The new head of L.A. City College spent three years helping steer a university in Armenia. His new campus is highly diverse.
By Andrew Wang, Times Staff Writer
When Steve Maradian got the call that the American University of Armenia was seeking a new vice president, he knew it would be a job unlike any other in his more than 20 years in higher education.
The university had opened the same day that Armenia gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, three years after a devastating earthquake killed 25,000 Armenians. When Maradian was hired in late 2002, he found a country still rebuilding and still dealing with the old socialist mentality.
“In the Soviet culture, you just didn’t do anything,” he said. “If you did something, you might put yourself out of a job.”
Even so, he had leaped at the chance to go for the first time to the land of his grandparents’ birth to help the school grow in the mold of American universities.
“It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity,” said Maradian, who has spoken Armenian since childhood. “I mean, when do you get to go to your motherland and make a difference?”
Now the longtime higher-education administrator will shift his attention from Armenia to a campus in east Hollywood’s Little Armenia: Los Angeles City College.
Last month, Maradian, 54, was named president of the college, one of nine in the Los Angeles Community College District. He takes over from Doris Givens, the interim president of the 16,000-student campus for the last two years.
That the college on Vermont Avenue sits in a sizable Armenian enclave is not lost on him.
“The Armenian connection is important,” he said, speaking energetically in an accent that reveals his Massachusetts roots. “It’s important to me to keep that cultural connection — the language, the food, the religion.”
But Maradian is quick to point out that he will be the president for all students, not just those who share his ethnic heritage.
The campus enrolls a diverse student body, including many from immigrant families. Only about 47% of the students list English as their family’s primary language. Eleven percent speak Armenian at home, 22% Spanish and the others a variety of languages, including Korean, Chinese, Russian, Japanese and Tagalog.
Maradian said he planned to apply to his new job the lessons learned during tenures as president of colleges and institutes in Texas, Georgia, Louisiana and Ohio, as well as his three-year stint in Armenia.
Community colleges, he said, “are really about rebuilding communities and people.”
They play a vital role, he said, in training people to perform jobs that sustain a community, such as nursing, and provide training for local entrepreneurs and workers in local industry. Also, the two-year campuses are many students’ avenues for transferring to institutions where they can earn bachelor’s degrees.
“When a student comes out and succeeds, the community is the beneficiary,” Maradian said. “I know of no society that can succeed without people with skills and talents. It’s our job to facilitate that.”
As important as day-to-day college administration, he said, will be his external role: promoting the school and bringing in funding.
The president, he said, needs to work with the community “so they know what we’re doing and so they know where the needs are, so we can continue to get support … to say, ‘This is what we’re doing, and this is why it’s important.’ ”
In Armenia, where he served as the university’s vice president of government relations, he negotiated funding from American Schools and Hospitals Abroad, an office within the U.S. Agency for International Development.
The money was spent in part on a new wing for the campus business center and will be used as well to renovate a Soviet-era hotel as a residence for faculty and students. Maradian said he also headed efforts to raise funds from various private donors.
Sylvia Scott-Hayes, president of the L.A. college district’s board of trustees, said Maradian was the most qualified of the candidates interviewed.
“He displayed a very clear understanding of our student population and their needs,” she said. “There’s a presence about him that the students will be able to connect with. He’s got a nice style about him that’s very open.”
That Maradian is an Armenian American coming to head a college in a neighborhood with a strong Armenian presence is an unexpected bonus, Scott-Hayes added. “He brings a different perspective, and we were excited about that,” she said. “It kind of takes our diversity to a different level.”
Maryanne DesVignes, director of the college’s learning skills department and liaison between the Academic Senate and the administration, said many in the faculty welcomed having a president without the “interim” tag, especially as the college enters a period of construction.
“These next couple of years are going to be challenging at best,” she said.
Maradian comes to a district in the throes of a $2.2-billion reconstruction effort, in which 455 existing buildings are to be renovated and 44 new buildings constructed over the next 10 years.
City College was allotted $248 million for numerous campus improvements, the renovation of eight buildings and the construction of six buildings, including a new child-care center, a new science and technology building, a new physical education center and a facility that will house an athletic field and a parking structure, said Larry Eisenberg, the district’s executive director for facilities planning and development.
City College’s enrollment, a number that is important for state funding, dropped to a little more than 16,000 last fall, down from 18,372 two years earlier and well short of the nearly 24,000 figure of 1975.
Maradian said construction was necessary. The college, he said, “in my judgment cannot absorb many more students without the campus being developed.” But, he added, the school must show the public that it has done a good job in building.
Last year, school officials paved the football field to use as a parking lot. The college has drawn accusations of mismanagement from city officials, the local community and alumni over that action and for leasing 4.3 acres elsewhere on campus, at $120,000 a year, for a private golf driving range.
Maradian said he needed to study enrollment issues more before determining a course of action. “I have to look at what’s the maximum capacity and what the campus can support,” he said. “Bigger is not always better. Quality is more important.”
He also said it was too early to form specific policies on many other campus issues, and he plans to spend his first days there getting familiar with them.
As many community college students are, Maradian said, he and his siblings were the first generation of his family to go to college. Also, he’s a community-college parent: One of his sons attended one in Georgia.
As for what drives him to work in community colleges, he said the answer was simple: He loves being an educator.
“I just felt that it was a calling,” Maradian said. “There’s nothing more satisfying than seeing a student succeed.”
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Presidential facts
Maradian holds a bachelor’s degree in history and a master’s degree in education from Northeastern University in Boston. He has a master’s in business administration from Wheeling Jesuit College in West Virginia and a doctorate in education from the University of Massachusetts, with focuses on higher education leadership and future studies.
• Before working at the American University of Armenia, Maradian was director of federal relations for the University System of Georgia; president of Middle Georgia College; executive director of the Regional Maritime Technology Center and the Simulation Based Design Center at the University of New Orleans; president of Lamar State College-Orange in Orange, Texas; and president of Belmont Technical College in St. Clairsville, Ohio.
• He’s an avid jogger — “I am in my 15th year without missing a single day,” he said — who last year finished the Marine Corps Marathon in Washington, D.C., in 4:48:21.
• Maradian is a single father of two sons — Ross, 27, and Adam, 26 — both of whom live in Washington, D.C.
• He speaks Western Armenian, a dialect spoken in parts of Turkey and in many Armenian communities in Europe and North America.
Los Angeles Times
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