Collier County School District, said the program focuses on the students in the middle.

“We take those students and we front-load them into honors or (Advanced Placement) classes that challenge them. We give them support. They attend tutorial sessions twice a week,” she said.

The program is being piloted this year at four of the district’s high schools: Lely, Golden Gate, Immokalee and Everglades City. About 50 freshmen from each school take part in the program.

As part of the program, students take an AVID elective, which meets during one class period five days a week. On Mondays and Wednesdays, students receive lessons in the AVID curriculum, which includes lessons on handling conflict management and teaching them study skills, like how to take Cornell notes — a note-taking system that condenses and organizes notes.

Tuesdays and Thursdays, students have tutorial sessions where they break into small groups to help each other work through the problems.

“It is not your typical shoulder-to-shoulder training,” said James Briggs, the grant manager for the program. “The student does a presentation of the problem and other students ask questions. The idea is for the student to receive that ah-ha moment without giving them the answer. We want them to arrive at the answer themselves.”

Gaddis, a Lely High School English teacher and one of the AVID co-teachers, said teachers and tutors who volunteer their time to work with the students are trained to take a hands-off approach.

“We’re there to model good questions,” she said. “It’s amazing. These students are 14, 15 years old and they sit and teach each other unaided.”

On Fridays, the classes take field trips to local colleges or have guest speakers come in and talk to them about college or their careers. “We want the students to start making the connection now,” said Benfatti.

Gaddis said sometimes the biggest challenge is getting the students past teenage apathy.

“We want them to care about setting goals and academics,” she said.

Lely High School freshman Sogeily Gadoua, 15, said she wanted to join the AVID program because she thought it could “help me in the long run.”

“I thought it would help me get into college and to be more organized,” said Sogeily, who hopes to attend Dartmouth College when she graduates.

And it is helping. Sogeily said her grades have improved since the start of the semester.

“In my AP class – I have one AP class and the rest are honors – I had a D and I brought it up to a B-plus, almost an A. And I had a C in science, but I brought that up to an A,” she said. “When I started, I would ask random questions. When I saw that I had a D, I took it more seriously and started to ask better questions.”

Lely High School algebra and AVID co-teacher Alan Davis said he has seen a difference in his classes between the AVID students and the general population.

“When I teach algebra, I will see students taking poor notes or no notes at all,” he said. “But David (an AVID student who is in his algebra class) takes the skills he learns here and takes all of these notes. And when the test comes around, he just blows it away.”

Gaddis said the ultimate goal is that what the AVID students are learning becomes a positive shift in school culture.

“By the time these kids are seniors, one-quarter of our students will be in AVID,” she said. “Other teachers are using the Cornell notes.”

While it is too early to draw any conclusions, school officials eagerly anticipate the results.

A shift in culture is the goal, Benfatti said.

“We want to increase the number of students in the system who are into this higher order of thinking,” she said. “We want the kids to be able to get feedback and give thoughtful feedback.”

Nationally, of the 2009 AVID graduates, 92 percent planned to attend college; 60 percent to a four-year college and 32 percent to a two-year college, according to the program’s web site. Since 1990, more than 65,000 students have graduated high school and planned to go to college, according to the web site.

Patty, 14, said she joined the program to get to college so that she can help support her family both here in the United States and in Venezuela.

“I would like to bring more of my family here,” she said, adding she is thinking about attending Ohio State University to study psychology.

While the schools started with freshmen this year, the program will continue with them as sophomores, as juniors and seniors as new classes of freshmen AVID students come up behind them.

Lely High School sophomore Ryan Bessette, 16, who participated in an AVID program at an Orlando middle school before moving to Naples, said he wishes the program was available to more students than freshmen this year.

“It helped me to get organized,” he said. “It improved my grades. I was a C and B student. … It helped me connect with the school, but also get connected with the community because there was a community service piece. I think it prepares you for college life.”

Ryan said although he doesn’t have access to the program, he is still using strategies like the Cornell Notes to help him in high school.

“It stays with you forever,” he said.

Connect with K-12 education policy reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

School program aims to help more students go to college

8:28 A.M. UPDATE — About 2,000 people on 1,500 motorcycles are expected to participate in today?s 35-mile March of Dimes 10th annual Bikers for Babies ride from Naples to Fort Myers.

It is the largest law enforcement-escorted ride in Southwest Florida and the third largest for March of Dimes. Bikers for Babies aims to raise $130,000.

