Rochester: Bringing leadership insights to the classroom

by Kara Kane on March 2, 2010

pat_seischabAfter a career as an organizational development manager, Pat Seischab embarked on a new challenge: teaching adult students at Medaille’s Rochester Campus. “After 25 years of corporate work and consulting experiences, I developed insights in change management, process improvement, leadership and adult learning that I now bring to the classroom,” Seischab says.

From her organizational development background, Seischab offers, “I know you must accept people where they are and not where you would like them to be.” Bringing that concept into the courses she teaches in Rochester many evenings, she regularly customizes class activities to the learning needs of students, working to maintain academic standards and to meet individual learning needs.

In the past, prospective students have asked Seischab, “Why should I go back to school to get a degree?” Her answer is simple, and informed by her own experience. “To anyone considering going back to school, I say ‘do it!’ I was 39 when I went to graduate school, and I always tell students how much easier it is to return to school as an adult now than it was years ago.” Adult students who have looked at other colleges in the Rochester area may think there are no other options besides the traditional college experience of a campus with lots of buildings, daytime classes, and activities that are designed to appeal to the typical 18-year-old freshman.

According to Seischab, “Most students don’t realize the types of accommodations made by Medaille for non-traditional students returning for a degree.” The path to a degree begins with a personalized admissions and registration process, where student services staff assist with financial aid and course registration. From there, classes are held in a cohort structure, meaning that students travel with the same group of classmates for each class. With evening classes and coursework that can be immediately applied to one’s own work, students do not have to wait to complete the degree before seeing direct benefits to their professional career.

Bringing leadership insights to the classroom“Medaille students share a strong desire to make a better life, and that’s why our faculty works so well with our students,” Seischab says. “We are highly motivated to use our knowledge to help our students get ahead.”
She continues: “Medaille students leave with self-confidence in their ability to achieve, and that self-confidence fuels a positive attitude. A positive attitude, self-confidence and a degree in business are a powerful combination.”

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