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星期二, 10月 23, 2018

中華頤養院年終感謝宴表揚資深員工

“Founders and leaders” Caption:
South Cove Manor leadership gathered to celebrate the 
accomplishments of staff at the 2018 Employee 
Appreciation Dinner.
Pictured are (l-r front): Amy Guen, founder,  Helen Chin Schlichte, 
founder and Board Member, Josephine Chin and founder Bill Chin, 
and (back) Li Chen, Administrator, Board Chair Richard Lui, 
and South Cove Manor CEO Bill Graves.




“20 year” Caption:
At South Cove Manor at Quincy Points Annual Employee 
Appreciation Dinner held on October 16th at Cathay Pacific
 in North Quincy, staff celebrating 5,10, 15, 20, 25 and
 30 year work anniversaries received special recognition. 
Pictured l-r are Matilde Aime, Xi Yu, Yan-Ling Liang, and 
Kwon Siu Yan-Lok, all celebrating 20 years of service at
 South Cove Manor.

“15 Year honoree” Caption: Celebrating her 15 year anniversary 
at South Cove Manor is Chenghuen “Cathy” Xie, center, pictured 
with Li Chen, Administrator, left, and CEO Bill Graves. Ms. Xie 
started her career as a Certified Nursing Assistant, became a 
nurse, and was recently promoted to Nurse Manager.


海外青年華語文研習班接受報名

中華民國僑務委員會為提升海外青年華語文能力及增進對中華民國臺灣之認識,推動海內外青年交流,每年均辦理海外青年華語文研習班活動,深獲海外青年及家長之肯定。
全球班第1期至第4期均於開辦前6個月開始受理報名,額滿截止,惟其中第2期第3期(暑期青少年班)依地區配額分別受理報名,報名日期為2019年1月1日至2月28日止。
年滿12足歲至未滿24目前居住於海外,身心健康、學行良好、有高度學習華語文意願,並能適應團體生活、願意遵守學習生活公約之華裔青(少)年均可報名參加。  
     有關活動詳細內容與申請表格請上僑委會網站下載(www.ocac.gov.tw/僑生服務/青年研習/華語文研習班)瀏覽下載,或洽詢波士頓僑教中心 617-965-8801 陳小姐。

Latino Advisory Commission Announces First Set of Priorities and Recommendations

Latino Advisory Commission Announces First Set of Priorities and Recommendations

BOSTON – Today, Governor Charlie Baker and the Latino Advisory Commission announced the Commission’s first set of priorities and recommendations. Last year, Governor Baker signed Executive Order 577 establishing the Latino Advisory Commission to advise on issues relating to the economic prosperity and well-being of the Commonwealth’s Latino community.

“We are pleased the Latino Advisory Commission will focus on educational performance, advancing economic opportunity in the Commonwealth’s workforce, and ensuring Massachusetts remains a welcoming place for all communities,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “Our administration is thankful for the Commission members’ hard work and dedication and we look forward to working together on advancing the Massachusetts Latino community.”

“Our administration is committed to supporting and promoting the strengths of the Latino community across each of the communities in the Commonwealth,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “I look forward to working with the Commission to implement their recommendations to support the entire Latino community.”

The Black Advisory Commission and the Latino Advisory Commission collaborated on a number of components of their efforts in 2017--2018. In partnership, the chairs of both Commissions held various meetings to develop similar paths and methodologies to their processes that determined priorities, recommendations and implementation strategies. They convened a statewide process to assess the paramount challenges and opportunities of both communities in Massachusetts including four joint roundtables with industry experts  and meeting with community leaders across the Commonwealth.

“Latinos are the fastest growing portion of our labor force and are an essential component to the Commonwealth’s future economic prosperity,” said Secretary of Labor and Workforce Development Rosalin Acosta. “The recommendations of the Latino Advisory Commission will further align our workforce and educational priorities to help Latinos with the skills and training resources they need to access high demand jobs in our innovation economy.”

