All Headlines >
Sections
 
 Academics
 
  Athletics
 
  Auraria
 
  Board of Trustees
 
  Cabinet
 
  Events
 
  Metro State in the Media
 
  Metro State of Mind
 
  Metro State News
 
  People
 
  State/Legislature
 
  Student News
 
  The Arts
 
  Technology

 

Search @Metro

 

 

 

 

 

 

  Resources
   
  Metro State home
  Alumni home
  Athletics home
  Board of Trustees
  Events Calendar
  MetroConnect
  Office of College Communications
   
  Chronicle of Higher Education
  Denver Post.com
  Rocky Mountain News.com
  Silver & Gold Record
  The Metropolitan
   
  Contact us

Academics  

e-mail this article    printer friendly page

Metro State officially ‘Trumped’
Sep 5, 2007

Not paying for a year of college would be a dream come true for any Metro State student. For one ambitious and business savvy Roadrunner junior that scenario will be played out as they march towards graduation without the burden of tuition payments their senior year.

The Metro State Alumni Association is staging “The Apprentice Challenge @ Metro State” beginning in January—a semester-long contest pitting two teams of college juniors against each other in a series of monthly challenges much akin to Donald Trump’s popular television reality show but without any firings.

Each month, two teams will be tasked with a challenge from a local nonprofit or corporation that addresses a philanthropic need or compelling community issue. The teams—made up of 9 or 10 Metro State juniors—will put their collective heads together to brainstorm, plan and execute a response to each challenge.

The efforts will be scored along the way by a group of alumni, college and corporate representatives. Students with the highest scores at the conclusion of the competition will be invited to attend “The Boardroom,” where their efforts will be on display for judging by a live audience on May 3, 2008.

The final student will be named Apprentice and skip away with a paid internship with a local company to be completed during the 2008-09 academic year and a full-tuition scholarship for their senior year at Metro State.

“This is a unique, collaborative project that the Alumni Association felt would raise money for its programs while bringing together several academic departments, student clubs, corporations, nonprofits and other external audiences,” said Cherrylyn Napue, assistant vice president for alumni relations.

The initiative also blends well with President Stephen Jordan’s desire to see the College become more active in the community as a preeminent institution founded on and dedicated to high-quality education that is relevant and individualized.

“Not only will these students have the opportunity to interact with key individuals in the community,” said Janell Lindsay, director of special initiatives for Alumni Relations and Enrollment Services, “they’ll also learn teamwork, networking, negotiation, problem-solving and a lot more.”

In the interest of creating the most diverse applicant pool for the program, faculty in all departments are asked to encourage well-qualified candidates to apply for the program and to accommodate requests for recommendation forms.

“The Apprentice is really a chance to showcase Metro State and its students in a new way to the community,” Napue said.

Napue asks that faculty encourage any exceptional juniors they know who might be interested. In addition, the application requires a faculty recommendation.

Interested Metro State juniors can download the application at: http://www.mscd.edu/apprenticechallenge. The application packets are due by Sept. 28, at noon. Finalists will be released Nov. 2.

For further information about the program and eligibility or questions about the application process, please contact Janell Lindsey at 303-556-6344 or lindseja@mscd.edu.

 


 © Copyright 2008 by Metropolitan State College of Denver.
 All rights reserved. Metropolitan State College of Denver Office of College Communications, 303-556-2957.



Top of Page

Academics
Latest Headlines
Provost candidate: Enrique Riveros-Schäfer
Center for Faculty Development to host workshop on learning communities
Schedule set for provost candidate’s Nov. 17 campus interviews
Provost candidate: Linda Curran
Skeletons in the classroom: Anthropology students get hands on with hominid fossils
HSI Update: Task force makes graduate programs proposal key priority
Kudos
Provost candidate: Ronald Hy
Islamic art, medieval architecture among topics researched during Fulbright trip to Egypt
President to seek graduate programs