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'''Mark W. Rocha''' (born August 29, 1953) in the [[Bronx, New York]]. Rocha, a past recipient of the [[Fulbright Fellowship|J. William Fulbright Fellowship]], an English teacher, and Literature aficionado. He is one of the former president of [[Pasadena City College]].
'''Mark W. Rocha''' (born August 29, 1953) in the [[Bronx, New York]]. Rocha, a past recipient of the [[Fulbright Fellowship|J. William Fulbright Fellowship]], an English teacher, and Literature aficionado. He is the president of [[Pasadena City College]].


== Early life and Career ==
== Early life and Career ==


Rocha was raised in the [[Bronx, New York]]<ref name="Early life">{{Citation | title=High Beam | url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-2522669461.html}}</ref>. Rocha is one of three brothers. His father, William,a native of Columbia, was the first in his family to receive a college degree<ref name="Hispanic Outlook">{{Citation | title=Mark Rocha, President, Pasadena City College,A Passion For Universal Access to Education, Hispanic Outlook | url=https://www.wdhstore.com/hispanic/data/pdf/nov14-mark.pdf}}</ref>. He earned his bachelors degree in English from [[Villanova University]] in 1975<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>, his master's degree from [[California State University, Fullerton]]<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>, and Ph.D in English from the [[University of Southern California]]<ref name="University of Southern California Alumni News">{{Citation | title=University of Southern California Alumni | url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/pubrel/trojan_family/spring02/alumninews/alumninews2.html}}</ref>. His scholarly work is in the field of American drama and theater and includes numerous articles on the playwright [[August Wilson]]<ref>{{Citation | title=Bloomberg Businessweek | url=http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=28871981&privcapId=6182854&previousCapId=26503&previousTitle=VERMILLION%20INC}}</ref>. In 1994, Rocha was awarded a ''[[Fulbright Fellowship]]'' and taught for a year in [[Caracas, Venezuela]] at the [[Universidad Simon Bolivar]].
Rocha was raised in the [[Bronx, New York]]<ref name="Early life">{{Citation | title=High Beam | url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-2522669461.html}}</ref>. Rocha is one of three brothers. His father, William,a native of Columbia, was the first in his family to receive a college degree<ref name="Hispanic Outlook">{{Citation | title=Mark Rocha, President, Pasadena City College,A Passion For Universal Access to Education, Hispanic Outlook | url=https://www.wdhstore.com/hispanic/data/pdf/nov14-mark.pdf}}</ref>. He earned his bachelors degree in English from [[Villanova University]] in 1975<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>, his master's degree from [[California State University, Fullerton]]<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>, and Ph.D in English from the [[University of Southern California]]<ref name="University of Southern California Alumni News">{{Citation | title=University of Southern California Alumni | url=http://www.usc.edu/dept/pubrel/trojan_family/spring02/alumninews/alumninews2.html}}</ref>. In 1994, Rocha was awarded a ''[[Fulbright Fellowship]]'' and taught for a year in [[Caracas, Venezuela]] at the [[Universidad Simon Bolivar]]. His scholarly work focused on American Theater, including playwrights such as [[August Wilson]]<ref>{{Citation | title=Bloomberg Businessweek | url=http://investing.businessweek.com/research/stocks/private/person.asp?personId=28871981&privcapId=6182854&previousCapId=26503&previousTitle=VERMILLION%20INC}}</ref> and [[Tennessee Williams]]<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>.
During the 1970's, Rocha had the opportunity to work in the community college system<ref name=Hispanic Outlook"></ref>. Rocha served as president of [[West Los Angeles College]]. Under his leadership, [[West Los Angeles College]] was recognized by the [[Chronicle of Higher Education]] as one of the nation's "Great Colleges to Work For." In addition, West Los Angeles College had a majority minority, the largest minority of African-Americans in the California Community College system, and was one of the top transfer feeder schools to the Cal State system<ref name="Hispanic Outlook"></ref>

Rocha previously served as president of [[West Los Angeles College]]. Under his leadership, [[West Los Angeles College]] was recognized by the [[Chronicle of Higher Education]] as one of the nation's "Great Colleges to Work For."


