Professor Doris Buckley Honored by the YWCA

Early Childhood Education professor Doris Buckley was honored by the YWCA with their Annual Tribute to Women recognition ceremony. Doris joins a distinguished group of approximately 875 women who have been recognized over the last 4 decades. Congrats Doris!

six women in professional attire post in front of step and repeat with YWCA logo

NECC VP Naydeen González-De Jesús, Interim Dean of Business and Professional Studies Sheila Muller, Board of Trustees Chairwoman Jennifer Borislow, Professor Doris Buckely, Professor Deirdre Budzyna, Trustee Pati Fernandez

Boston Globe: Harvard and MIT sold edX for $800m five years ago. How are they spending the money

Axim has granted Northern Essex $600,000 over several years to allow the college to hire staff and develop curriculum for a new base manufacturing program to train workers for manufacturing jobs that employers in the state are having trouble filling.

NECC President Glenn Joins US Senators, Educators, and Business Leaders in Calling for Permanent Protections for Dreamers 

Washington, DC (May 12, 2026) — This week, Northern Essex Community College President Lane Glenn stood alongside US Senators Mark Kelly (D-Arizona), Dick Durbin (D-Illinois), and Alex Padilla (D-California), as they joined students, educators, and business leaders to call attention to the growing threats facing Dreamers and DACA recipients.

“Our colleges, communities, and economy all need Dreamers everywhere to succeed,” said Glenn. “Our students should not have to keep living from court decision to court decision, or policy change to policy change. We need stability and a path forward so students can learn without fear, researchers can pursue their innovative ideas, and our academic communities can thrive.”

president glenn stands at a podium in front of the US capitol building

President Glenn speaking about the impact of DACA delays on students. Photo Courtesy: The Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration

DACA, the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, is the program that protects qualifying undocumented immigrants from deportation, but without a path to citizenship, if they were brought to the U.S. as children. Dreamers is a term often used to describe these children.

The press conference, hosted by TheDream.US on the U.S. Capitol grounds ahead of a Senate spotlight forum led by Sen. Durbin, highlighted the threats Dreamers are facing, including mounting renewal delays, work permit expirations, detention concerns, and deep uncertainty for hundreds of thousands of young immigrants across the country.

“The threats facing Dreamers with and without DACA are real,” said Glenn. “I see the growing fear and uncertainty on our campus, fueled by DACA processing delays and rising concerns about detention and deportation.”

The event featured the launch of Dreams Delayed, a new project from TheDream.US documenting stories from Dreamers navigating DACA renewal delays, job loss, educational disruption, and other impacts tied to growing uncertainty around the program.

TheDream.US is the nation’s leading organization supporting Dreamers at the intersection of higher education, workforce development, immigration, and advocacy. As part of their program, they have awarded over 12,000 scholarships to immigrant youth from 120+ countries and 45 states. Their work has contributed to over 4,500 graduates to date.

For Jen Rickling, this issue hit in a way she never expected when her own daughter-in-law was swept up and placed in detention. She joined Glenn in speaking at the event.

“As a Southern Arizona resident, immigration and border security issues have always been in the news,” said Rickling. “But they really hadn’t hit home in a personal way until I watched my daughter-in-law, Annie, being taken away in handcuffs after accompanying her husband, my son, Matthew, to his military post. While Annie was freed from detention, even now, Annie and Matthew’s future together remains uncertain. For Annie and other Dreamers like her, there has to be a better way than detention and deportation.”

Kai Martin spoke at the event, describing her experience as she waits for her DACA renewal to begin her PhD program at Howard University.

“Being admitted into a PhD program was a milestone that I worked years to achieve,” said Martin. “It is hard to explain what it means to have your future paused, not because of your effort or qualifications, but because of administrative delays beyond your control. For Dreamers like me this is our home, and our contributions deserve permanence.”

Martin, like many others gathered, is an alum of TheDream.US, which partners with nearly 80 colleges in 19 states and Washington, D.C., to provide scholarships, career support, and access to legal options that help Dreamers break through systemic barriers and achieve social mobility. Through data, scholar and alumni stories, strategic partnerships, and targeted state and local advocacy, they work to expand equitable access to college, professional pathways, and permanent legal status. For more information on the work of TheDream.US, visit www.thedream.us.

To learn more about DACA support at NECC and the application process, visit the webpage.

