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Kent State Trumbull Students Collect About 600 lbs. of Food in Let’s Can Hunger Challenge
Members of the Kent State University at Trumbull Students in Free Enterprise delivered nearly 600 pounds of canned food to the Warren Family Mission on March 19, as part of the Let’s Can Hunger Challenge that was conducted earlier this month.
read moreConnecting Talent With Jobs: Kent State and Ohio Employers Meet With State Legislators
Posted April 2, 2012 | Emily VincentStudents, staff, faculty members, alumni, employers and legislators listen to Kent State President Lester A. Lefton give the opening remarks during Kent State Day at the Statehouse in Columbus.
Forty Ohio employers traveled to Columbus on March 28 to join representatives from Kent State University and alumni in the workforce for the university’s annual Kent State Day at the Statehouse. During this daylong advocacy event with the theme “Talent Meets Jobs: A Kent State Education Aligns With Employer Need,” these major Ohio employers met with 21 legislators and other state officials to express their recognition of the important role that Kent State plays in workforce development.
Along with employers of Kent State graduates, successful Kent State alumni in the workforce joined the Kent State delegation, which included Kent State President Lester A. Lefton, members of the Board of Trustees, deans from Kent State’s eight campuses and students, to tell their personal experiences with Kent State in preparing students for work. The employers and graduates represented a diverse group of industry sectors in Northeast and Central Ohio.
“We had an impressive group of industry leaders who made an investment of time and effort to come to the Ohio Statehouse and support higher education by discussing their first-hand experience hiring Kent State graduates,” Lefton says. “Some of these corporate executives are also proud Kent State graduates who shared with legislators how Kent State prepared them for successful careers. In addition, these executives joined us in Columbus to discuss job creation in Ohio and the importance of college-educated talent for the growth and prosperity of their companies.”
In addition to meeting with legislators, a smaller group of delegates and university officials had round-table discussions with senior state officials who are responsible for employment-related policies, including Mark Kvamme, president and interim chief investment officer of JobsOhio, and Rich Frederick, executive director of the new Office of Workforce Transformation.
The companies represented at the Kent State Day at the Statehouse event collectively provide more than 100,000 jobs for Ohioans. The impressive list of employers includes Abercrombie & Fitch, Allied Machine & Engineering Corporation, Allstate Insurance, Cleveland Clinic, Fahlgren Mortine, FirstEnergy Corporation, First National Bank, Nationwide Insurance, the North Canton Chamber of Commerce, the Ohio Wine Producers Association, Parker Hannifin Corporation, Robinson Memorial Hospital, Saint-Gobain, the Sherwin-Williams Company, Soft-Lite, Summa Health System, the Timken Company, Tinker Omega Manufacturing, University Hospitals Health System, Victoria’s Secret, Vocon Inc. and W.S. Tyler.
Iris Harvey, Kent State vice president for university relations, explains that Kent State Day at the Statehouse helps advance the mission of Kent State and discuss issues important to higher education.
“Legislators deal with issues every day that greatly impact higher education and workforce development,” Harvey says. “Our elected senators and representatives are very interested in learning directly from employers and graduates about how well Kent State prepares students to meet employer needs.”
“We’re working to serve our students, the region and the global workforce by making a Kent State degree ‘a passport to success’ in every field, as employers continue to show high levels of satisfaction with our new graduates’ ability to hit the ground running and continue to seek out and hire more employees educated at Kent State,” Lefton says. “Kent State produces a large number of graduates – 200,000 to date and more than 6,000 each year – who leave our campuses and enter the workforce educated and prepared. A Kent State education is an education that works.”
For more information about Kent State, visit www.kent.edu. Follow Kent State on Twitter at www.twitter.com/ksunews.