Vol State Livingston faculty member receives statewide honor

TCAT Faculty Member of the Year, Rebecca Russell of Knoxville; and Vol State professor, Girija Shinde, Community College Faculty Member of the Year.

LIVINGSTON – Volunteer State Community College professor Girija Shinde was named Community College Faculty Member of the Year at the Statewide Outstanding Achievement Recognition (SOAR) celebration in Nashville recently. Shinde has been teaching biology at Vol State at Livingston since 2002.

The SOAR Awards are designed to highlight student, faculty, and staff achievement in the Tennessee Board of Regents (TBR) system. 

“The mission of our College System and each of our community and technical colleges is the success of all our students and the development of Tennessee’s workforce. It’s appropriate that we recognize the outstanding students – and the outstanding faculty and staff members on our campuses who work with students daily to help them succeed,” said TBR Chancellor Flora W. Tydings.

“I felt humbled and honored when I received the award,” Shinde said. “I thought it was a recognition of my contribution to my students, college, community, and society at large. The community college student-instructor relationship is special because it extends beyond academics. It involves meeting their needs, the different ways they learn but also working with them if they have family issues, health issues, and work conflicts.it is about offering academic help, flexible schedules, supporting them emotionally at times, encouraging and inspiring them.”

“We are fortunate to have such a talented and dedicated faculty member as Dr. Shinde,” said Vol State president Jerry Faulkner. “This honor is well deserved and appropriate for her commitment to student success.”

Eighteen finalists for the individual awards advanced through college- and regional-level competitions in East, Middle and West Tennessee to the final interviews with a panel of judges. One winner was announced in each the three categories for the Community Colleges and for the Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology (TCATs) – for a total of six individual award winners.

About Vol State

Volunteer State Community College has more than 100 areas of study and offers two-year degrees, certificates and paths to university transfer. Workforce Development extends the college mission to the entire community. For more information, visit volstate.edu. The College System of Tennessee, governed by the Tennessee Board of Regents, is the state’s largest public higher education system, with 13 community colleges, 27 colleges of applied technology and the online TN eCampus, serving more than 100,000 students.

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