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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (June 8, 2006) – His whole career has been about
helping college students feel comfortable in their new living environments,
but it wasn’t until Charlie Macke became the new director of Residential
Life at Tennessee Tech University last month that he felt he’d come
home.
That’s because the Cookeville area is home to his parents and two
brothers. A sister-in-law of Macke’s, in fact, also works on campus,
in TTU’s Counseling Center.
“I’m excited both about the opportunities of living here
in Cookeville and of working here at TTU,” he said.
Having been a resident assistant as a student at Western Kentucky University
in the early 1980s and having served as vice president for Student Development
at Virginia Intermont College most recently, Macke knows how important
it is for people to feel comfortable when moving to a new location.
“Campus is the first place most students have ever lived away from
home, so it’s especially important for them to feel comfortable,”
he said. “I believe that if they’re comfortable in their living
environments, then the rest of their campus experiences will be enhanced.”
Although he’s worked in Residential Life at schools with both small
and large student populations, Macke said most institutions of all sizes
face similar challenges when it comes to facilities maintenance.
“Probably as many as 60 or 70 percent of institutions across the
country are deferring some or all of their routine maintenance on facilities
for various reasons, often budgetary,” he said.
“One of my goals as director of Residential Life at TTU is to work
with our staff and students to determine our needs and concerns and to
eventually put a routine maintenance program in place, because it often
ends up costing institutions more the longer they have to defer those
maintenance projects,” Macke concluded.
In addition to his work, his other interests include reading, yard work,
home repair, music and bike riding.
He and his wife Karen have a son, Adam, who attends Embry-Riddle Aeronautical
University in Florida and a daughter, Hannah, who is a sophomore in high
school.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 9 June 2006
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