“The central tenet in the Baker-Polito Administration’s economic policy is creating ‘opportunities for all’ so that everyone in Massachusetts can participate and share in economic success,” said Housing and Economic Development Secretary Jay Ash. “Through our work with the Latino Advisory Commission, we have enhanced and refined workforce and small business initiatives to increase access and support, and I am pleased that we’ll be adding funding for both – including the formation of a new apprenticeship tax credit -- through the economic development legislation Governor Baker signed in August.”

“This Commission recommends that the state ensure alternative English Language Learner programs under the LOOK Act are research-based, with well-trained teachers, both of which the Baker-Polito Administration is working toward with new investments in the FY’19 budget targeted to help implement the legislation that provides school districts more flexibility in how they teach students who are English language learners,” Secretary of Education James Peyser said.

The Black and Latino Commissions acknowledged a number of synergies on issues, challenges, and prominent priorities within the Latino and Black communities across the Commonwealth.  Similarly, the solutions to address many of the challenges are similar or can be addressed together, while also differentiating in important ways.

“The Latino Advisory Commission is an example of leadership in action, I salute Governor Baker’s willingness to better understand the needs of the Latino Community,” said Representative Carlos Gonzalez. “The Latino Advisory commission is composed of some of Massachusetts best and brightest minds who happened to be Latino, I commend the members for their work which will have a short and longstanding impact in our communities because of the Governors commitment and financial contribution to attaining the measurable outcomes.”

“As the Chairman of the Massachusetts Black and Latino Legislative Caucus, I’ve been encouraged by the commitment shown by the Baker Administration in putting together reports and recommendations from both the Black and Latino Advisory Commissions,” said Representative Frank Moran. “These reports were carefully constructed with large amounts of community feedback by talented members appointed by the Governor to each Commission. The recommendations put forth on everything from economic development, to education to state recruitment and hiring practices will help us make decisions to boost fairness and equality across the Commonwealth for communities of color.”

“I am so proud of the work that the Latino Advisory Commission has accomplished over the past year. With the unwavering support of the Governor and Lt. Governor, the guidance and resources provided by the Secretariats, and the invaluable insight from many Latino residents around the state, industry leaders and elected officials, LAC has produced a set of recommendations and priorities that we believe will be instrumental in addressing many of the issues and concerns of the Latino community in Massachusetts,” said Latino Advisory Commission Chair Josie Martinez. “The Latino population is a critical to the success, prosperity and competitiveness of the Commonwealth, and we are all committed to insuring that there are more opportunities for Latino students, businesses and immigrant families.”

This first set of priorities and recommendations relate to the advancement of educational pathways for Latino students, workforce development and continuing to make Massachusetts welcoming for immigrants.

Priority: Improve the educational performance and pathways for success for Latino students:The Commission recommends strengthening foundational academic skills in K-12, including English Language Learners (ELL) programs and developing college and career pathways for high school students.

        The state can work to ensure alternative English Language Learners programs under the LOOK Act are research based, with well-prepared teachers.

        Following examples such as the Lynch Leadership Academy, Building Excellent Schools and Latinos for Education, we can expand proven programs for developing diverse school leaders and develop regional systems for proactively recruiting, training, and retaining teachers of color.

        To focus on improving early literacy curriculum and instruction in low-income communities, examples to follow include the Pre-School Expansion Grant program and Early Literacy Expert Panel.

        The Springfield Empowerment Zone partnership and the Lawrence Alliance for Education are examples of ways to create opportunities to empower educators to better match programs and school cultures to their students’ needs and assets, while deepening out-of-school time partnerships with community-based youth development organizations.

        The Baker-Polito Administration is committed to increasing access in high school to college-level courses through the Early College program. Currently there are approximately 2,400 Massachusetts students in an early college program, 55% of whom are low-income. To build upon this success, partnering with non-profit organizations like Mass Insight and Equal Opportunity Schools could create more opportunities for proactive recruitment of under-represented populations and additional supports to improve outcomes.

