George Ferguson

George Ferguson

Location: lynchburg, virginia

About me

Who I Am
I'm the College Director at the CVCC Amherst Early College Center, a small satellite campus where I get to do the work I care about most — helping students take their first real steps into higher education. I oversee dual enrollment programming, manage faculty and day-to-day operations, and build the kind of community partnerships that open doors for the people we serve. I'm also a PhD candidate at Liberty University's School of Divinity, where my doctoral research explores forgiveness in the New Testament — specifically, the theological question of why some acts are described as forgivable, and others are not. It's deep, demanding work, and it shapes the way I think about grace, growth, and second chances in every part of my life. I believe everyone deserves someone in their corner — someone who will listen, show up, and help them figure out the next step forward.

What Drives Me
Leading a small campus means wearing every hat there is — advisor, administrator, coach, and sometimes the person fixing the printer. I love that. Small settings let you see the whole person, not just the transcript. I get to know my students by name, understand what they're working through, and meet them where they are. I'm committed to growing as a leader, not because I think I've arrived, but because the students and colleagues I serve deserve someone who's still learning right alongside them. Whether it's helping a first-generation student build a resume, walking a faculty member through a tough conversation, or staying up late pushing through another dissertation chapter — I want to be the kind of person who shows up fully.

What I Bring
My work sits at the intersection of higher education leadership and theological scholarship. On the campus side, I manage student services, faculty coordination, documentation, and community engagement. On the academic side, I'm trained in biblical exegesis, systematic theology, and doctoral-level research writing. I also have experience in career coaching, resume development, and helping students navigate the transition from community college to four-year institutions. I'm always looking for ways to connect — with other educators, with community organizations, and with anyone who shares a passion for making education more accessible and more human.

Interests

theology of forgiveness, servant leadership, ai in education, ai in education, first-generation student advocacy, biblical languages & exegesis, community partnerships, writing & scholarly research

Skills

higher education leadership, career coaching ai tools in education, scholarly research & writing, student advocacy, community partnerships

Activity

Comment on James Wagnon's post: Your reflection brings something valuable to this conversation — the perspective of an institution where advisory boards are not just recommended but legally required. The annual mandate creates structural discipline that many institutions lack, and your technical focus on motor vehicle repair gives you direct industry connection that many academic programs struggle to maintain.
I appreciated your insight about expanding the scope beyond compliance. The module's framing of advisory boards as strategic intelligence resources — not just regulatory checkboxes — opens up exactly the kind of broader engagement you described. Student retention and new… >>>

The Board Frameworks module clarified for me the fundamental distinction between governing and advisory boards — a distinction I had not previously articulated with precision. Governing boards hold statutory authority, fiduciary responsibility, and ultimate institutional accountability, while advisory boards provide strategic intelligence and specialized expertise without legal liability.

The insight that resonated most was the framing of boards as a way to multiply leadership capacity. Even the strongest leaders cannot possess all the expertise, experience, and connections an institution needs. Boards exist precisely to extend that capacity through diverse perspectives, industry connections, and independent oversight.

In my context as College… >>>

Comment on Zafarjon Roostamov's post

Your two-pronged framework of market analysis and branding/positioning captures the strategic foundation that effective marketing requires. Without market analysis, marketing investments often miss their mark; without clear branding, even well-targeted marketing fails to resonate. The combination produces the precision the module emphasized throughout.

I particularly appreciated your inclusion of transfer students, working professionals, and international students in your target audience identification. This reflects the "out of the box" thinking the module encouraged — moving beyond obvious populations to identify adjacent groups who could benefit from IT education. Working professionals, in particular, often represent highly… >>>

The Marketing & Budget Planning module brought strategic planning into sharp focus by translating vision into concrete dollar figures. The insight that resonated most deeply was that plans without financial substance remain aspirational — numbers force honesty in ways that strategic vision alone cannot.
The marketing section reframed lead generation as a multi-stage funnel rather than a volume game. Measuring quantity and quality together — tracking leads from initial response through appointment, show rate, and enrollment — reveals where marketing investments actually produce results. The module's vision of "a streamlined and cost-efficient marketing plan that yields quality leads in sufficient… >>>

Comment on Amanda Bell's post: Your definition captures the essence of organizational development with real precision. The framing of OD as a "strategic approach to enhancing effectiveness, adaptability, and culture" highlights three dimensions that often get separated in institutional discussions but really belong together — structure without culture becomes mechanical, and adaptability without strategic alignment becomes reactive.
Your emphasis on aligning structures, processes, and people with mission resonates with the module's central insight that organizational planning is fundamentally about alignment. When any of these three elements drift from mission, institutional effectiveness suffers, even when individual elements appear strong on… >>>

Comment on Jasmine Proctor's post: Your reflection captures something foundational that I think the module was driving toward — that organizational development is fundamentally about culture and alignment, not just structural design. The phrase you used, "people, processes, and policies are aligned with the institution's mission and strategic goals," is a precise way of describing what healthy organizational development actually accomplishes.
Your emphasis on continuous improvement and collaboration resonated with me. The module's call for asking faculty and staff to draw their own version of the organizational chart — and comparing it to leadership's version — reflects this same… >>>

The Organizational Development Planning module reframed institutional structure as a strategic tool rather than a fixed reality. The insight that resonated most deeply was the module's reminder that "structure exists to serve people, not the other way around" — a principle that shapes how I think about my role as College Director at Central Virginia Community College's Amherst Early College Center.

The organizational chart discussion was particularly clarifying. The exercise of asking faculty and staff to draw the chart from their own perspective — and comparing those drawings to leadership's version — emerged as a powerful diagnostic tool. Where perceptions… >>>

Comment on Allan Skok's post

Your reflection captures something foundational that the module emphasized throughout — that student success is built on the twin pillars of clear expectations and genuine belonging. The connection you drew between sense of belonging and student success aligns directly with Vincent Tinto's research on social and academic integration as drivers of persistence.

I particularly appreciated your emphasis on a realistic understanding from day one. The module's point about expectation gaps — students arriving with mental images of school that differ from actual realities — resonated with my work as College Director at Central Virginia… >>>

Comment on Jasmine Proctor's post

Your three-pronged approach to student services planning reflects a comprehensive understanding of what today's students need to succeed. The integration of experiential learning, personalized academic advising, and feedback-driven improvement aligns beautifully with the module's emphasis on student services as continuous rather than transactional.

Your point about internship and co-op programs resonated with me, particularly the emphasis on industry partnerships that provide professional mentorship alongside hands-on experience. The module noted that experiential learning is also a confidence-building technique, and I would add that internships create lasting professional networks that often determine first-job placement. For students… >>>

Got it, brother — you want a shorter discussion post for the Student Services Planning module. 💛 Let me give you a clean, focused version that's substantive but concise.

 
📝 SHORT DISCUSSION POST (Ready to Copy and Paste):
 
The Student Services Planning module reframed student services for me as something far more strategic than I had previously articulated. The concept that resonated most deeply was the framing of placement services as institutional promise-keeping — when students enroll, they trust the institution to prepare them for what comes next. Strong student services are how institutions remain faithful to that… >>>

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