Business Transfer Student Named to 2026 PTK All-Massachusetts Academic Team

The Massachusetts Association of Community Colleges is recognizing Northern Essex Community College student Dayana Ticllas Prado of Lawrence for her outstanding academic achievement and exemplary student service. They selected Ticllas Prado for the 2026 Phi Theta Kappa (PTK) All-Massachusetts Academic Team. She received her award at a ceremony at the State House this week.

Ticllas Prado is originally from Peru.  She says that from a young age, she has enjoyed challenging herself academically. In middle school, she competed in a national math competition. And during COVID, she volunteered to help fellow students who were struggling with virtual classes.

“I would go to their homes after school and help them understand their lessons, complete homework, and prepare presentations. At first, it was volunteer work, but later, families started paying me for the extra support. Around that time, I also helped my mother manage her small business, which taught me responsibility and organization,” she says.

Those experiences sparked an interest in business and entrepreneurship for Ticllas Prado. And soon after she and her family moved from Peru to Lawrence in 2023, she enrolled at Northern Essex as a Business Transfer student.

“Adjusting to a new country and a new education system was challenging, especially taking college classes in English. Because of that, I often studied twice as much so I could understand my classes better. During this time, I also worked two part-time jobs while studying.”

Andy Vargas stands with Dayana at the state house

Rep. Andy Vargas (D), 3rd District and Dayana Ticllas Prado at the MA State House PTK Ceremony

Still, Ticllas Prado found time to volunteer. She served as vice president of the Student Government Association and was named to the Dean’s List every semester. She also became a member of Phi Theta Kappa and Alpha Beta Gamma honor societies and participated in the Commonwealth Honors Program. This spring, she presented an AI project called “Allinet” at the MassURC 2025 conference

Her hard work is already paying off. Ticllas Prado transferred to Suffolk University this spring semester, where she is participating in the Honors Program and studying finance.

“My goal in the future is to become a financial analyst and eventually create a nonprofit organization focused on financial education and personal development, helping people build better financial futures.”

PTK is the international honor society of two-year colleges. PTK has recognized and encouraged scholarship among community college students for 100 years while promoting the academic integrity of the associate degree program. Students with grade point averages of 3.5 or higher are invited to join Phi Theta Kappa. For additional information, contact Professor Lisette Espinoza at lespinoza@necc.mass.edu.

Abbatessa Wins National Title in Women’s Shot Put

Utica, NY (May 8, 2026) – Through two days of the NJCAA Track and Field Championship, the highlight performance goes to sophomore Maci Abbatessa (Danvers) as she captured the NJCAA national title in the women’s shot put. Her final throw of 10.69 meters in wet conditions bested the runner-up by just .01 meters.

Maci stands with medal around her neck smiling at camera

Maci Abbatessa

Abbatessa becomes the program’s first individual national champion since 2011, when NECC Hall of Famer Noelia Figuereo captured the championship in the 100-meter.

Abbatessa has a strong showing in two other throwing events, breaking her own school record in the hammer throw with a toss of 34.55 meters. She placed 9th in both the hammer and the javelin.

Both the women’s 4×100-meter relay and Janelis Uviedo (Lawrence) in the triple jump also both recorded 9th place finishes.

Several Knights also saw personal best performances on the championship stage. Mia Ruiz (Haverhill) placed 17th in the 100 with a time of 13.32. Teriq Goodman (Worcester) placed 29th in the 100 (11.58) and 25th in the 200 (22.99). Uveido also improved her school record time in the 100-meter hurdles with a time of 19.15.

Learn more about athletics at NECC by visiting the webpage. maci stands atop a pidum surrounded by other track athletes

The Nurse Who Never Clocks Out: How Elizabeth Stratton Became the Heart of Two Communities

She works twelve-hour shifts caring for oncology patients at Anna Jaques Hospital. She cheers from the bleachers at Northern Essex Community College basketball games. She bakes sweet treats for the players, answers the phone at odd hours, and has held more than a few young men together during some of the hardest moments of their lives. For Elizabeth Stratton— NECC nursing alumna, oncology nurse, coach’s wife, and, to many, a second mother — there is no off switch.

Community isn’t something she builds. It’s something she simply is.

Stratton graduated from NECC’s night nursing program in 1997, a path she found not through planning, but through a moment of grace she has never forgotten. At 18, she was pregnant, concerned about facing judgement from others, and trying to navigate college away from home while pursuing a degree in social work— a field she quickly realized wasn’t right for her.

