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New Roane State building has health science labs, high-tech classrooms

Posted at 4:16 pm September 4, 2014
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building

Roane State Community College officials will celebrate the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building during a Friday morning ribbon-cutting ceremony in Oak Ridge. Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam will be a featured guest.

 

This new $13.8 million building at Roane State Community College mixes high-tech amenities with new teaching techniques, and it eases overcrowding at the Oak Ridge campus. It adds space for health science classes and programs such as surgical technology, organic chemistry, and pharmacy technician students. It also incorporates environmentally friendly design features such as a reflective white roof, lights that adjust automatically, geothermal wells that help heat and cool the building, and rain gardens that capture storm water runoff.

The high-tech amenities include “smart dummies” that can be programmed with symptoms to train nursing students, full multimedia and wireless systems in classrooms, and more than 300 computers, including in five computer labs. There is a distance education classroom with microphones hanging from the ceiling, and an engaged learning, or “flip,” classroom, where students do homework before class and come prepared to collaborate and solve problems.

A new surgical technology program, co-sponsored with Walters State Community College, will be housed here. There is a new organic chemistry lab, and Roane State’s pharmacy technician program is moving to Oak Ridge from the college’s main campus in Harriman. There is also a “flex lab” that can be easily and quickly configured to suit the training needs of area industries. It has a high ceiling and bay door, plenty of power and conduits, and gas and ventilation.

The new three-story, 64,000-square-foot building—officially named the Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building—might be described as Melinda Hillman’s “baby.” Hillman, who is Roane State’s vice president of advancement and community relations, has spent thousands of hours during the past six years working on the project, from its inception in 2008 through the planning and fundraising stages to the end of construction. She will be among those celebrating during a Friday morning ribbon-cutting ceremony that will feature special guests, including Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam.

“It’s sort of ‘birthing a baby,’” said Hillman, who clearly has a passion for the project and hasn’t taken a vacation in a year. “I’ve worked on it so long.”

Hillman and Owen Driskill, Roane State’s director of marketing and public relations, recently led reporters on a tour of the brick-and-coated-metal building, the last expansion that the 40-acre Oak Ridge campus can accommodate. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Education, Health, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Anderson County, Bill Haslam, Chris Whaley, early education, education, environmentally friendly, flex lab, Gary Goff, Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building, health sciences, LEED certification, Melinda Hillman, Oak Ridge, occupational therapy assistant, organic chemistry, OTA, overcrowding, Owen Driskill, pharmacy technician, ribbon-cutting, Roane State, Roane State Community College, Rx-Tennessee, surgical technology, ultrasound tech, Walters State Community College

Roane State has Sept. 5 ribbon-cutting for new health, sciences building

Posted at 4:17 pm August 11, 2014
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building

The ribbon-cutting for the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building at Roane State’s Oak Ridge campus will be Friday, September 5, at 8:30 a.m. The public is invited. (Submitted photo)

 

Roane State Community College will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony on Friday, September 5, for the new Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building at the college’s Oak Ridge campus.

The event begins at 8:30 a.m. The public is invited.

“We would love for the community to see the new building and to meet our faculty and students,” said Melinda Hillman, Roane State vice president of advancement and community relations. “Students will have wonderful learning opportunities in the new building, all thanks to the community’s support for this project. We are deeply appreciative and invite everyone to celebrate with us.”

The 64,000-square-foot, three-story building will help ease overcrowding at the Oak Ridge campus at 701 Briarcliff Avenue. Originally designed for 1,800 students, the campus has 2,500 students. The building will accommodate 500 students and give Roane State the space to offer new programs in health care and technology. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, College, Education, Education, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building, health care, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, LEED, massage therapy, Melinda Hillman, nursing, Oak Ridge, occupational therapy assistant, pharmacy technician, ribbon-cutting, Roane State Community College, surgical technology, technology, U.S. Green Building Council, Upland Design Group

Roane State launching new surgical technology program this fall

Posted at 9:24 pm June 1, 2014
By Roane State Community College Leave a Comment

Roane State Community College will launch a two-year program in surgical technology this fall.

The associate of applied science in surgical technology is co-sponsored by Roane State and Walters State Community College through the Smoky Mountain Health Sciences Consortium. The program will be offered at the Sevier County campus of Walters State and the Oak Ridge campus of Roane State. Streaming video technology will be used to offer courses to students at both colleges.

Labs will be held in the Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building at Roane State’s Oak Ridge campus. The new 64,000-square-foot, $13.8 million building will host its first classes this fall. Students will complete clinical requirements at area hospitals.

Surgical technologists prepare operating rooms, arrange equipment, and assist doctors during surgeries. According to the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Outlook Handbook, employment of surgical technologists is projected to grow 30 percent through 2022. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Top Stories Tagged With: Goff Health Sciences and Technology Building, health care, Michael Laman, Roane State Community College, Rx-Tennessee, Smoky Mountain Health Sciences Consortium, surgical technologists, surgical technology, Trade Adjustment Assistance Community College and Career Training, U.S. Department of Labor, Walters State Community College

TBR approves tuition increases, surgical tech program at Roane State

Posted at 8:04 am June 24, 2013
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

The Tennessee Board of Regents on Friday approved maintenance fee and tuition recommendations at its universities and community colleges.

The proposed increases for students taking 15 credit hours would amount to an extra $102 per semester for community college students.

The TBR also approved a new associate of applied science program, a collaborative surgical technology program through Walters State and Roane State community colleges. [Read more…]

Filed Under: College, Education, Top Stories Tagged With: Bill Haslam, community colleges, compensation, John Morgan, maintenance fee, Roane State Community College, surgical technology, TBR, Tennessee Board of Regents, tuition, universities

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