The sea of bikes stretches for 11-14 miles. The ride starts at 11 a.m. and takes about 1 1/2 hours from start to finish. Intersections could held up for up to 45 minutes.

People are encouraged to cheer on the individual riders and motorcycle clubs in their support for all babies to be born healthy. March of Dimes works to improve babies? health by preventing birth defects, premature birth and infant mortality through research, community services, education and advocacy.

Estero Boulevard on Fort Myers Beach and McGregor Boulevard in Fort Myers are recommended locations to watch the procession.

March of Dimes Bikers for Babies revs up; road closures planned

Dr. Richard Linden may look more familiar with rubber gloves on because he's a dentist by trade -- but a rocker by avocation for the Physicians' Talent Show Tuesday to benefit the Neighborhood Health Clinic.

Photo by supplied

Dr. Richard Linden may look more familiar with rubber gloves on because he’s a dentist by trade — but a rocker by avocation for the Physicians’ Talent Show Tuesday to benefit the Neighborhood Health Clinic.

What: Physician’s Talent Show, benefiting the Neighborhood Health Clinic and music scholarships for Steinway Piano Gallery

When: Cocktail and hors d’oeuvres reception with silent auction at 6:30; talent show begins at 7:30

Where: Sugden Community Theatre in Naples

Admission: $75

Information: (239) 498-9884


You may know your doctor’s bedside manner.

But can you also claim to know his song-and-dance routine?

At 7:30 p.m. on Tuesday, you’ll have a chance to do that very thing. That’s when the sixth annual Physician’s Talent Show returns to Naples, a one-night-only performance that will give 19 local docs a chance to strut their non-medical stuff on the stage of the Sugden Community Theatre in Naples.

There will be music. There will be magic.

And it all benefits a very good cause: Proceeds from sales of the $75 tickets supports Naples’ not-for-profit Neighborhood Health Clinic, which provides medical services for low-income working Collier County adults, as well as scholarships for students at the Steinway Piano Gallery.

Dr. Millard Brooks, an anesthesiologist with Collier Anesthesia, will present his perennially popular “Billy Ray, the Trailer Trash Magician” character, just as he has done for the past six shows. Billy Ray is not dumb, Brooks explains, not exactly. He’s just a little bit different — and a lot sarcastic.

“I’ve gotten such a great response with him,” Brooks says. “It’s basically comedy magic.”

The character hails from the “piney woods of Southeast Texas,” Brooks says, “where teeth are optional.”

It’s a locale that’s not far from where the good doctor was himself raised, and asked how Billy Ray decided to pursue magic as a profession, Brooks deadpans that it was prompted by a revelation from Billy Ray’s sister: She told him she was getting $50 a trick.

“I will take it to the edge,” Brooks says of his comedy.

What’s not unnecessary is explaining how much fun the show is each year for the doctors. For the physicians, it’s a chance to indulge their creative sides, which may not happen during the course of a regular workday. All have something they enjoy doing that’s outside their normal work, Brooks explains — whether it’s pulling rabbits out of hats or playing golf.

Brooks does not play golf.

“It gives me a chance to be on the stage and do what I really enjoy doing,” Brooks says.

“And they keep wanting me to come back, so I do and I wished I had more opportunities to do it.”

He is the only magician in the show. The majority of the performers are musicians, such as Dr. Martin Cohn, a sleep specialist with the Sleep Disorder Center of Southwest Florida, and Dr. Corey Howard, an internist who focuses primarily on health and fitness.

Cohn has a longtime affection for the clarinet; he grew up in Chicago during the Big Band Era, and as early as age 10, he begged his parents to let him learn.

“The ‘licorice stick’ just struck me as a neat instrument,” Cohn recalled.

Howard plays the tenor sax, and when not practicing medicine, he plays in the rather dubiously named band “Throat Culture.”

Like Cohn, he has a lasting love of music; he actually began his education as a music major in college, and played in New York City in a band with vocalist and former Miss America Vanessa Williams. Medicine eventually won out over music, but he never forgot his first love, and now he likes to play the saxophone for fun and for his family.

The annual talent show benefits the clinic and scholarships, but “it’s also an opportunity to show my kids” what he can do., he says. The plan may be working: He is delighted to report that his son recently abandoned the trumpet in favor of the tenor sax.

Cohn, for his part, will perform in a traditional Jewish music quartet called the Naples Klezmer Revival Band. Joining him will be his fellow band mates Stu Warshauer on violin, Arnold Saslavsky on drums and Jane Galler on guitar. Galler also is the band’s vocalist. The band will play three songs, including Der Heyser Bulgar, which means “The Hot Bulgar Dance.”