From left to right: NECC President Lane Glenn, NECC alumna Elizabeth Stratton, NECC men's basketball coach Darren Stratton at the 2026 Men's Basketball Championship Celebration

(L to R): NECC President Lane Glenn, NECC alumna Elizabeth Stratton, NECC men’s basketball coach Darren Stratton

It was a labor and delivery nurse who treated her “just like any mother having a baby,” who planted the seed that would grow into a 27-year career.

“It was transformative,” Stratton says simply.

Her husband Darren— longtime head coach of NECC’s men’s basketball program— encouraged her to enroll in NECC’s night program, which allowed her to study while raising her son. She set her sights on labor and delivery, built her foundation in med-surg, and eventually found her way to the floor she’d dreamed of.

Six years in, everything changed again. Her mother was diagnosed with stage four breast cancer. Liz, pregnant with her third son and preparing for maternity leave, became her mother’s primary caregiver, driving her to Dana Farber in Boston for treatments. Long days that started before sunrise and didn’t end until evening.

Those car rides, she says, were “wonderful.” They talked about everything. Stratton isn’t afraid of hard conversations— a trait her work in oncology has only deepened.

A chance encounter led her from labor and delivery to oncology. A former colleague and hematologist, upon learning she might not return to nursing, essentially refused to let her go. His insistence, and her own fear after senior clinicians nearly missed a critical complication in one of her patients, pushed her toward a new chapter. For 19 years now, she has worked in oncology.

“I didn’t think I could love anything more than labor and delivery,” she says. “Oncology is just… it’s my place.”

What keeps her grounded through the weight of that work? Faith, she says. And the patients themselves. “Oncology patients are very inappropriate— they just say what they want to say. They have this no regret, no filter. They want to be normal. They just want to be seen.”

Stratton gives them the space for all of it; the laughter, the grief, the hard days and the euphoric ones. On the commute home, she takes the back roads— the long way as she calls it. She prays. She processes. Then she shows up again.

At NECC, she has shown up the same way for decades. As Coach Stratton’s players came through the program— many of them young men navigating hunger, educational gaps, the absence of family support— Stratton and her husband, both products of working-class upbringings themselves, recognized the need and met it quietly. Baked goods. Study sessions. A shoulder. A phone call. She helped NECC’s Athletics Hall of Famer Nate Proulx pass his Anatomy and Physiology class. She even went in on a day off to help deliver a former player’s baby.

“I really don’t do big things,” she says. “I just do little, small things. And you find out later that it mattered.”

Those who know her would disagree with the first part. To the generations of NECC students who found in her something they needed, Stratton has done something very big. She has made them feel seen.

How One NECC Student Found His Calling in Nursing

In recognition of National Nurses Week (May 6-12), NECC is proud to spotlight the students, faculty, and healthcare professional who make up the backbone of our nursing program. The following article highlights the personal journey of one NECC Nursing student, offering a glimpse into the dedication, challenges, rewards that define the path to becoming a registered nurse. His story is one of many— and a testament to what becomes possible when passion meets the right support.

Kaleb Bradish didn’t arrive at nursing in a straight line. He started in research, considered medical school, then became an EMT to test whether he could handle the weight of having someone’s life in his hands. What he discovered wasn’t just that he could— it was that he wanted more of it.

“I realized that the nurses did most of the care and spent most of their time with the patients,” he said. “I didn’t want to feel how I did when I was in the lab. I enjoy being with people, talking to them, listening to them, and making the people who come in for help feel heard, cared for, and calm.”photo of NECC nursing student Kaleb Bradish in white scrubs outdoors

Now a nursing student at Northern Essex, Bradish is one of many students navigating one of healthcare’s most rigorous educational pathways— and doing so with the support of a program built for real people with real life constraints.

Ask Bradish how nursing school has changed his understanding of the profession, and he doesn’t hesitate. “The mental load of nurses is something that I think no one quite realizes,” he said. “The more you accomplish in school, the more you learn in the classroom— the more you realize how much you don’t know and still have to learn.”

It’s a humbling realization, one he says the nurses he’s worked alongside embody daily. “The nurses I have worked side by side with have amazed me every day and didn’t know that they did,” he added.

If pressed to describe his journey in just three words, Bradish offers: enlightening, demanding, yet feasible— a combination that speaks both to the depth of the program and the faculty that make it possible.

For Bradish, choosing NECC wasn’t just an academic decision— it was a financial lifeline. Nursing students often face an uncomfortable reality: clinical hours and coursework make it nearly impossible to maintain the income they once relied on.

“As a nursing student you have to decrease the amount of hours you have been accustomed to living on and really make adjustments to your lifestyle,” he said. “I thought I was never going to be able to afford it.”

