BCC's Renews Participation in Berkshire Honors Scholar Program

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PITTSFIELD, Mass. — Berkshire Community College (BCC) announces the renewal of its participation in the Berkshire Honors Scholar program. 
 
The program is part of the Commonwealth Honors Program, members of which include all four University of Massachusetts campuses, seven state university campuses and 14 community colleges. 
 
The renewal of BCC's participation in the program follows a visit from the Commonwealth's Department of Higher Education (DHE), which conducts site visits every seven years. After each site visit, BCC conducts a self-study, using DHE guidelines, to analyze the program.  
 
"DHE was so impressed with how enthused and engaged our honors students are," said Honors Coordinator Chris Laney, who noted that for the first time since the program began at BCC in 2006, there are more than 100 honors students. 
 
To fulfill Berkshire Honors Scholar graduation requirements, students must take at least three honors courses and maintain a B average or better. Those who meet the requirements and are accepted to any Commonwealth Honors Program member institution are guaranteed admission to the honors program at that school.  
 
Students in the Berkshire Honors Scholar program take intellectually engaging courses, with smaller class sizes, in the company of other students who care deeply about learning. Honors students also enjoy a dedicated Honors Center on campus, where they can meet, rest or study. 
 
In the time since the previous DHE site visit, Laney says he has seen noticeable improvements to the program.  
 
"The real effort has been to increase access and equitability. We have maintained our success rate and our students continue to excel. The percentage of Pell Grant–eligible students in the program has risen to a rate above the College as a whole," Laney said. 
 
Most graduates of the Berkshire Honors Scholar program continue to four-year schools, with the main incentive being getting into an honors college, Laney explained. While the honors college at UMass is considered the flagship, Westfield State University also has a strong honors program that provides flexibility and ease of transfer, he added, noting that one recent BCC graduate was accepted to Ivy League schools but chose Westfield for its excellent financial package. 
 
"I want our honors students to know that they can go just about anywhere," Laney said. 

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Dalton Becomes Purple Heart Community

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff
DALTON, Mass. — The town has been home to many veterans and soldiers who made the ultimate sacrifice in military service — a new proclamation honors their service and sacrifice.
 
The Select Board signed a proclamation declaring the town a Purple Heart Community, joining communities across the commonwealth to adopt this as a way to honor their local Purple Heart recipients. 
 
"This designation is more than a symbolic gesture; it is a public affirmation of Dalton's respect, gratitude, and enduring commitment to the men and women who have been wounded or killed in combat while serving in the United States Armed Forces," Historical Commission co-Chair Deborah Kovacs said at the Select Board meeting Monday night. 
 
The Purple Heart is the oldest military decoration that is still awarded to service members, recognizing their sacrifice, courage, and an unwavering devotion to the nation.
 
The Purple Heart originated on Aug. 7, 1782, when Gen. George Washington created the Badge of Military Merit to recognize enlisted soldiers and noncommissioned officers for exceptional service during the Revolutionary War. 
 
It fell out of use after the war but was revived in 1932 on Washington's 200th birthday under the leadership of Gen. Douglas MacArthur.  
 
Under the revival, it was still awarded for meritorious service or for combat wounds but during World War II this narrowed to service members wounded or killed as a direct or indirect result of enemy action. That wounds-only standard has remained in place ever since.
 
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