The music is danceable, Cohn explained, adding, “We’re going to get the crowd on its feet.”

Cohn isn’t sure why so many doctors seem to have secret inner artists. Perhaps it’s something in the way their brains are wired, he suggests. But he does know it’s rewarding to find an outlet for his passion. It’s also nice to have the applause, he concedes, and he knows most audience members appreciate his efforts.

“People seem to appreciate it, and that’s a good feeling. I don’t get that in medicine. No, I’m just joking,” he says with a laugh.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Local docs rock for charity

Members of the Greater Fort Myers Chamber of Commerce got together at the Advancing Business Leaders event on Sept. 14 to network and motivate young professionals.

Member Ted Yeatts said the leaders group has given him opportunities to be mobile, forward-thinking and find other who share the desire to become successful professionals.

?More often than not, it has been about whom I meet and where they are headed, than it is their current positions,? he said.

The group meets to promote professional and personal development through educational activities, community involvement and networking.

Rising professionals socialized and got insight from established business people during the event held at Biddle?s Restaurant & Piano Bar in Fort Myers.

Chamber connections: Greater Fort Myers Chamber of Commerce

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff

Photo by GREG KAHN // Buy this photo

Scenes during culinary class at Golden Gate Middle School on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2010. The class, which teaches basic culinary skills along with safety and sanitation in the kitchen, was started in August. The program is part of a push by Collier County high schools to start academies to help students who want to go into a specific field such as medical or culinary. Greg Kahn/Staff


Becky Iannone likes to refer to her classroom as “organized chaos.”

Students come into her classroom and put on T-shirts in bright greens and orange. They pull hair nets out of small, plastic bags and place them on their head.

And then they grab the knives.

But in Iannone’s class, it is OK to have knives. Iannone runs Golden Gate Middle School’s culinary arts class. The school developed a specialized culinary program as a way to offer high school credit to eighth-grade students who didn’t take algebra or Spanish, the two other high school courses offered at the school.

The program also boosts interest for Golden Gate High School’s culinary academy.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

Iannone, who taught culinary arts for years up North before coming to Collier County 10 years ago, said she approached Golden Gate Middle School Principal Leslie Morris and asked if she could look for a culinary curriculum that was being stored in the kitchen on the second floor of the school.

“It is the only place where a student can earn a high school credit that will be attached to a high school academy while attending a middle school,” wrote Dale Johnson, the district’s supervisor of Career and Technical Education, in an e-mail. “Specifically, it is hoped that middle school students will be more likely to complete high school academy requirements if the program begins in eighth grade.”

“She said, ‘You taught culinary. Why aren’t you teaching it now?’” said Iannone, who also teaches technology at the school. “It’s my passion.”

Iannone and Morris agreed to pilot the program last year with her technology students. Iannone taught technology to the students for nine weeks and culinary arts for nine weeks.

Although the program isn’t officially part of the Golden Gate High School Culinary Academy due to requirements placed on the academy by the National Restaurant Association, students do earn the high school credit for Culinary 1.

Still, other middle schools in the county have programs designed to encourage students to enter the academy programs at the high schools they eventually might attend.

The Gateway to Technology program at East Naples Middle School is designed to create student interest into the Pathways to Engineering and Architecture Academy at Naples High School. The students don’t earn high school credit, but they are introduced to the basic components of engineering and technology.

Students at Cypress Palm Middle School in Golden Gate Estates are given the opportunity to participate in a special technology course called Exploration of Production Technology that introduces students to the various components of construction, with the hope that it will spark interest in the construction academy at Palmetto Ridge High School.

This year, Iannone started with two classes of eighth-graders, with about 40 students in each class.

“The joys of the class-size amendment,” Iannone jokes, referring to the state Constitutional Amendment that requires class sizes to be limited in core classes like English and math to 22 students in middle school.

The unintended result is that elective classes such as culinary arts have more than 22 students in the class.

Because her classes have so many students, Iannone teaches one lesson over four days. A group of about 10 students works in the kitchens, with Iannone supervising them. The remaining eighth-graders work in groups on lessons about cooking.

On Thursday, while students learned to peel and chop vegetables that will eventually be used in muffins and soup, the other students learned about the different types of knives and the different parts of the knife.

“I like being in the kitchen much better (than the classwork),” said eighth-grader Faryn Loskot, 13. “It’s a good class. I wanted to learn to cook better. And it’s good to know in case you need a job.”