But NECC showed up. Internship stipends across two semesters helped Bradish cover essentials— gas to get to clinicals, daily expenses— without the crushing pressure of unmanageable debt. Food vouchers, access to a student lounge stocked with snacks and coffee, and a quiet-but-collaborative space to study between classes all made a tangible difference.

“I am so grateful to NECC,” he said. “They helped me achieve this education for such an affordable price, and if I had difficulty making a payment, they worked it out with me.”

Academic advisors Solange and Dawn also played an integral role in keeping him on track, as did faculty members including Allison Belisle, Professor Parsons, Burrows, and Collins. The list of supports continues, each of whom Bradish credits with pushing him toward excellence and offering support during the program’s most demanding moments.

During a clinical placement in Lawrence— the city where he grew up— Bradish witnessed something that quietly reshaped his future. Watching instructors speak Spanish directly with patients, he saw a real difference in those patient-provider connections.

“When patients know you can understand them, it is a shift that I cannot even put into words properly due to its sheer beauty,” he said. It prompted him to take medical Spanish and commit to continuing that pursuit well beyond graduation.

After graduating, Bradish plans to pursue critical care, potentially in an emergency department or ICU, with a long-term interest in cardiovascular intensive care. But his vision extends beyond the hospital walls. He’s already exploring volunteer opportunities in his community, with plans to serve vulnerable populations including immigrants, LGBTQIA+ individuals, and the elderly.

“This career provides me with a limitless opportunity to give,” he said. “It is a calling, and I plan to rise to that every day of my nursing life.”

To prospective students who feel the path is out of reach, Bradish’s message is direct: Stay determined, do your research, and if you want it, you will achieve it

Psychology Graduate Found Community Through the PACE Program

For psychology major Izaiah Igartua Rivera, coming to Northern Essex Community College following high school felt like a natural next step. His older sisters attended NECC before continuing their education, and the Haverhill native saw an opportunity to stay close to home while working toward his goals. Now, as he approaches graduation, he says what began as a practical decision quickly became something more meaningful.

“Coming to Northern Essex Community College for my associate degree was one of the smartest decisions of my life,” reflects Rivera. Izaiah Igartua Rivera stands in a maroon suit in front of a lake surrounded by trees

A 2023 graduate of Haverhill High School and a first-generation college student, Igartua Rivera arrived at Northern Essex with a clear sense of direction. By his senior year of high school, he had discovered a passion for psychology after a memorable classroom experience.

“My teacher brought in a human brain,” he recalls. “I was mesmerized. Everything we do—how we think, how we act—comes from that. I just wanted to understand it.”

That curiosity has grown into a long-term goal: becoming a therapist and helping others better understand their own mental health.

Early on, Igartua Rivera found support through Northern Essex’s PACE program. PACE is a student support services program funded by a TRiO grant from the U.S. Department of Education. Referred on his very first day, he quickly became part of a community that helped shape his college experience.

“I went upstairs after scheduling my classes, started talking to them, and I was in,” he says. “From that point on, anytime I needed help, I knew exactly where to go.”

PACE provided more than academic guidance. Through the program, Igartua Rivera built friendships and found a sense of belonging that had been missing in his earlier academic experiences.

“In high school, I didn’t really have people around me who were focused on education,” he says. “It felt isolating. But with PACE, I met people who were on the same path. We pushed each other.”

That support also extended beyond campus. Through PACE, Igartua Rivera visited four-year colleges, explored transfer options, and gained a clearer vision for his future. After graduation, he plans to continue his education and pursue a bachelor’s degree in psychology.

“As a Black man, mental health wasn’t something that was really talked about growing up,” he says. “I struggled with it, and I didn’t have anyone to turn to. I want to be the person I needed when I was younger.”

That sense of purpose is rooted in his upbringing. Raised by parents who emphasized education despite their own challenges, Igartua Rivera grew up hearing a message that continues to guide him.

“My mom always told me, ‘Don’t become a statistic,’” he says. “That’s something I carry with me every day.”

Now preparing to graduate, he reflects on how far he’s come—and how quickly it all happened.

“It doesn’t even feel real yet. It feels like I just left high school.”

For students considering their next step, Igartua Rivera offers simple advice: keep moving forward.

“Take your time, but don’t stop. Even if it’s just one class—just keep going.”

Rivera is one of hundreds of students graduating from Northern Essex this spring. Read more about the college’s 64th annual Commencement here.

