“I have lots of good things to say about the skills that I gained during that time and how I’ve applied them since,” says Shinn, now a diplomat in the U.S. State Department.
Shinn is just one of thousands of students who have either tutored or been tutored at the Academic Success Center, as it is known today. From its launch as a writing lab, the center has evolved into a full-service resource that serves every kind of student at the university. This year marks its 30th anniversary at Fresno Pacific.
Early tutors like Shinn helped plant the seeds of decades-long growth while guiding fellow students.
“It was very rewarding to see the figurative light bulb go on for students,” says Karl Strube, one of the center’s early tutors in math. Like Shinn, he also gained valuable skills and insights about himself. One key discovery was that he loved one-on-one tutoring but didn’t want to head a classroom.
That realization changed the direction of Strube’s career and life. He switched majors from math education to accounting and now works as an accountant in Fresno.
Tutoring only reinforced the academic path of Sarah Elder, who earned a bachelor’s degree in English literature, teaching credential and master’s degree in curriculum and instruction from Fresno Pacific. She’s been a teacher at Visalia’s El Diamante High School for more than two decades and also is an adjunct instructor at Fresno Pacific.
“When there was an opportunity to work in the writing center, that’s just the kind of thing that an English major loves,” Elder says.
The three former tutors have at least one person in common: Melinda Gunning, the founder of the original writing lab and current director of disability access and education at Fresno Pacific.
“Several former tutors and students continue to be my friends and have had great influence on my life,” Gunning says.
Strube, for example, offered personal and professional support during a difficult time in her life. Gunning also occasionally runs into students who benefited from the center, and recently happily bought coffee from a former student working to fund a ministry in Ethiopia.
If the Academic Success Center is a tree with many branches, then Gunning is its roots. “Having Melinda as someone who was guiding that center on campus was really helpful,” Elder says. “She really helped to have us continue to love writing and helping students, and I think that fostered the teaching spirit for a lot of us.”