Gaye Lynn Scott Ed.D | VC of Academic Affairs

Welcome to the Vice Chancellor Academic Affairs Blog


Recent Blog Post

A vertical photograph of a brick wall inside the Rock Art Enclosures at the Apartheid Museum. The wall features several dark, raised handprints of varying sizes positioned at different heights. Below the handprints, the words "WE ARE THINKERS" are inscribed in blue capital letters. Natural light shines down from an opening in the ceiling above.
  • South Africans in Six Descriptors

    Having arrived home from South Africa on April 11, I have taken some time to try to process our experiences in Johannesburg and Cape Town.  One of the most difficult, distressing, and uplifting museums that we visited in Johannesburg was the Apartheid Museum.  When you enter you are given a ticket that randomly classifies you

    Continue Reading >>

Latest Blog Posts

  • Sand image

    SACS Has Left! SACS Has Left!

    We did it. After two plus years of planning, writing, rewriting, conducting surveys, pulling faculty rosters, double- and triple-checking faculty credentials and documentation, pulling data, organizing mock interviews, scheduling visits to five high schools and three campuses, organizing last-minute interview requests from the 5th Year Compliance Report visiting team after they arrived – and a

    Continue Reading >>

  • Sand image

    SACS Is Coming! SACS Is Coming!

    A team from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges (SACSCOC) will be visiting ACC next week (September 17th through the 19th).  The team will be visiting with faculty, staff, and students at our Highland Campus, Hays Campus, and Elgin Campus.  They will also visit five high schools in our service area

    Continue Reading >>

  • Sand image

    A Day in the Life of an AVP – the August Edition

    “Woke up, fell out of bed, dragged a comb across my head . . .” (Lennon/McCartney, A Day in the Life) Many folks wonder what administrators do all day – there is a perception amongst some that we are superfluous.  While that’s a different conversation (!), I thought I would offer up a sample of

    Continue Reading >>

Past Blog Posts

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This