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GCU MAGAZ I NE • 33

Alan Pickett, B.S. in

Public Safety and

Emergency

Management, ’14,

earned his

ministerial license as a reverend in

the Church of God. Pickett is an

assistant conductor with Amtrak in

NewOrleans but soonwill be

commissioned in the Army Reserve

as a chaplain. He also is enrolled in

GCU’sMaster of Divinity program.

Catherine Herron,

M.S. in Leadership,

’14,

recently

appeared on Trinity

Broadcasting

Network (TBN) local station

WMPV TV-21 in Mobile, Ala.

Herron recorded two of her

original gospel music songs for

WMPV, both of which aired in

June 2016.

Kate Beausoleil, M.

Ed. in Secondary

Education, ’14,

is

the seventh grade

physical science

teacher and assistant cross

country coach at Pleasant Valley

(Iowa) Junior High School.

Beausoleil has completed three

marathons and mentors runners

for the Quad Cities (Ill.) Marathon.

Danielle Rodzen,

B.S in Psychology,

’15,

lived out her

dream when she

traveled with GCU

on a mission trip to Kenya and

also took a solo trip to Ireland.

Rodzen is a child life assistant at

Phoenix Children’s Hospital and a

resident director at GCU.

Dr. AnnWolven,

Ed.D. in

Organizational

Leadership with an

Emphasis in Higher

Education Leadership, ’15,

recently presented at the

international OLC Innovate 2016

conference in New Orleans.

Wolven’s presentation, “Faculty

Metamorphosis through Mobile

Technology,” identified how

mobile technology influences

students’ learning. She is an

English instructor at Illinois

Eastern Community Colleges.

Alena Gladwin, B.S.

in Biology with an

Emphasis in

Pre-Medicine, ’16,

was chosen for a

one-year paid internship with the

Translational Genomics Research

Institute (TGen) in Phoenix. TGen

is a nonprofit focused on the

development of research and

treatment for cancer,

neurological disorders, diabetes

and other complex diseases.

Alena was a 2016 Outstanding

Senior award recipient at GCU.

James Morales,

B.S. in Secondary

Education

(Emphasis inMath),

’16,

is the newmusic

instructor for Four Peaks

Elementary School and Fountain

Hills (Ariz.) Middle School.

Morales has worked in the high

school program the Fountain Hills

Unified School District for more

than a decade.

Camila Moreno,

B.S. in Nursing, ’16,

has been hired as

the full-time night

shift RN at Banner

Thunderbird Medical Center in

Glendale, Ariz. Moreno will be

working in the medical/surgical

observation unit and credits her

preparation at GCU for landing

the job so soon after graduation.

GCU NEWS & NOTES

Mission work goes overtime

A student on the East Asia team is planning on returning next

year to visit the friends that he made. A student on the Middle

East team enjoyed her time so much and was so moved by the

needs there that she extended her stay by a month.

Those are the typical — but hardly ordinary — stories you

hear every year about the annual mission trips undertaken by

Grand Canyon University students and staff.

This year, GCU sent out 357 students and leaders to 20

countries. The East Asia and Middle East trips both were

4-6 weeks and were student-led — they did college campus

ministry there and were able to build relationships and share

their faith.

Kayla’s song still resonates

“Dancing by Your Side (Home Now),” the

tribute song by GCU sophomore Kristyn

Roberts to her late friend and roommate Kayla

Castro, touched a lot of hearts.

Roberts said that she got multiple shares on her Facebook

page after the GCU Today story and video were published.

“As much as I cried the first time I heard this song, boy,

did the tears keep flowing watching the passion and emotion

that was behind it all,” one person wrote. “It has brought a

tremendous amount of comfort in my own life with losses I've

dealt with as well.”

To read the story about Kayla's song, go online to

http://bit.ly/29V93Lq

Science experiment is working

After igniting in Arizona, the Chief Science Officer (CSO)

initiative is spreading rapidly to other states, and GCU helped fan

the flames by hosting a three-day summer institute last month.

The GCU-sponsored program quickly grew to 200 students

after one year. CSOs are junior high school and high school

students elected by their classmates to promote STEM

(science, technology, engineering and math) subjects in

their schools.

Officials from Idaho, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada,

Washington, Oregon and New York attended the institute and

since have committed to starting similar programs.

To read more about the CSO program, go online to

http://bit.ly/2a2A5Fd