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Many of the students who selected culinary arts as an elective said they wanted to learn how to help their mothers at home.

“I was tired of my mom telling me I didn’t know how to cook,” said Katya Lopez, 13. “It’s a really fun class. It was this or P.E. and I’m not going to sweat.”

Katya said she likes the new version of the culinary class.

“I took a similar class last year and the teacher never let us do anything,” she said. “In this class we get to cut the vegetables, we get to make the appetizers.”

The students’ first project was to work in teams to make appetizers like artichoke cheese puffs, creamy bruchetta and black bean dip. The students then had to present their appetizers in a buffet.

“They were so proud and everything was edible,” Iannone said. “We didn’t have to like everything, but we had to try it. Then they evaluated what the best dish was, who did the best presenting.”

Aaren Jones, 13, said she took the class to “learn how to cook American food.”

“My family is Haitian, so we cook Haitian food,” she said, adding her favorite Haitian dish is fried plantains. “Now that I (am cooking), I could see myself doing this for a job. It’s fun.”

When students leave her classroom, Iannone said she hoped the students have the basic culinary industry standard skills and confidence in themselves to read a recipe and have it turn out well. She said she hopes the students understand that food allows them to be creative and use their imaginations.

“I think a lot of the students came in thinking we were just going to bake cookies and eat them,” she said. “I want to push them beyond the obvious.”

Eventually, Iannone said it is her hope the students will be able to make dishes to sell to faculty members as a fundraiser for the program.

“It would be great if one of them like it enough that they would get out and learn to work in this industry,” she said. “In this area, it’s great because of all of the restaurants we have in town.”

__ Connect with K-12 reporter Katherine Albers at www.naplesnews.com/staff/katherine-albers/.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

PHOTOS Food for thought: Golden Gate Middle adds culinary arts class

Which Higher education Rankings Set Must You utilize?

PC Pro Schools

facebook Twitter stumble reddit del.ico.us
Study Additional: Higher education Prowler , Faculty Rankings , Forbes , Poll , Princeton Evaluate , Unigo , US Information School Rankings , Washington Month-to-month , Faculty Information

School rankings are out — and in such fantastic numbers that it is challenging to find out exactly where to start out. To assist with this daunting process, right here are a couple of prominent web sites personified. Possibly you will locate a listing that seems like you.

U.S. Reports & World Report: The Non-Competitive Traditionalist

The grandaddy of university rankings, U.S. Information & World Report is probably the most widely study source of higher education superlatives — maybe because it can’t seem to make up its mind as to which institution is No. 1. Not only does U.S Information frequently present tie scores, but it offers such a plethora of lists (best national universities, national liberal arts colleges, regional universities and up-and-coming colleges, to name a couple of) that every school’s a winner.

If you uncover yourself frequently using asides and modifications, however, you might like the U.S. Reports rankings. Their report promises nothing additional than “an excellent starting point for the school search” and concedes that “many factors other than those spotlighted right here will figure in your decision.” Nevertheless, U.S Reports does offer a comprehensive and well-regarded ranking system, which can support students who definitely (at least they think.!!!.) want the best (or at least a good) university, or university, for them.

Forbes: The Future I-Banker/CEO

The Forbes listing gives schools points for things that might appeal to future B-schoolers and Wall Street moguls. Ratings are based on the number of alumni who end up in Who’s Who in America, the amount of students and professors receiving awards and the number of students who graduate in debt (among other less tangible stats.) This no-nonsense listing can aid you come across the private and public colleges that offer the best value in educational, cultural and — maybe most importantly — capital returns.

Unigo: The Social Media Buff

If you yearn to “like” your university on Facebook or study the president of your university’s Twitter feed, Unigo’s rankings are for you. Unigo serves as an online platform for school students to evaluate their campuses and a free-but-customized site for high school students who are preparing to apply (full disclosure: HuffPost Higher education teamed up with Unigo to release their 10 for ’10 rankings this year)!!! The website tracks your recent visits and offers a quiz to assist you discover a school for you, something social media addicts will feel comfortable with. The site’s student reviewers create profiles before they post, so readers can match a face, year and major with the assessment on the page. It is like Facebook in its purest form.

Higher education Prowler: The Bottom-Line Realist

University Prowler relies on student authors to give accurate and up-to-date reviews of their school. Each institution has a profile, replete with stats and a brutally honest report card. If you think in letter grades, and want to find out that the school your lusting after has an “A” in academics but a “B-” in facilities, this is the site for you. In addition to grades, school profiles contain basic stats and figures, comments and lists of comparable schools.

