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Posts tagged as “profile”

‘This is Me Giving Back’

Assistant Dean of Students Sabine Dupoux Shines Light on Her Journey as a First Generation College Student

By Isabelle Mascary | Editor-in-Chief

Photo by Sabine Dupoux

In the midst of the pandemic two and a half years ago, Sabine Dupoux became the Assistant Dean of Students at the Leominster campus and has been a part of the Mount family ever since. She is a first generation Haitian-American graduate with her Master’s degree in Business Administration. 

She oversees the food pantry in Gardner and Leominster and also oversees the management operations of the Leominster building to ensure safety for faculty, staff and students. “My role is to ensure that students are successful inside and outside of the classroom,” she said.  read more

Profile: Gail Steele

Theater at the Mount Director Gail Steele Emphasizes the Importance of Community in Theater Arts

By Isabelle Mascary | Editor-in-Chief

Photo courtesy of MWCC

Gail Steele has been a part of the Mount community since 1977. She grew up in Lawrence, Massachusetts and received her undergraduate degree at Bridgewater State College.

She got her master’s at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.

Although she has always had a love for theater arts, it isn’t where she began her journey. “I was more towards communications because I wasn’t confident that I could have a career in theater,” she explained. “So I hedged my bets to focus more on communications. But I always had my hand in theater. I’m a good organizer. That’s what running a theater is all about.” read more

Profile: Kara Roche

MWCC Associate Professor of English and Speech Provides
a Lesson in Chasing Your Passions

By Elysian Alder | Assistant Editor

Photo by Kara Roche

Associate Professor of English and Speech Kara Roche has been working at the Mount since 2007, and although English and teaching are two of her greatest passions, it’s the people – the community – that fill her with so much love for the college. Reflecting back on the journey she’s had to get to this point, Roche said, “Now I get to teach my two loves here: English classes filled with poetry and Shakespeare and speech classes. How lucky am I? My road taken turned out pretty well.” read more

Sue Goldstein: Driving Force for Journalism

The Mount Observer Sits Down with Its Previous Faculty Adviser

By Isabelle Mascary | Editor-in-Chief

In her twenty years at MWCC, Sue Goldstein successfully re-started the student newspaper and became a beloved professor and mentor to many students. In 2022, she retired from MWCC, but her legacy remains. As a woman of many hats and a great contributor to the college, Goldstein still teaches online courses. “I’m still teaching a few classes, such as college writing one and college writing two online.”

            It might come as a surprise to many that this popular professor didn’t even get into journalism until about 1977, and she began her teaching profession in 2003. “They were kind of two separate things. I never envisioned myself teaching,” she explained, continuing to state that she didn’t start teaching until she was in her forties. read more

Profile: Lexi Gallagher

MWCC Student Talks Photography and Pursuing College During the Pandemic

By Annabelle Kennedy | Observer Contributor

When Alexis “Lexi” Gallagher saw her mother taking pictures in middle school, she knew she wanted to do the same. What Gallagher didn’t know was it would open a lifetime love affair with photography. She grabbed her mom’s point-and-shoot camera and started taking photos. “I didn’t really understand how to use it yet, it was mostly because I saw my mom doing it, and I wanted to do the same.”

Gallagher, now 20 years old, attends Mount Wachusett Community College in Gardner, MA. While in high school, Lexi Gallagher, like most kids from her hometown of Jaffrey, New Hampshire, always knew she wanted to attend a 4-year college or university (and yes, she has heard plenty of jokes about her name due to the hit show Shameless). read more

Profile: Hilary Blair

MWCC Vet Tech Professor Shares Her Journey From Art to Animals

By Isabelle Mascary | Assistant Editor

Once your passion meets your purpose, work no longer exists when you’re doing what you love. Meet Hilary Blair, the Mount’s new Veterinary Technician Professor who began at MWCC as an adjunct professor for two years and is now full-time.

Working as an emergency and critical care veterinary technician for the past fourteen years, Blair chose the Mount because of an opportunity to teach a subject she is passionate about. “I am deeply familiar with [the subject] just because of my profession in general as a veterinary nurse,” Blair said. read more

Profile: Annabelle Kennedy

Professional Writing Major Discusses Interest in Pursuit of Being a Death Doula

By Lexi Gallagher | Observer Contributor

Lunenburg resident and Mount Wachusett professional writing student, Annabelle Kennedy, has a history with the written word and enjoys the act of writing. However, she also has a passion towards going in a different direction than most after graduating: being a death doula.

“Helping dying people and their families process emotions and help with a difficult transition really seemed to call to me,” Kennedy said. “I’ve been definitely exploring the idea of being a death doula. I started listening to a Tarot podcast about five years ago, and the woman who hosted it is a thanatologist and discussed the subject there.” From there, Kennedy found out about the death doula movement.  read more

(Archive October 2019) Campus Activities Team for Students

By Kristopher Madden | Observer Contributor

If you’ve been on campus long enough, you’ve seen some of the events that our school stages. From holiday parties to Open Club Enrollment Day, Campus Activities Team for Students (CATS) is behind the scenes, making it happen.

“If you’re ready to plan events, want to earn a lot of volunteer hours, want to see stuff happen on campus and have tons of fun, then come join CATS,” said Brittany Stephenson, a Fire Service Tech/EMT major and Club President since 2016. read more

(Archive April 2018) Terrific Partners: Meet Collene and Puma

By Christine Nelson | Observer Contributor

Photo By Christine Nelson
Professor Collene Thaxton with service dog Puma

You may have seen Professor Collene Thaxton and her service dog Puma together on campus, both at Gardner and Devens. You may even have Thaxton as an instructor, as she is a Professor of Nursing. Thaxton has Type I diabetes. Puma is a service dog; his job is to let Thaxton know when her glucose levels are too low or too high. I was lucky to interview them both while Puma was off duty. read more

(Archive March 2018) Remembering Bill Nutting

By William A. Lefrancois

Forty-five years of service, of teaching it all;

Four decades of a life, finally a time for it to stall.

Through good times and bad, educating with a will;

Thoroughly passionate in all things, these things were Bill.

Starting back in nineteen seventy-three as a lab tech, and moving forward;

From Technician to Instructor to Professor all ahead toward.

From General Biology to Human Health to Microbiology;

Each course in its turn, all things drenched in biology!

Bill Nutting lived a life of joy and of much pain; read more