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Capital Community College : A Giving Tuesday Story: Capital's Gui ...
Jim Satterfield, Canton, Georgia
November 30, 2021
Jim Satterfield, Canton, Georgia
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In 1996 Professor Emeritus Charles Darling created an online instructional guide for his creative writing and literature classes at Capital Community CollegeΒ (CCC).
Dr. Darling,Β theΒ author of several books of poetry and Capitalβs first webmaster, wanted to create a place where his students could obtain help with writing their research papers and reports, as well as look up grammatical issues for themselves.
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The Guide to Grammar & WritingΒ rapidly took on a life of its own, mushrooming into a widely popular site as use of the web for personal and educational uses became ubiquitous. It was not uncommon for the late Professor Darling to field more than 50 emails a night. It was Charlie Darlingβs idea to link his Guide to the College Foundation. βFrom now on, people who get answers to grammar questions from me will also get a pitch to send a tax-deductible contribution to the collegeβs nonprofit foundation,β Darling told the Hartford Courant in a 2004 feature story.
Twenty-five years later Charles DarlingβsΒ Guide To Grammar & Writing is still going strong as a free resource for teachers, students and anyone trying to get their grammar and written communication right. People from all corners of the earth still call and e-mail the college with questions on grammar use and writing and send along their thanks with occasional gifts of appreciation.
One of the latest βthank yousβ accompanied by a donation came to the College Foundation last month from Jim Satterfield who lives in a small town outside of Atlanta.
βWhat is an 88-year-old man who lives in Canton, GA doing making donations to a college in Hartford CT?β asked Satterfield explaining his interest in the Guide and Capital CC. βThis seems especially odd since he has degrees from the University ofΒ Georgia, should be a rabid Bulldog football fan, and ought to make donations there rather than out of stateβ¦β¦Well, Iβm not a typical UGA alumnus.Β I canβt tell you the name of the UGA football coach nor name a single player.Β Β But I am, and always will be, a student.Β I will always try to learn new things as long as I live, and over the last year Iβve ventured back into the area of sentence diagramming.Β This adventure in learning/relearning has resulted in my becoming aware of CCC.β
βTo do sentence diagramming,β says Satterfield, βIβve had to relearn much of the English I had forgotten and also learn much that Iβve never known.Β I βgoogledβ English grammar websites and found a link to Dr. Darlingβs webpages on grammar that are a part of the CCC website. I went to those webpages on Grammar, and I found a major resource that is open to the worldβ¦free to anyone who wants to learn English.Β What a gift to Mankind! Iβve used the website regularly in my work with sentence diagramming, and I will continue to use it.Β
Since discovering the Guide to Grammar, Satterfield has made two donations in support of Capital, one for the Guide itself and a second for the Collegeβs nursing program. The nursing gift was inspired by βthe flood of memories your college brought to me.β Satterfield, who earned his masterβs in zoology at UGA, went on to become a professor at the Georgia State College of Business Administration, a college similar in size to Capital at the time that has grown into Georgia State University in Atlanta. βCCC reminds me so much of that College in the days when I joined the faculty.β While the old Georgia State didnβt offer nursing Satterfieldβs biology department taught human anatomy and physiology and microbiology for nursing students. βI enjoyed teaching those older (working) students who could bring to class a wealth of knowledge and experience on which to build their degree.β recalls Satterfield.
Professor Darling died in 2006 after a courageous battle with brain cancer not long after retiring from a 35-year career at Capital Community College. But his gifts as an extraordinary teacher live on through the Guide that he created and generously shared, a sharing that continues today. His remarkable contributions to the college can be found at the Grammar site in this tribute by Jane Bronfman, former Director of Marketing and Public Relations.
by John McNamara
This press release was produced by the Capital Community College. The views expressed here are the authorβs own.