NECC is First MA Community College to Offer New X-ray Operator Program

Haverhill and Lawrence, MA (May 1, 2026) — The Commonwealth of Massachusetts has just approved a new certificate program at Northern Essex Community College to address a critical need in the local healthcare industry. This fall, the college will offer certification in Limited Scope of Practice of Radiography. Limited X-ray Machine Operators, or LXMOs, can perform specific, routine X-ray procedures, primarily in outpatient settings like clinics, urgent care, or physician offices. Northern Essex is the first and only community college in Massachusetts to offer a state-certified Limited X-ray Operator program.

“By filling workforce gaps and shortening the pathway to practical radiography skills, the LXMO certificate enhances career mobility for students and supports community healthcare partners with trained personnel where full technologist certification is not required,” said Radiologic Program director Angela Bowers.

LXMOs are instrumental in expanding capacity in urgent care centers and mitigating current demands on emergency departments for non-emergent care by conducting basic radiographic exams. Typically, they are imaging the chest and upper and lower extremities. LXMOs who wish to conduct more high-level imaging can apply most of the credits from their certification to an Associate of Science: Radiologic Technology degree. Northern Essex also has several seamless transfer agreements for those students who then want to earn a bachelor’s degree in medical imaging or a related field.

“The COVID-19 pandemic really exposed the need for LMXOs in Massachusetts,” said Dean of Health Professions Kathy Hudson. “But regulations didn’t allow for LMXO certifications at the time. When we heard in 2024 that the state was reexamining those regulations, we immediately put a proposal together for this program, and Professor Bowers worked tirelessly to get to this point. We are extremely proud to receive the news of its approval.”

The Limited Scope of Practice of Radiography certification will launch in the fall 2026 semester. Students will earn 26 credits over a six-month period, including weekly clinical hours. Once the coursework is completed, they will need to pass a state exam to receive their certification.

For more information on Radiography at Northern Essex, visit the webpage or contact Bowers.

NECC Receives $1million to Develop Heat Pump and HVAC Training

Northern Essex Community College is one of the state’s 13 community colleges participating in the Mass Clean Energy Center’s (MassCEC) new Heat Pump and HVAC Training Network. This week, the Healey-Driscoll Administration announced more than $13 million in awards for the program, supported by the Department of Energy Resources (DOER).
The Heat Pump and HVAC Training Network will open pathways for more Massachusetts residents to pursue in-demand careers such as heat pump and HVAC mechanics and technicians, while helping employers meet growing workforce needs. The initiative is expected to support at least 500 additional learners and drive long-term growth through investments in infrastructure and equipment.

lt governor driscoll stands in room with construction, talking to college leadership

Lt. Governor Driscoll toured the science building renovation in April

Northern Essex will receive $1,105,455 in funding as part of the new initiative.  NECC will establish a new state-of-the-art 1,500 square-foot, HVAC mini-split heat pump training facility in the newly-refurbished science building on its Haverhill campus to expand and complement an existing HVAC lab at the neighboring Whittier Regional Vocational Technical High School. Together, these facilities will deliver hands-on technical training and credentialing to a growing number of existing HVAC workers, high school students, new workers and former fossil fuel workers from nearby communities.

Haverhill nonprofit Community Action, Incorporated (CAI) will assist in recruitment, referrals, wrap-around supports, case management and non-technical trainings in employability. CAI will build on its expertise as an HVAC training provider for the MassSave program, along with its successful existing partnership with Whittier Tech for welding certification training.

“Programs like these are critical in addressing the workforce needs of the Merrimack Valley,” said Northern Essex President Lane Glenn. “NECC is committed to providing students with a clear pathway to in-demand, well-paying careers, and we know that clean energy is a field that will continue to expand. We are grateful for MassCEC and our local partners.”

Construction on the HVAC mini-split heat pump training facility at NECC is part of an existing $17 million building renovation project that is scheduled for completion by early 2027.

The thirteen community colleges to receive funding are:

Berkshire Community College: $1,188,635
Bristol Community College: $1,199,694
Bunker Hill Community College: $1,130,000
Cape Cod Community College: $1,250,000
Greenfield Community College: $810,000
Massasoit Community College: $555,000
MassBay Community College: $1,200,000
Middlesex Community College: $1,250,000
Northern Essex Community College: $1,105,455
North Shore Community College: $1,069,431
Quinsigamond Community College: $824,556
Roxbury Community College: $1,079,472
Springfield Technical Community College: $809,989

For more information about workforce training at NECC, visit the webpage.