Tuesday, December 15, 2015

DESPITE TSC ACCREDITATION, LEWIS GOES, DEFECTIONS ON; MICROMANAGEMENT, LOWER EXPECTATIONS BLAMED

By Juan Montoya

Add Chet Lewis, President of Finance and Administration, as the latest high-profile administrator at the Texas Southmost College who is saying goodbye to the newly-independent community college.
Lewis is credited with holding the institution together as the community college struggled through its separation from University of Texas-Brownsville and sought its accreditation as an independent institution of higher education.
He has accepted a position with San Jacinto State College, sources say.
TSC president Lily Tercero announced that The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges this month awarded TSC accreditation.earlier this month.
She credited " a genuine team effort" for the accreditation. Tercero has been able to convince a majority of the TSC board to carry along Leonardo De la Garza, a consultant was also her former boss and who was supposed to advice her on getting accreditation for a proscribed period of time which has now stretched for almost three years.
That majority is composed of Kiko Rendon, Ed Rivera, Dr. Reynaldo Garcia and Art Rendon.
Tercero begins work as TSC president In this last budget year, that board's majority approved another $180,000 appropriation for De la Garza.
De la Garza was brought on board by TSC President Lily Tercero in the first year of her term to help with the "transition" between the UTB-TSC partnership and on the community college's accreditation as an independent entity.
"We have basically been paying for two board presidents," said a TSC staff member who recently left the community college after having endured the "extreme micromanagement" by Tercero and De la Garza.
"People who have left were discouraged because they love TSC and supported the community college through its painful separation process only to be treated with very little respect by Tercero," she said.
In particular, the former staffer said that the Nursing Progam administrator had confided to some colleagues that she had been urged by the administration to adopt polices that would lower the standards of the program, something that she had refused.
"When you only have 46 percent of the nursing students passing the certification, something is wrong," she said. Nora (Montlavo) was too much of a professional and couldn't get herself to do it."
When she announced that the SACSCOC had granted TSC accreditation, Tercero expressed her delight in the "short" time it had taken TSC to get it.
"It’s a huge accomplishment. And to do it in so short of a time as we did – people talk about teamwork, and this was a genuine team effort, starting with our Board of Trustees, our faculty, our students and our staff,” she said.
In fact, it was the third attempt that the college had made to get it. TSC had been turned away once and resubmitted the application again only to be told that there was missing data.
After it was turned down, TSC blamed the former UTB administration under Dr. Julieta Garcia for not providing them with the date required by the UT System. That required even longer time to generate the numbers needed for the application.
TSC and UTB had been accredited jointly by SACSCOC. The partnership between the two institutions was scheduled to end Aug. 31 with UTB becoming part of the new University of Texas Rio Grande Valley.
Because of the sanfus, the UT Board of Regents extended the educational partnership agreement between UTB and TSC for another year. This was done in order for TSC to hang on to its regional accreditation and continue offering classes until it received its own accreditation.
Tercero told the newspaper that TSC’s separate accreditation will now allow it to start creating new programs and give high school students the opportunity to earn up to 60 college credits, up from 27.
“We’re going to be able to move forward with paperwork that allows students to get 60 hours, so they can now get an associate’s degree, which is wonderful news for our community and all the students in all the high schools in our service area,” she said.
Meanwhile, just as proponents of the separation with TSC pointed out the dismal graduation numbers under Juliet Garcia at UTB-TSC, they now point to the graduation rates of an independent TSC and say it's headed in the wrong direction.
"When Texas State Technical College graduates 1,800 students and TSC graduated not even 300, and some of the instructors hired by the administration leave something to be desired, it's not a good omen of what's to come for our college," she said.
Many who have left were top notch educators in their fields who had a deep love for TSC. Now, as they see the Tercero administration with the support of a bare majority stumble to the future, they were discouraged and left, the former TSC staffer said (see graphic).
"Wee need a new vision to build the college," she said. "It's as if we were back to square 1 in 1991 when the partnership began. But it doesn't look like Tercero is leaving after all. Lewis didn't have to go. We could have given him what San Jacinto offered, but Tercero didn't and just let him go."
Trustee Adela Garza emailed us a comment on Lewis' departure for greener pastures.
"Good evening. Just read the blog concerning Chet. His leaving is very unfortunate for TSC and, in my opinion, could have been avoided. No TSC employee bled more for the institution in the past few years than Chet Lewis. His leaving should help the TSC Board finally recognize something is wrong at TSC. Thanks"