        Building on best practices from examples such as 100 Males to College, Posse Foundation, Bottom Line and One Goal, we can expand investments into cohort-based college readiness and success programs for first-generation students.

        Expanding upon the Administration’s commitment to workforce development and vocational technical programs through programs like the Workforce Skills grants, we can strengthen career planning and coaching in urban middle and high schools and expand career pathways and vocational-technical programs in urban high schools, including academic supports, integrated with job readiness and work-based learning experiences.


Priority: Advance the competitiveness of the Latino workforce and businesses: The Commission recommends targeting workforce development programs to prepare more Latinos for successful employment, enhancing ways for Latinos to competitively pursue and advance in senior level and leadership roles across all sectors, and increasing the competitiveness of Latino owned businesses by growing access to capital, capacity building and supplier diversity opportunities.

        Working across secretariats with Housing and Economic Development, Labor and Workforce Development and Education, internship programs among quasi-public agencies, for instance, the Mass Clean Energy Center, can be developed to help increase diversity across sectors.  

        Promoting the Administration’s YouthWorks program to private sector companies would direct qualified youth to more employment opportunities.  

        Supporting the apprenticeship expansion strategy would focus on pre-apprenticeship programs that feed diverse youth into existing apprenticeship programs and engage more high schools, vocational tech schools, parents and companies to understand the opportunity of apprenticeships in non-traditional fields.

        By working together with programs such as YearUp and Apprenti, internships and apprenticeships in the STEM industries, targeting opportunity youth and under-represented adult learners can be developed and expanded.

        Leveraging successful practices from the Learn to Earn pilot would create targeted career pathways, aligned education, training and proactive coaching to develop and expand partnerships with local workforce organizations in low-income communities of color.

        Continuing to increase the recruitment efforts of competitive Latino candidates from outside state government into leadership roles that become available and pursuing a greater number of Latino candidates for appointments onto state Boards and Commissions will intentionally increase the number of Latinos in leadership and executive positions.

        Investing in leadership talent development programs such as New Manager Program and the Senior Leader Development program increase the pipeline of Latino employees who are increasingly ready for next-level promotions.

        Working together with the diverse professional associations and the private sector on innovative ways in which Latino candidates are recruited and selected for top executive and leadership roles will also advance the community across all sectors.

        Using the Administration’s Open for Business initiative, Latino-owned businesses would benefit from a targeted strategy and approach to increase participating such as utilizing the innovative procurement diversity and inclusion methodology introduced in recent years by Massachusetts Port Authority (Massport), pilot programs can be incubated within Open for Business to grow and scale the participation of Latino owned businesses.

        Since taking office, the Baker-Polito Administration has increased the state’s supplier diversity benchmarks for spending with Minority Business Enterprises (MBEs) and can work towards continuing to do so.

        The Supplier Diversity Annual Report that summarizes compliance and audit activities on various components of the Massachusetts Supplier Diversity Program, including the supplier diversity commitments by state contractors and vendors can highlight a specific section for Latino-owned businesses.

        In order to grow competitiveness, the efforts of the Massachusetts Office of Business Development, as well as public private partnerships, to promote and increase resources that enable Latino owned businesses to grow and thrive by building capacity and providing access to capital and technical support though programs such as the Community Development Capital Program, Small Business Technical Assistance Grant Program and Massachusetts Small Business Development Centers can be leveraged.

        Increasing the collaboration between state agencies and business support organizations would increase targeted outreach to ensure that Latino owned businesses are aware of the various business tools and resources that are available for their region or in their business sectors.

        Creating opportunities for Latino owned businesses to increase their social and business networks, which can then be leveraged to support greater business partnerships could be convened by larger Latino owned business and/or established business resource organizations, such as small business development centers and chambers of commerce in various regions of the state.


Priority: Continue to make Massachusetts welcoming for immigrants: The Commission recommends improving and expanding English for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) programs, expediting reciprocity parameters for cross-state and international professional licenses and assisting eligible immigrants in applying for citizenship and offering financial literacy training for immigrant families.

