REPORT CARD
- Share via
-- Angelique Flores
Golden West College has named its employees of the year: psychology
instructor Joyce Bishop; Rona McArthur-Harold, staff support for evening
operations and the office of instruction; and Carolyn Kirkpatrick,
director of personnel services.
Bishop has taught psychology at Golden West College since 1986. She
teaches in a variety of styles, recognizing that not all students learn
through lectures. Recently, she began offering her psychology courses
over the Internet. Bishop and her husband also launched the nonprofit
Pathways to Independence, an agency that provides living expenses,
college tuition, health and mental care, transportation, clothing, child
care and mentoring for up to 16 students.
McArthur-Harold is the primary staff member for nearly every
department on the campus. She is the switchboard operator, dispatcher for
Public Safety and the liaison between students and the college’s faculty
and administrators.
A 15-year employee, she has worked for the Criminal Justice Training
Center, the Affirmative Action/Grievance office, Language Arts Division,
Vocational Education and the Tech Prep program. She was also the advisor
to the Broadcasting and Outdoor Recreation clubs. McArthur-Harold serves
on the college’s Staff Development, Crisis Alert, Disaster Preparedness
and Student Health Services committees.
Kirkpatrick has been an employee of Golden West College since 1979,
but first came to the college in 1970 as a student, while still attending
high school. She is responsible for planning, directing and coordinating
activities and directing employment, payroll, workers’ compensation and
affirmative action programs for the campus.
Employees honored for milestones
Golden West College honored 75 of its employees for reaching
milestones in their service to the Huntington Beach college. The awards
were presented to employees completing five, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 and 35
years of employment at the campus.
The honorees who have been employed at the college for five years are
Dori Abella, Stephen Ludwig, Christana Montes, Sonny Pa’u, Omid
Pourzanjani, Linda Stevens and Ronald Wilkinson; 10 years: Dibakar Barua,
Joyce Bishop, Darline Calvert, Theresa Dietrichson, Marty Fernandez,
Norma Flores, John Grajeda, Judith Harmer, Greg Hyska, Maureen Kennedy,
Valerie Klein, Eric Maddy, Frank Maldonado, Marie McGrath, Diane Mefford,
Don Nguyen, Jimmy Nguyen, Jo Ann Ono, Cheryl Prohaska, Richard Ullrich,
Holly Van Dorn, Valerie Venegas, Deven Werthman, Paul Wisner and Roger
Wyant; 15 years: Dennis Carrie, David Falzon, Dorothy Fitzgerald, Candice
Francis, Karen Glines, Stephanie Hayward, David Hudson, William Hyde,
Frank Jessoe, Gladys Lavoie, Robert Lazarus, Sandra Lutz, Rona
McArthur-Harold, Roxana Ross, James Tortolano and Thanh Vu; 20 years:
Susan Babb, James Fortune, Michael Goldman, Leeanne Hill, Karen Hinton,
David Koenig, Karen Kuehner, Helen Norton, Connie Olson, Patricia Stingle
and Norma Willis; 25 years: Frank Baker, Nannette Brodie, Jose Dollente,
Christopher Drover, Charlanne Nee, Barbara Sablan, Diane Seilo and Tony
Thorne; and 30 years: Darrell Ebert, Dolores Harper, James Long, Martin
Newitz, Harvey Reynolds, Richard Rowe and Bud Yeargain; 35 years: Pierre
Grimes.
Slogans earn students scholarships, awards
The American Educational League awarded several cash scholarships to
local students in its countywide slogan contest. Ocean View High School
graduate Anthony Garza won first place. His classmates Nicholas Mendes,
Hoa Le, and Sudantha Liyanaarachchi also received awards. Edison High
School graduate Megan Loughran also won, as did Westminster High School
graduate Michael K.N. Nguyen.
New tutors to help teach reading
The Huntington Valley branch of Literacy Volunteers of America has 10
new tutors for the Huntington Beach Public Library Adult Literacy
Program. They are Dolores Basilio, Melody Edwards, Kathleen Latini, Aaron
Lopez, Ralph Macchia, Barbra Sue Miller, Ramona Miller, Cathy Parsa and
Janed Sax of Huntington Beach, and Susan Bertotti of Los Alamitos.
Each new tutor is helping a local adult improve his or her reading,
writing and speaking skills. About 400 people participate in the literacy
programs at the Central Library and Oak View Branch Library.
Information: Rose Saylin, (714) 375-5102.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.