14 comments:

Anonymous said...

TSC can not give Lewis what San Jacinto offered because he is going to be a Vice-Chancellor at the San Jacinto Community College System level. TSC does not have a system with 30,000 students like San Jacinto, TSC is just one single taxing district without a Chancellor or any Vice-Chancellor. Congratulations Mr. Lewis on your move up.

Anonymous said...

Juan you have a way to turn a huge positive into a negative, Congratulations.

Anonymous said...

The board should put Adela in charge so she can fire Tercero for doing a good job. That is ISD thinking for you.

Anonymous said...

This is typical Valley stuff, instead of congratulating someone for successfully accomplishing the goals that were set, you crucify them because you do not like how they did it. Also typical Valley is that you are upset because someone improved their position. Remember that everyone can be replaced. Just because someone leaves, it is not the end of the world.

Anonymous said...

So SACS was more than ok with TSC's personnel situations but you being the expert think SACS is wrong and you say there is an issue with turnaround. I think I trust SACS's opinion over yours.

Anonymous said...

Please explain -- You have often complained of the low graduation rate of TSC students but you have never been specific as to why you think they are low. Is it due to poor teaching? Is it due to poorly prepared students coming from the Brownsville school system? Are the graduation standards unreasonable high? Should everyone be required to first take remedial classes before getting onto college level classes. Should the name be changed to Texas Southmost Middle School? Or should expectations be high and if students are unable to do the work they should fail, much like will happen when they go out into the real world and get fired when they are unable to do the job they were hired to do. I get that it is a junior college but there should be reasonable standards.

Anonymous said...

Only the ones working at the college can understand the micromanagement of this lunatic woman who thinks she can be Dr. Juliet Garcia. This woman is such a joke who uses intimidation and cheap techniques to control people.

Anonymous said...

We should fire Tercero, hire Patty Garza, then remove all the Board Members except for Adela and appoint her TSC Trustee for life. Adela and Patty Garza are the only people in Cameron County that have any sense. I only wish more people listened to visionaries like Adela Garza. Before you accuse me of being paid by Adela to write this, know that I paid Adela to allow me to write about her. I love Adela Garza. She deserves to be the first woman president of the United States and the first female Pope since Pope Joan. My ovaries are tingling just thinking about voting for her. Thank you Juan Montoya for fighting the good fight and giving Adela a platform to change minds and hearts.

No. One Fan

Anonymous said...

Yes, of course I agree with the comment above. I also paid Adela to allow me to write about her. It's only fitting that I do as she does. Adela should move to Washington DSC and become leader of the free world. I don't know where Washington DSC is but she obviously does because during her campaign that's where she told us she was going to represent us. Juan thank you so much for enlightening all of us and showing us the path forward. Vote for Adela!

Anonymous said...

I dream of a world where no one questions the motive of the chicken crossing the road.

Anonymous said...

TSC is nothing but grade 13 for victims of BISD. You have to leave Brownsville for a basic education.

Anonymous said...

All Hail !
Those who pass
Those who should
Fail


Anonymous said...

Inside Adele's brain:

Districts of Colombia (sic) >>

District sof Colombia >>>

DSC ..... (sick)

Anonymous said...

You are giving Adela way too much credit. She is about as bright as a 3 watt light bulb. All you have to do is listen to her campaign speeches on YouTube when she ran for US Congress. What an idiot.

rita