        Expanding ESOL capacity and strengthening incentives for adult basic education providers will help to develop career pathways with integrated instruction, including expanded after-hours access to local vocational-technical schools.

        Promoting the administration’s Workforce Training Fund and Workforce Competitiveness Trust Fund use of grants with employers can help to provide ESOL to existing or potential employees as part of workforce professional development best practices.

        Considering increased resources for accelerated English language programs targeting foreign professionals seeking licensure.

        Building on initiatives of the Executive Office of Housing & Economic Development (EOHED), it is possible to review and consider alternative options for professional licensing to meet increasing employer demand for experienced workers.

        Leveraging the coordination between the state’s Division of Professional Licensure to seek greater alignment can more effectively explore and promote reciprocity parameters and standards.

        Promoting existing partnerships and collaborations between training providers, higher education institutions and private employers can identify opportunities to increase the volume of cross-state and international reciprocity agreements for licensure or credentialing.

        Building on strategies that include communication and coordination with national and international accrediting entities can create more robust databases of information related to licensing and standards. 

        The Massachusetts Office for Refugees and Immigrants’ (ORI) network of Citizenship for New Americans Program (CNAP) service providers will identify outreach strategies to engage eligible Latino immigrants for  help applying for citizenship.

        ORI will work to encourage financial institutions and other subject matter experts to offer linguistically and culturally appropriate financial literacy training to Latino immigrants.

The Commission will further partner with the Baker-Polito Administration as implementation gets underway for this set of priorities and recommendations. It will receive updates on implementation plans and offer feedback and input at future meetings. The Commission is tasked with delivering a report with various recommendations on each of three selected priorities that promote the Latino community’s economic prosperity & well-being every two years and will provide another set of priorities and recommendations in 2019-2020 with focus on other prominent topics that may include health care, housing and public safety.

Members of the Commission include gubernatorial appointees with varying roles in many community, professional and non-profit organizations and represent a group diverse in gender, race, industry, region, age and education. The Commission is tasked with delivering a report with various recommendations on each of three selected priorities that promote the Latino community’s economic prosperity & well-being every two  years.

