Community
Red Deer College’s 54th Convocation Takes Place June 1st
On Friday, June 1, graduating students will cross the stage during RDC’s 54th Convocation Ceremonies at Westerner Park in Red Deer.
This year, 1,950 RDC students are eligible to graduate. Of the eligible graduates, 673 studied in the School of Trades & Manufacturing Technologies, with the remainder completing programming in RDC’s Donald School of Business, School of Arts & Sciences, School of Continuing Education, School of Creative Arts, School of Education and School of Health Sciences.
More than 600 students applied to attend the Convocation ceremonies on June 1, and graduates will be granted certificates, diplomas and degrees. 2018 also marks the first graduating classes for two new RDC programs: the Media Studies & Professional Communication Diploma and the Human Resources Management Graduate Certificate.
During the ceremonies, RDC will recognize two deserving students with special honours:
• The Governor General’s Academic Medal (Collegiate Bronze Level) is presented to the student with the highest academic standing after completing the final year of a diploma-level post-secondary program.
• The RDC Foundation Outstanding Student recognizes a student who demonstrated outstanding leadership and commitment to RDC through participation in, and contribution to, the College.
RDC will also bestow an Honorary Degree upon a notable individual who has made an outstanding contribution to the advancement of social, cultural or economic development in a way that has had significant impact for RDC, central Alberta and beyond. This will be the fourth Honorary Degree granted by RDC, with Dr. Bernie Pauly, Mr. Morris Flewwelling and Mr. Tim Tamashiro receiving degrees at previous Convocation Ceremonies.
As part of the ceremonies, Red Deer College will celebrate with 17 Indigenous graduates who have chosen to be recognized with an Indigenous Student Convocation Stole. The blue stole was created with input from several Indigenous communities, and it acknowledges the students’ academic achievements and the completion of their programs of study at RDC.
Red Deer College 54th Convocation Ceremony
Friday, June 1 | Ceremonies in Prairie Pavilion at Westerner Park
Morning ceremony – 9:30 a.m. | Afternoon ceremony – 2:00 p.m.
Master of Ceremonies – Morris Flewwelling, Chair of RDC’s Board of Governors
Additional details about Convocation are available at www.rdc.ab.ca/convocation.
For more stories visit Todayville.com
Community
Festival of Trees tickets on sale! Update from the Red Deer Regional Health Foundation
Festival of Trees tickets are on sale now! Get ’em while they’re hot!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Community
First Battle of Alberta this NHL season to bring big boost to Child Advocacy Centre!
From the Central Alberta Child Advocacy Centre
The Edmonton Oilers MEGA 50/50 is BACK in support of three amazing organizations
By purchasing your Oilers MEGA 50/50 tickets today, you’re helping to support the CACAC, along with Little Warriors and Zebra Child & Youth Advocacy Centre .
Purchase before 1PM to be eligible for all 4 early bird prizes, including a $500 Esso card, 2 PCL Loge Arkells tickets for November 1, $1000 for Alberta Beef, and $10,000 CASH!
Early Bird draws!
Buy before 1:00 for $500 Esso card
Buy before 7:00 for 2 PCL Loge Arkells tickes
Buy before 7:30 for $1,000 Alberta Beef
Buy before 8:00 for $10,000 Cash!
THANK YOU EDMONTON OILERS!
-
Brownstone Institute2 days ago
The Most Devastating Report So Far
-
Business1 day ago
Carbon tax bureaucracy costs taxpayers $800 million
-
ESG1 day ago
Can’t afford Rent? Groceries for your kids? Trudeau says suck it up and pay the tax!
-
Daily Caller1 day ago
Los Angeles Passes ‘Sanctuary City’ Ordinance In Wake Of Trump’s Deportation Plan
-
John Stossel1 day ago
Green Energy Needs Minerals, Yet America Blocks New Mines
-
COVID-192 days ago
Dr. McCullough praises RFK Jr., urges him to pull COVID shots from the market
-
Alberta1 day ago
Province considering new Red Deer River reservoir east of Red Deer
-
MAiD2 days ago
Over 40% of people euthanized in Ontario lived in poorest parts of the province: government data