Two Great Colleges, One Great Partnership: RLC, SIC to continue Alliance Agreement for the next decade
News Archive
2 Minute Read

Two Great Colleges, One Great Partnership: RLC, SIC to continue Alliance Agreement for the next decade

October 27, 2021

 rlc sic partnershipnew

 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

HARRISBURG, Ill. (Oct. 25, 2021) - Southeastern Illinois College and Rend Lake College have for a decade now fostered a relationship built on honesty and transparency to serve students on both campuses and share valuable resources.

Both boards recently approved a new Alliance Agreement that outlines clear and regular communication channels and goals to continue their sharing agreement well into the next decade.

SIC President Dr. Jonah Rice said the relationship began early in his tenure with RLC President Terry Wilkerson who was brand-new. RLC needed a Spanish teacher and SIC had one who also taught in another discipline. From there, the sharing relationship grew.

“I credit Terry (Wilkerson) for reaching out in a genuine and honest way, and that’s how this partnership began,” said Rice.

Both colleges developed a curriculum for oil and gas shortly thereafter but since that industry never took off, the colleges didn’t give up. Together, they have shared programs like the veterinary assistant program at SIC’s Carmi Center, nearer to RLC’s district. That program has been ongoing for five years.
SIC also uses the talents of the RLC maintenance personnel for some projects at the college.

Rice and Wilkerson said the alliance is more than a consortium as a college consortium is usually restricted to just a few programs. The alliance puts everything on the table.

Just recently the two colleges decided to share a full-time grants writer. It’s an efficient way to meet the needs of both institutions and maximize local funds for serving students.

SIC and RLC have also shared programs and courses including history, sociology, math, physics, massage therapy, and agriculture, among others. The choirs at both colleges regularly combine their talents for joint concerts. In fact, the music instructors from each college came to administrators to propose sharing music theory in alternating ways to increase enrollment and share teaching the majors courses.

“That’s valuable innovation from the ground up initiated by faculty,” said Wilkerson.

As colleges and universities face a declining high school population nationwide, particularly in the Midwest, such agreements are growing.

“The sooner college leaders recognize that yesterday is gone and tomorrow is all about collaboration in a new era of higher education, the sooner their colleges will become more stable and still offer a wide variety of disciplines and training that can’t be done without partnerships,” said Rice.

The colleges have aligned academic calendars, learning management systems, and they are exploring a common administrative software system to make sharing and tracking data at an administrative level much easier.

College faculty have been at the table and have seen that no positions have been eliminated and in fact, instructors have had overload possibilities, meaning extra pay, and saving small enrollment courses that would have otherwise probably been canceled.

Both leaders say the process is transparent and non-punitive in approach. When someone retires in a discipline with smaller enrollment in particular, or someone leaves in an operational area, for instance, then if the sister college can offer those courses or services, it’s a win-win-win for students, instructors, and the colleges in general.

With this latest agreement, the boards and leadership plan to meet periodically to look for more mutually beneficial opportunities of intersection.

“The relationship we are building is strong and fluid,” said Wilkerson. “It’s based on need, trust, mutual respect and preserving the individuality of our institutions.”

Wilkerson and Rice have both presented at multiple conventions over the years including both the Association of Community College Trustees and the Higher Learning Commission about their work together and have become recognized leaders in collaborative services among community colleges through a variety of creative agreements and processes.

#

Release by joint effort of RLC and SIC. 

Terry Wilkerson Portrait 2020 m                     SIC President Dr. Jonah Rice

Pictured: RLC President Terry Wilkerson and SIC President Dr. Jonah Rice (Click images for printable photos)


{loadposition like-share}

{loadposition contacts}

Recent RLC News

View recent, similar Rend Lake College articles below

News Archive

Tickets on sale for Father of The Bride

Tickets are now on sale for the RLC Theatre Fall Play, "Father of the Bride," a story about the chaos, frayed nerves and ultimate happy endings of planning and pulling off a...

News Archive

Rend Lake College Murphy-Wall Pinckneyville Campus Celebrates 20 Years

PINCKNEYVILLE, Ill. (December 2, 2022) — The Rend Lake College Murphy-Wall Pinckneyville Campus, a Perry County extension of the Rend Lake College main campus in Ina,...

Rlc News

Rend Lake College to Celebrate 20 Years at Murphy-Wall Pinckneyville Campus

INA, Ill. (November 23, 2022) — Rend Lake College is celebrating its 20-year anniversary of the Murphy-Wall Pinckneyville Campus on November 30 at 2 pm at the Pinckneyville...