Danilowicz joins area college presidents for “Future of Talent Summit” panel
by Neil Harvey
March 12, 2024

߹ۿ President Bret Danilowicz joined the heads of several area colleges
                                 for a leadership panel discussion at the first Future of Talent Summit on March 7
                                 on Roanoke College’s campus.
The event was part of an ongoing initiative to cultivate and strengthen bonds among
                                 regional educators and industries and to unify the workforce and economic development
                                 efforts of higher education officials, employers and government agencies.
Across an hourlong dialogue, Danilowicz and four other presidents – Mirta Martin of
                                 Ferrum College, John Rainone of Mountain Gateway Community College, Robert Sandel
                                 of Virginia Western Community College and Frank Shushok of Roanoke College – addressed
                                 a host of central issues.
Chief among those: The need to help Virginia students develop into skilled workers;
                                 the best ways to connect them with viable employers and lucrative jobs; and the importance
                                 of retaining them locally.
The panel discussed incentives and advantages for students – internships, but also
                                 options including co-ops and micro-partnerships.
“We need to advocate for our businesses to stand up to make those opportunities for
                                 students who come here,” Danilowicz said. “And then they become the future leaders
                                 and industry members of this region.” 
Sandel also pointed to the wide range of today’s students and their needs, with some
                                 seeking undergraduate or advanced degrees but others earning associate degrees, licensing
                                 and technical certification. He praised the current partnerships between community
                                 and four-year colleges, such as the articulation agreement signed last year between
                                 Radford and Virginia Western.
“Things don’t just happen; you've got to make them happen,” Sandel said. “We work
                                 diligently to make things happen.”
Asked about today’s students and the new and increased educational alternatives they
                                 face, Danilowicz offered advice to those entering higher education.
“I … tell freshmen or transfers, the biggest mistake you will make at ߹ۿ is if you don't, within your first month, go to career services and start talking about internships and employment,” he said.
He also pushed back against long-standing modes of viewing some degrees as less marketable and, therefore, less desirable.
“There’s too much conversation nationally that says ‘Don’t study that, there’s no
                                 employment in that,’” he explained. “What we have to do as institutions is to say,
                                 when you are passionate about that field, when you go into Career Services, the conversation
                                 should become ‘Here’s how you take that field, get a degree in it and align it to
                                 places where there’s demand in the region.
“It is not about the degree … it is about the professional track that the student
                                 is taking. And we have to show them where those kinds of employment areas are,” Danilowicz
                                 said.
Keynote speaker Kirk Cox, president of the Virginia Business Higher Education Council
                                 and a former speaker of the House of Delegates, said the state’s schools and industries
                                 remain highly ranked and points of pride for residents across party lines.
“At a time of great political division, there is something on which Virginians of
                                 both parties strongly agree,” Cox said. “It’s time to invest in Virginia talent.”
In his early remarks to the audience, Roanoke College President Frank Shushok celebrated
                                 the fact that both business and educational professionals were uniting in their efforts,
                                 and he urged them to make constructive connections.
“The most important thing about this gathering is that we’re in the room together,” he said.
Later in the day, the summit also offered four “Lunch and Learn” panel-led sessions,
                                 variously focused on developing healthy talent pipelines, capitalizing on grants and
                                 other financial incentives, career and technical education programs and meeting the
                                 modern priorities of younger generations.
That fourth panel was joined by two representatives from ߹ۿ – career
                                 coach Thallya Díaz and Lee Svete, who is Radford’s new director of Career and Talent
                                 Development and serves as finance director for the Virginia Association of Colleges
                                 and Employers (VACE).
Svete described one objective at Radford as “helping students become career- and life-ready.”
“It’s the holistic point of developing relationships with students early in their
                                 college career,” he said.
“They come in the door, we help recruit them and then we develop a four-year plan
                                 that’s comprehensive to make them marketable in this competitive world of work.”
This is the first year the Future of Talent Summit has been held, and it marks a collaboration
                                 by the Roanoke Regional Partnership and its satellite, Get2KnowNoke; the Greater Roanoke
                                 Workforce Development Board; the Roanoke-Blacksburg Technology Council; Onward New
                                 River Valley, Virginia Talent + Opportunity Partnership; the New River/Mt. Rogers
                                 Workforce Development Board; and the central colleges and universities in the Roanoke
                                 and New River Valleys.
The Future of Talent Summit is funded by grants and support from such entities as GO Virginia and Growth4VA.