At [[Pasadena City College]], Dr. Rocha has positioned [[Pasadena City College]] as a truly global community college for the 21st century. Under his leadership, [[Pasadena City College|PCC]] was recently recognized for its efforts to close the achievement gap, winning the 2012 State Chancellor's Award for Student Success for its innovate<ref name="pathways">{{Citation | title=First Year Experience Pathways Program | url=http://www.pasadena.edu/pathways/}}</ref> that has significantly increased student retention. Of the 2,000 community colleges in the United States, [[Pasadena City College]] is in the top 100 in every category for associate degrees awarded, and is ranked eighth in the nation as a "Veterans Friendly College" among all community colleges. The PCC Foundation<ref>[http://www.pasadena.edu/foundation/ PCC Foundation]</ref> has raised over $7 million in private donations for student scholarships and has awarded over $26 million in external grants. On Dr. Rocha's watch, associate degrees in [[STEM]] field have doubled and the college completed a state of the art facility, the PCC Center for the Arts, the capstone project of a $175 million bond construction program.
At [[Pasadena City College]], Dr. Rocha has positioned [[Pasadena City College]] as a truly global community college for the 21st century. Under his leadership, [[Pasadena City College|PCC]] was recently recognized for its efforts to close the achievement gap, winning the 2012 State Chancellor's Award for Student Success for its innovate<ref name="pathways">{{Citation | title=First Year Experience Pathways Program | url=http://www.pasadena.edu/pathways/}}</ref> that has significantly increased student retention. Of the 2,000 community colleges in the United States, [[Pasadena City College]] is in the top 100 in every category for associate degrees awarded, and is ranked eighth in the nation as a "Veterans Friendly College" among all community colleges. The PCC Foundation<ref>[http://www.pasadena.edu/foundation/ PCC Foundation]</ref> has raised over $7 million in private donations for student scholarships and has awarded over $26 million in external grants. On Dr. Rocha's watch, associate degrees in [[STEM]] field have doubled and the college completed a state of the art facility, the PCC Center for the Arts, the capstone project of a $175 million bond construction program.

Revision as of 01:09, 22 February 2014

Dr. Mark W. Rocha
Born (1953-08-29) August 29, 1953 (age 71)
Alma materBachelors, Villanova University
Master degree, California State University, Fullerton
Ph.D., University of Southern California
Occupation(s)President/Superintendent
Pasadena City College
SpouseNancy Rocha

Mark W. Rocha (born August 29, 1953) in the Bronx, New York. Rocha, a past recipient of the J. William Fulbright Fellowship, an English teacher, and Literature aficionado. He is the president of Pasadena City College.

Early life and Career

Rocha was raised in the Bronx, New York[1]. Rocha is one of three brothers. His father, William,a native of Columbia, was the first in his family to receive a college degree[2]. He earned his bachelors degree in English from Villanova University in 1975[2], his master's degree from California State University, Fullerton[2], and Ph.D in English from the University of Southern California[3]. In 1994, Rocha was awarded a Fulbright Fellowship and taught for a year in Caracas, Venezuela at the Universidad Simon Bolivar. His scholarly work focused on American Theater, including playwrights such as August Wilson[4] and Tennessee Williams[2]. During the 1970's, Rocha had the opportunity to work in the community college system[5]. Rocha served as president of West Los Angeles College. Under his leadership, West Los Angeles College was recognized by the Chronicle of Higher Education as one of the nation's "Great Colleges to Work For." In addition, West Los Angeles College had a majority minority, the largest minority of African-Americans in the California Community College system, and was one of the top transfer feeder schools to the Cal State system[2]

At Pasadena City College, Dr. Rocha has positioned Pasadena City College as a truly global community college for the 21st century. Under his leadership, PCC was recently recognized for its efforts to close the achievement gap, winning the 2012 State Chancellor's Award for Student Success for its innovate[6] that has significantly increased student retention. Of the 2,000 community colleges in the United States, Pasadena City College is in the top 100 in every category for associate degrees awarded, and is ranked eighth in the nation as a "Veterans Friendly College" among all community colleges. The PCC Foundation[7] has raised over $7 million in private donations for student scholarships and has awarded over $26 million in external grants. On Dr. Rocha's watch, associate degrees in STEM field have doubled and the college completed a state of the art facility, the PCC Center for the Arts, the capstone project of a $175 million bond construction program.

In 2012, the PACCD Board of Trustees extended Rocha's contract as PCC's superintendent-president, through the end of the 2016 academic yearCite error: The <ref> tag has too many names (see the help page)..

In January 2012, Rocha was interviewed by Brad Pomerance on a HLN special edition broadcast[8].

Personal life

Rocha resides in Pasadena with his wife Nancy. He is the father of two adult sons. An avid runner, Rocha has completed seven marathons, including the inaugural Pasadena Marathon in 2009.

References

  1. ^ High Beam
  2. ^ a b c d e Mark Rocha, President, Pasadena City College,A Passion For Universal Access to Education, Hispanic Outlook (PDF)
  3. ^ University of Southern California Alumni
  4. ^ Bloomberg Businessweek
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference Hispanic was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ First Year Experience Pathways Program
  7. ^ PCC Foundation
  8. ^ Dr. Mark W. Rocha on HLN. Firstpost.com