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News Release: 

Contact: Kathryn Reed, reedk@nccommunitycolleges.edu, 919-807-6975 or



Exchange program with Northern Ireland underway
Professor at Sandhills Community College first to participate


By Kathryn Reed, Summer Intern, System Office, Public Affairs


Denise Baker left the country to find the best of Northern Ireland and came home five weeks later with the best of the United States.

Baker, a professor of fine arts at Sandhills Community College, participated in an exchange program this spring in which she traded jobs with Jasper McKinney, head of the design and technology faculty at Northern Ireland’s Newry Institute.

The program, proposed by H. Martin Lancaster, president, North Carolina Community College System, was designed to allow faculty members to investigate the “best practices” that each school uses to prepare students for changing economies and careers. The exchange is the first in a multi-year, ongoing collaboration between the North Carolina’s community colleges and the equivalent colleges in the United Kingdom, especially Northern Ireland. Future collaborations will include student exchanges, joint research projects, formation of sister institutional agreements, and exchanges of seminar and forum speakers.

The Newry Institute is one of 16 schools comparable to American community colleges in Northern Ireland. The school has 22,000 full-time and part-time students and specializes in culinary arts, art, design and electronics. Newry is located between Belfast and Dublin in the eastern economic corridor of Ireland where most of the economic growth of the last ten years has taken place.

Before the program began, Baker asked friends, family, students and colleagues to send postcards to her while she was at NI to “see how many postcards can cross the Atlantic Ocean in 31 days.” McKinney made a similar request for postcards from friends and coworkers in Northern Ireland.

“It was blind faith,” Baker said. “When I did it I thought if I got 100 I would be lucky.”

Baker’s expectations were exceeded by leaps and bounds, however. She returned home with more than 850 postcards and the basis for a conceptual art project.

The traveling exhibit, which Baker titled “Invitation to Communicate” will unveil at Sandhills in 2007. The exhibit will display the postcards that Baker and McKinney received as well as materials exchanged between ten pairs of pen pals they arranged. The project will make a cultural comparison between both North Carolina and Northern Ireland and the United States and the European Union.

“Did I ever dream that it would come to this?” she said. “I just think it’s cool as heck.”

Baker explained that because places put their most appealing images on postcards, the project “highlights the best of North Carolina and the best of Northern Ireland.”

She said another aspect of the exhibit will be a focus on “a very intimate form of communication.”

“We’re the invisible generation,” she said. “All our communication is deletable. I feel that there’s going to be a void in history 200 years from now because we don’t leave anything behind.”

Baker hopes her exhibit will be displayed at community colleges throughout the state and then at NI.

McKinney echoed her enthusiasm for sharing their exchange experience with others. He said the exchange program is a positive link to the future and emphasized the importance of looking beyond borders for fresh approaches to challenges. Baker said the postcard project reflects this sense of participation and cooperation.

“It was a more inclusive exchange,” she said. “It was broader than just myself and Jasper.”


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