Princeton Assessment: The Sneaky Stereotyper

The Princeton Review’s clean-cut image might lead you to believe their statistics without a second thought, but beware this veneer of objectivity. Mixed in with facts and figures about the school (including helpful deadline information!) are generally arbitrary rankings (Most Beautiful Campuses! Stoner Schools!) and descriptions that seem to come straight from that institution’s PR department. Tricky, tricky !.!!! but we’d expect nothing less from a company that specializes in preparing students for the trickiest of tests. If you want to be able to rattle off some basic categorical/aesthetic info about your school, Princeton Evaluation is the place for you.

Newsweek: The Begrudging Conformist

If you’re always the last among your friends to catch on to trends and are always kind of angry about giving in to the mainstream, you might want to look at the Newsweek faculty rankings. The latest to enter the rating game, Newsweek only introduced their own flavor to the rankings menu this year. In order to compile their top 25 lists (evaluating colleges in categories of size, location, gay friendliness, jock friendliness and far more) Newsweek drew on data from School Prowler, school statistics (like acceptance rates and credentials of incoming freshmen) and specialized reports. Although the lists are pleasingly straightforward, they are mostly redundant, providing basic information about schools without introducing much new content. Which is okay, because they didn’t even really want to do this anyway.

Washington Month-to-month: The Rebel

Taking a leaf out of JFK’s book, the Washington Month-to-month asks not what your school can do for you, but what your higher education can do for your country. Rather than rate schools based on how well they will serve the student, Washington Month-to-month focuses on how colleges and universities perform in such areas as undergraduate community service and post-grad placement in the Peace Corps, Americorps and other comparable programs. If you’ve been struck by the events of the past couple of years (as the Washington Month-to-month certainly has) you might want to look at the schools they consider to be the best.

Which is your favorite set of rankings? Take our poll, and weigh in below!

The Fort Myers Green Wave have called upon a former teacher and student-athlete to guide their athletic department.

Rod Gadson has been named interim athletic director at Fort Myers High School. He graduated from Fort Myers High School in 1993 and played football at Syracuse University, earning a degree in education there in 1998.

Gadson will have the interim tag removed from his title after passing a recertification test, hopefully next month, said Fort Myers principal Dave La Rosa.

“No. 1, I didn’t know he was out there looking for a job,” La Rosa said. “No. 2, he’s a graduate. He was an athlete here. He knows about the history and the tradition. I think he’s a good role model for kids.

“The person in that job is the face of Fort Myers athletics. I thought he was best guy for the job.”

La Rosa said he received 25 applications after Craig Weigel departed for his native Michigan.

Gadson, 36, has a minor degree in business management. After teaching science at Fort Myers in 1998-99, he worked for a pharmaceutical company.

Gadson started at quarterback and defensive back for the 1992 Fort Myers football team, which finished with a 12-1 record and is believed by many to be the best in school history.

“The opportunity to come back to my alma mater and to come back with a staff that I’m familiar with as far as the teachers and the coaches, it’s great for me,” Gadson said. “To come back to Fort Myers and be a positive role model, to continue the success in the athletic department, it’s just something I look forward to.”

Former Wave star returns as AD

21. August 2010 · Comments Off · Categories: Education, News · Tags:

%content%
PHOTOS: Tommie Barfield Elementary Open House

Hodges University is expanding its facilities, most notably with a $12 million building to be added to its Fort Myers campus, the private, non-profit university announced Thursday.

The three-story, 45,000-square foot building will go up adjacent to the Fort Myers campus’ existing 60,000-square foot main building, on Colonial Boulevard, and is expected to be finished by early 2012.

The new building will be used to add and expand degree programs, but specific programs to be housed there were not named as part of Thursday’s announcement. Since establishing the Fort Myers location in 2005, enrollment there has grown nearly 80 percent, according to a press release.

“Our institution has seen unprecedented growth, and this new facility will help us maintain the highest quality educational experience that our community expects when they choose Hodges University to achieve their educational and career goals,” said Jeanette Brock, the university’s executive vice president of academic affairs.

Earlier this year, Hodges opened a new science and technology building at its Naples campus, and will soon begin work to add a new access road and increased parking there. In Immokalee, the university has plans to remodel portions of its learning site at the Harvest Center at Jubilation, primarily to add classrooms for its growing English as a Second Language program.

? 2010 Naples Daily News. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Hodges building anew in Fort Myers, renovating in Immokalee