哈佛貧富學生人數懸殊 1:23


               (Boston Orange 整理報導)哈佛校園內絕大多數學生都是有錢人家子弟,貧富學生比率是123
             在週一的哈佛錄取新生做法審訊會上,發表證詞的人對於彌平這巨大經濟落差的最好方法,卻有極不同的意見。
             審訊的中心點是哈佛大學在招生時,是否使用了平權運動來歧視亞裔學生。
              但經常的,彷彿是哈佛的巨富及權貴也在受審訊。
            在討論哈佛高達39億美元,比許多國家國內生產總值還多的捐款贈金時,美國地區法官Allison Burroughs在週一(1022)說,讓我們就說哈佛很富裕吧!”,在法庭內引來哄堂大笑。
成就高,收入低,經常是他們家中第一個上大學的學生們,對於他們的屬於這所精英學校,有掙扎感。
激進世紀基金會(progressive Century Foundation)智庫的學者Richard Kahlenberg表示,如果哈佛廢除它給富裕及關係好學生的優先權,哈佛是可以採用不計族裔錄取方式,來達到族裔及經濟多元化的。
Richard Kahlenberg 是一名基於社會經濟因素,而非族裔平權運動的長期支持者。他在週一時說,哈佛大學在增加校園內低收入學生人數上,可以做得更多些。
他說,只談族裔的話,哈佛在達到多元化上,做得很好,但哈佛卻極為缺乏社會經濟上的多元化。
在哈佛大學教授Raj Chetty2017年報告中,只有3%的哈佛學生來自五個收入階層中的最底層,而來自收入最高層家庭的學生則有70%
換句話說,哈佛學生中,富裕的是低收入的23倍。
他認為哈佛應該採取族裔中立的錄取標準,並給低收入學生更多權重考量。
他也建議哈佛大學放棄給那些家長是哈佛大學畢業,和捐贈者或哈佛員工有關係申請者的優先考量,並廢除對那些上了資源豐富,有輔導員教導畢業班學生如何在更小範圍內競爭的學生們更有利的提早錄取做法。
他說,結果會是,被定義為家庭收入在八萬元或以下,處於不利情況下學生的在哈佛校園內比率,從現有的17%增加到54%。哈佛仍然會保有其優秀的學術標準。
Richard Kahlenberg的模式下,白人學生的比率會保持,校園內亞裔,西班牙裔學生的數目會略為增加,不過,非洲裔學生的數目會從14%降至10%
哈佛人員質疑這樣的交換。
代表哈佛的律師李威鳳(William Lee)說,在你的族裔中立替代方案中承受壓力的種族群體是非洲裔美國人學生
李威鳳辯稱,哈佛調查過種族中立的替代方案,但未能符合哈佛吸引最優秀,最多元化學生的教育目標
大約10年前,哈佛取消了提早錄取做法。那是一個無約束力,學生可在11月申請,並在12月中得到錄取許可的選擇做法。但只有幾所大學跟著這麼做。
哈佛人員說,然後哈佛失去了學業表現好的學生,包括非常好的黑人及拉丁裔申請者,都去了其他學校。最後哈佛又開始辦理提早錄取。
週一時,哈佛人員為學校在吸引中低收入學生上做辯護。
李威鳳表示,哈佛不為包括亞裔申請者在內的中等收入家庭學生提供優惠或提示。他指出,家庭年收入在65000元以下者,哈佛大學不需要他們繳付任何學費,食宿費。
不過,哈佛自己的數據顯示,該校給低收入學生的優惠,遠遠不及它給運動員或校友小孩的優惠。
從上週開始的這整個審訊,哈佛一直為它的偏好校友或捐贈者親戚做辯護,辯稱他們創造了一個活潑的社區,確保大學有足夠的錢來為低收入學生提供財務援助。
由於族裔意識的錄取辦法已受到越來越多攻擊,在大眾中的受歡迎度也下跌,支持社會經濟平權行動的運動,已在美國得到更多支持。
包括加州,密西根州(Michigan)和華盛頓州等幾個州,已在公立高等教育界採取禁止有種族意識的招生做法。那逼使它們用其他因素來達到多元化,包括經濟變數。
1996年就禁止以族裔意識錄取學生的加州,這做法有著混合性結果。
在公立學校系統中競爭最激烈的學校,加州大學柏克萊分校和洛杉磯分校,就見到黑人及拉丁裔學生的最大幅度下跌,再也沒回到禁止之前的程度。
根據加州大學洛杉磯分校的民權項目研究,競爭比較沒那麼激烈的學校,則回到了禁止之前的程度,但沒法跟上州內拉丁裔人口遽增的幅度。
從加州公立高中畢業和註冊進入公立大學的拉丁裔學生比率,差距更大了,從1995年的14%,增加到2014年的24%
週一時, Kahlenberg仍然質疑哈佛大學是否應該探討全面族裔中立的招生辦法替代方案。多年來,最高法院縮窄了大學入學許可使用族裔的範圍。學校仍然可以使用族裔,作為錄取學生的挑選因素之一,但他們也必須展示沒有其他方法來達到多元化。

Governor Baker Signs Supplemental Budget Bill, Investing New Funding in School Safety, Local Infrastructure

Governor Baker Signs Supplemental Budget Bill, Investing New Funding in School Safety, Local Infrastructure
Includes deposit to Stabilization Fund which will result in largest balance in a decade

BOSTON – Today, Governor Charlie Baker signed a supplemental budget for Fiscal Year 2018 (FY18) that includes new investments in education and communities, while making a significant deposit into the state’s Stabilization Fund, bringing the balance to more than $2 billion for the first time since 2008.

