Skip to Main Content
Menu
Roane State Community CollegeRoane State Community College

Roane State Community College

News
  1. RSCC HomeRSCC Home
  2. About Roane State
  3. Public Relations
  4. News
Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now! Register for online or traditional classes.Move Forward. Don't delay your future! Apply now!. Register for online or traditional classes.
Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.Tennessee Reconnect and Promise. Graduating high school seniors can attend tuition-free. Free tuition for adults.
Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.Online degrees available. Online education gives you flexibility to take classes that fit your schedule.

News: Tennessee’s community and technical colleges honor veterans

NASHVILLE (Nov. 9, 2022) – Tennessee’s community and technical colleges are honoring veterans on their campuses – students, faculty, staff and alumni – in Veterans Day activities this week. One veteran at each college will be awarded the Chancellor’s Commendation for Military Veterans, a special recognition launched three years ago by Tennessee Board of Regents Chancellor Flora W. Tydings.

The 39 Chancellor’s Commendation honorees for 2022 include 14 students, 14 faculty members and 11 college staff members who served in the military. Eighteen recipients served in the Army, eight in the Marine Corps, eight in the Navy, three in the Air Force, one in the Coast Guard and one in the National Guard.

Chancellor’s Commendation for Military Veterans Challenge Coin

The Chancellor’s Commendation is conferred in the form of a specially commissioned challenge coin featuring the military branches on one side and the Chancellor’s Commendation designation on the other. Challenge coins have a long tradition in all military branches, awarded by commanders in recognition of special achievement, excellence, hard work, unit pride, respect and esprit de corps.

The honorees are nominated by their college president. Presidents may nominate a student, member of the faculty or staff, or an alumnus who are veterans or active-service members and who exemplify characteristics of honor, courage, commitment, integrity, duty, respect, discipline and sacrifice. Presidents describe how their nominees demonstrate those traits and how they embody values of the College System of Tennessee, such as commitment to student success, service to campus and community, courage in adversity, and academic excellence.

“Our college communities are strengthened by the presence of veterans and active-duty personnel – as students, faculty, staff and alumni,” Dr. Tydings said. “They – and the experience and perspective they bring – are an important part of the broad diversity of people and backgrounds on our campuses that benefits everyone.

“We are committed to serving them as they served our country. It’s a privilege to honor them, not only on Veterans Day but all year. I thank our presidents, our faculty and our entire campus communities for their work in ensuring that veterans are served and welcomed,” the chancellor said.

That commitment is underscored by the system’s active participation in the state’s VETS Campus program. All 13 community colleges in the system are now certified VETS Campuses, which means they prioritize outreach to veterans, allocate resources for their successful transition from military service to college, and successfully deliver services that create a supportive environment where student veterans can prosper while pursuing their education.

Two of the system’s technical colleges – the Tennessee Colleges of Applied Technology at Chattanooga and Dickson – have also earned VETS Campus certification, and the others are working toward earning certification, said Dr. Robert M. Denn, TBR associate vice chancellor and veterans services officer.

The VETS Campus program was established by the Tennessee Veterans Education Transition Support (VETS) Act enacted by the Tennessee General Assembly in 2014. The statute details a rigorous set of seven requirements that colleges and universities must meet to earn VETS Campus certification. The Tennessee Higher Education Commission administers the program, awards the certifications and annually reviews compliance with the requirements.

Requirements for VETS Campus certification include mentoring and support programs for student veterans; creating and maintaining a process for assessing prior learning that grants academic credit to veterans for transferable training and experience attained through their military service; conducting annual surveys of student veterans’ views, needs, issues and suggestions, providing special orientation programs for student veterans, and more.

The 2022 Chancellor’s Commendation for Military Veterans honorees, their association with the college, and their military branches are:

COMMUNITY COLLEGES:

TENNESSEE COLLEGES OF APPLIED TECHNOLOGY:

Information on resources for veterans interested in pursuing their education, including the complete list of approved VETS Campuses, is available at https://www.tn.gov/thec/veteran.html

Additional information on financial assistance, academic credit for military training and experience and other resources for veterans is available at https://www.tbr.edu/student-success/veterans-and-military-families-support

Connect with us

Twitter / XFacebookInstagramThreadsYoutube
© Roane State Community College

Roane State Community College does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, creed, ethnicity or national origin, sex, disability, age, status as protected veteran or any other class protected by Federal or State laws and regulation and by Tennessee board of Regents policies with respect to employment, programs, and activities.​​​​​​​ View full non-discrimination policy.

Tennessee's Community Colleges

Report Fraud, Waste and Abuse

Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998