About Us
College History
2010s
November 2010: HLC awards continued accreditation
In awarding continuing accreditation to Northwest College on Nov. 17, 2011, the Higher
Learning Commission cited four areas of positive observations: NWC’s strong commitment
to student learning, responsiveness and good working relationship with the community,
dynamic residential life program, and well-resourced creativeness in making sure students
continue their education. Areas for improvement, which the HLC visiting team said
were no surprise because they all “came across in your honest self-study evaluation,”
included shared governance, development of planning, integration and implementation
in various planning processes, and better data utilization in decision making. The
visit culminated four years of research, information gathering, analysis and writing
of a lengthy self-study report. The HLC followed up in 2013 with a focused campus
visit on planning and budget. During that visit, NWC presented a monitoring report
on progress in student learning assessment.
July 2013: Hicswa becomes NWC's eighth president
Stefani Gray Hicswa assumed Northwest’s presidency in mid-July 2013, the results of
a nationwide presidential search following Paul Prestwich’s resignation after five
years at the helm. Hicswa had served seven years as president of Miles Community College
in Miles City, Mont., where she helped increase graduation rates to first among all
post-secondary institutions in Montana and among the top community colleges nationally.
Her 20-years’ experience in higher education administration includes operating a Montana
consulting firm that specialized in strategic planning and organizational development.
Hicswa holds a doctorate in educational administration from the University of Texas
at Austin. The focus of her dissertation research was the role of community college
presidents in rural community development. She earned her master’s in adult, community
and higher education from Montana State University in Bozeman and a bachelor’s in
organizational communication from the University of Montana in Missoula.
August 2014: Largest instructional building opens
Open for the fall 2014 semester, the 47,000-square-foot Yellowstone Building houses
Nursing, Allied Health and Criminal Justice programs, along with a community conference
center accommodating workforce training, community events and larger-venue demands.
Communication, Social Science and Education Divisions reside in the new facility,
as does NWC’s powerhouse Forensics Team. Home to some of the college’s most sophisticated
instructional technology, the building includes a firearms simulator used by the Criminal
Justice program and a suite of clinical labs with simulation mannequins that replicate
real symptoms for nurses in training. The Wyoming Legislature provided $9.38 million
toward the $13 million construction. NWC’s private Foundation raised over $800,000
to help with costs, and students contributed through a new $5-per-credit-hour facilities
fee. The college drew from budget reserves for the $2 million balance. Through this
multi-pronged funding approach, NWC was able to construct the most expensive building
on campus without seeking to raise taxes in Park County through a public bond issue.
May 2017: Graduation rate highest on record
The college’s 39% graduation rate for first-time, full-time students who began in
fall 2014 and completed within three years is the highest on record. The rate represented
a 2% increase from the previous year’s graduation rate and was among the highest of
Wyoming’s seven community colleges. In addition, NWC maintained its exemplary student
retention rate—61% for first-time, full-time students who began at NWC in fall 2016
and returned in fall 2017. It was the second highest in the state.
August 2017: NWC introduces an annual Paint the Town Red event
As a way to celebrate the beginning of the academic year and welcome incoming NWC
students to the local community, the college introduced our annual Paint the Town
Red event in August 2017. In partnership with the City of Powell, this event aimed
to foster community building between the college and local residents, services and
businesses. The celebration included live music, food trucks, children's activities
and a variety of opportunities for locals to meet the people behind college programs,
services and teams.
February 2018: HLC report among most positive in history
Northwest College’s 2018 accreditation report is among the most positive in the history
of the institution. The official report was received following NWC’s September 11-12,
2017, comprehensive campus visit by the Higher Learning Commission (HLC). The visit
culminated nearly three years of research, information gathering, analysis and writing.
It recommended continued accreditation, with the next comprehensive visit expected
in 2025. All sub-components for the five criteria’s Core Components have been met.
The report signaled that the three areas the HLC flagged for improvement after its
last comprehensive visit in 2010—assessment of student learning outcomes, tying budgeting
to planning and institutional governance—are no longer concerns. In addition, the
report allowed the college to choose its “pathway” for future reaccreditation maintenance.
January 2019: NWC Rodeo program honored by Montana Pro Rodeo Hall and Wall of Fame In 2019 the Northwest College Rodeo program was inducted into the Montana Pro Rodeo Hall and Wall of Fame. The Hall of Fame was founded in 2001 to honor Montana's professional rodeo champions. A brick and granite “Wall of Fame” was constructed in the shadow of an 18-foot bronze statue of Billings' six-time world champion Dan Mortensen, an alum of Northwest College.