“This bill will invest additional resources to address the mental health needs of students and make important upgrades to school infrastructure,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “Since taking office, we have worked with the Legislature to protect and rebuild the state’s reserves, and I am pleased that this supplemental budget will also result in us nearly doubling the Rainy Day Fund over the past four years.”

“This bill will provide additional support to our partners in the Commonwealth’s cities and towns to address their security, education and infrastructure needs,” said Lt. Governor Karyn Polito. “We are thankful to the Legislature for passing a supplemental budget that invests the surplus funds from Fiscal Year 2018 in a responsible and meaningful way.”

The bill dedicates $20.7 million in new education support, including funding for two programs to enhance school safety first proposed by Governor Baker in July. Under the supplemental budget, K-12 public schools will receive $7.5 million in grants to invest in security-related infrastructure upgrades and $7.5 million for grants to public schools to hire additional mental health and behavioral health specialists. The budget also includes $5 million for targeted intervention and turnaround efforts aimed at closing achievement gaps in districts with high concentrations of low-income students.

The budget provides $70 million in overall infrastructure spending, including $40 million in grants to cities and towns for local road and bridge improvements and $10 million for clean drinking water projects. The budget also funds a new State Police class and a new class of Department of Correction officers, as well as a $10 million gun violence prevention initiative.

The bill authorizes $541 million in supplemental appropriations overall. It results in a deposit of approximately $220 million into the Stabilization Fund, bringing the fund balance at the close of FY18 to just over $2 billion, or nearly double the balance when the Baker-Polito Administration took office.

The Fiscal Year 2019 budget anticipates an additional $368 million deposit into reserves which, along with interest and other expected transfers, would bring the projected balance at the end of the current fiscal year to approximately $2.4 billion.

“The Baker-Polito Administration has worked in a disciplined way with our partners in the Legislature to put the state on solid fiscal footing, while funding targeted new initiatives that improve services for the people of Massachusetts,” said Administration and Finance Secretary Michael J. Heffernan. “This supplemental budget marks an important achievement, restoring the balance of the Stabilization Fund to more than $2 billion for the first time since 2008.”

A $10 million appropriation included in the budget will fund a reserve to be used to advance costs incurred by the Commonwealth as it responds to the recent natural gas explosions in the Merrimack Valley.      

Other budget highlights:

<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$101 million to fund collective bargaining agreements
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$33 million for snow and ice removal costs in FY18
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$20 million for underground storage tank removal
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$10 million transfer to the Life Sciences Investment Fund
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$10 million transfer to the Community Preservation Act Trust Fund
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$5 million in transitional housing assistance for hurricane evacuees from Puerto Rico
<![if !supportLists]>        <![endif]>$700,000 for tuition and fee waivers for children who turned 18 while in the care of the Department of Children and Families (DCF) and enroll in college, and to children who have been adopted from DCF

The bill also includes changes necessary for the successful implementation of the new paid family and medical leave law and the law establishing an annual sales tax holiday, as well as state tax law changes necessitated by the enactment of the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act.

Governor Baker signed 66 outside sections while returning four with amendment, including several amendments that are necessary to close the FY18 books completely.

Northeastern University and Middlesex Community College to Offer Scholarships to Students Studying Biotechnology

Northeastern University and Middlesex Community College to Offer Scholarships to Students Studying Biotechnology
National Science Foundation Awards $4.4 Million in Scholarships for Associates to Masters’ Degree Program

BOSTON – Governor Charlie Baker and Lt. Governor Karyn Polito joined the college presidents of Northeastern University and Middlesex Community College today to announce a $4.4 million grant from the National Science Foundation that will provide scholarships to low-income students studying biotechnology.

The scholarships will be awarded to low-income and under-represented minority students who will participate in an associates to masters’ degree accelerated program in biotechnology. Northeastern University and Middlesex Community College are partners in this initiative, known as “A2M.” Over the next five years, more than 500 scholarships will be awarded to academically-talented biotechnology students across three degree levels who are in the A2M pathway. Students will gain research experience, mentoring from industry leaders, specialized academic advising and tailored academic and career support.

