The Welcome Bags include a mask, hand sanitizer, and treats!
While supplies last
One per student please
STUDENT ID UPDATE!
Students you will soon be able to upload your own photo for a new mobile NWTC student ID, available on any smart phone device. This will replace the traditional printed cards.
New students will be receiving an email with instructions.
Mobile student ID’s will automatically be created for returning NWTC students if they have an existing photo on file.
Currently enrolled, returning students without a photo on file will be sent reminders to upload a photo.
When available, you'll have access to your mobile student ID, found within your my.NWTC student portal under "Resources".
If you do not have a smart phone and require a physical student ID card please contact student.involvement@nwtc.edu or call 920-498-5483.
It's still summer in Wisconsin!
Why not transform concrete into vibrant colors
and works of art, with the chance to win an eGift Card?
Enter a photo of your chalk art below.
Challenge runs 8/16 - 8/24. Winners will be notified by 8/26.
Join us for this 16 week series as we explore the 8 dimensions of wellness. Every other Wednesday we will ‘explore’ how each dimension affects your own individual wellness. This series will help you understand how they are all interconnected so you can form a more well rounded and balanced lifestyle.
August 19 Explore
Social Wellness
Read this articleand answer all questions correctly in this QUIZ. You'll be entered in a drawing to win a $68 gift card to book your own Board & Brush session with your friends/family.
Learn about all the FREE services available to YOU during the
Virtual Resource Fair!
Coming Soon! Watch your email.
Publish Date: Monday, August 24
Join the Live WebEx Sessions:
Thursday, August 27 | 11:30am - 12:30pm | Eagle Hour
Once you're signed up we'll be sending you more details, your BINGO card, and a link to join the game on Tuesday, 8/25.
A Peace of My Mind: "I Can Hear the Streets Talking"
In the days immediately after George Floyd was killed by police in Minneapolis, famed photographer John Noltner took a portable studio to the intersection of 38th and Chicago, the site where it all happened. John simply asked demonstrators, "What do you want to say?" Over several days, he gathered 50 portraits and responses. Eventually, projecting the images 20' x 30' on the exterior of a church a few blocks to the north in a public art display.
John Lewis and Bryan Stevenson TED Legacy Project | November 2019
Civil rights leader and longtime US congressman John Lewis spent his life fighting for freedom and justice for everyone. In this illuminating conversation with lawyer and activist Bryan Stevenson, Lewis discusses the essential importance of voting, shares encouraging words of wisdom for the generation of young people currently organizing in the struggle for racial justice and tells moving stories from his decades of making "good trouble"...