“Students who are able to take advantage of this associates to masters’ opportunity will be prepared for success in the region’s biotech industry through paid internships, research experience, and other career opportunities,” said Governor Charlie Baker. “The partnership between Northeastern University and Middlesex Community College is an exciting and creative way to provide students an affordable path to a degree.”

The announcement was one of hundreds of events taking place across the state as part of the inaugural STEM Week, and exemplifies how public and private partners are working creatively to give students more opportunities to become engaged in STEM fields. Northeastern and Middlesex Community College partner with biotech companies, like Vertex Pharmaceuticals, Pfizer, Novartis, Shire, the MassBioEd Foundation, and the Mass Life Sciences Center, to provide students with paid internships.

“We are thankful to those companies that support Northeastern and Middlesex Community College in this program, and make it meaningful for students with workplace opportunities, hands-on research, and mentoring by professionals in the industry,” Lt. Governor Karyn Polito said.

Governor Baker and Lt. Governor Polito were joined by U.S. Representative Joseph P. Kennedy III and Vertex CEO Dr. Jeffrey Leiden for the announcement at Northeastern University, as well as Mass Life Sciences Center President and CEO Travis McCready. Both Congressman Kennedy and Dr. Leiden co-chair the Massachusetts STEM Advisory Council along with the Lt. Governor.

“This partnership that will give so many young people an opportunity to build successful careers in one of the Commonwealth’s fastest growing industries,” Education Secretary James Peyser said.“The scholarships for the associates to masters’ degree pathway will make degree obtainment so much more affordable for low-income students, helping to diversify the future biotechnology workforce.”

Younger people and minority individuals make up an increasing portion of the overall workforce, but the demographics of STEM fields have remained largely the same.

“I am delighted to see this collaboration between Northeastern and Middlesex, giving students a clear pathway from an associate degree to master’s in a STEM field rich with opportunities,” Higher Education Commissioner Carlos E. Santiago said. “This is exactly the type of initiative that is needed to diversity the talent in the biotech industry.”

“As we continue to support the development of the life sciences ecosystem in Massachusetts, we are committed to investing in the next generation of scientists, engineers, and entrepreneurs,” said MLSC President & CEO Travis McCready. “Our ecosystem will only grow through collaborative efforts to create more opportunities for underrepresented student populations to succeed and thrive in the life sciences. Northeastern’s new degree pathway is an innovative approach to making sure this happens.”
“At Northeastern, we are committed to meeting learners wherever they are in their educational journey,” said Joseph E. Aoun, President of Northeastern University. “This includes creating innovative pathways for adult learners of all backgrounds to pursue careers in biotechnology. I want to thank Governor Baker, Dr. Cordova, and President Mabry for their vision and their leadership. By joining forces, we are providing valuable educational opportunities and renewing a fundamental social compact.”

“Middlesex enjoys an excellent relationship with Northeastern and ‘A2M’ strengthens this special partnership,” said Middlesex Community College President James C. Mabry. “Enrollments in our biotechnology programs have increased by 87 percent since 2005, and we offer the enhanced training our Commonwealth industry partners have identified. MCC graduates are well-prepared to continue on to earn bachelors and master’s degrees via this exciting new pathway program.”

Middlesex Community College’s biotechnology program was the first community college biotech program in the state, established in 1990. It is highly respected and holds a Platinum endorsement – the highest rating – from the Massachusetts Life Science Education Consortium. 

Northeastern is a global research university built on a tradition of engagement with the world, creating a distinctive experiential approach to learning and discovery. The university offers a comprehensive range of undergraduate and graduate programs leading to degrees through the doctorate in nine colleges and schools, and select advanced degrees at campuses in Charlotte, N.C., Seattle, Silicon Valley, and Toronto.

The National Science Foundation Scholarships in science, technology, engineering and mathematics addresses the need for a high-quality STEM workforce and for the increased success of low-income, academically talented students with demonstrated financial need who are pursuing associate, baccalaureate, or graduate degrees in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.