Thad Kubis Called A Model Educator At City Tech

In a recent article in Printing Impressions, Harvey Levenson, Ph.D, wrote a piece on the importance of New York City College of Technology (City Tech) to the metropolitan area’s printing, publishing, advertising and design communities. In it, he singled out longtime and respected friend of GDUSA, Thad Kubis, for his exemplary teaching career.

Levenson writes:

Professor Thaddeus B. Kubis — A Model of Faculty Commitment to Students

My point person for researching this article was professor Thaddeus B. Kubis. Thad is a professional and passionately driven educator whose career includes, hands-on experience in advertising agencies, the creative community, print production, and the ever-changing world of new and emerging media.

A successful author, Thad developed The Guide to Integrated Marketing and Media Convergence for print providers. For more than 20 years as an Adjunct Professor at the New York City College of Technology and the Fashion Institute of Technology, he has been an active contributor to City Tech and supporter of the Communications Design BFA program. Thad’s link to the graphic arts industry started when his agency, NAK Integrated Marketing, signed Heidelberg USA as a client. That started a 20-year-plus, association with some of the industry’s largest names, including MAN Roland (today named Manroland), Harris, Mueller Martini, Kodak, as well as Heidelberg USA, and many others. Thad has taught print production, binding and finishing, digital media, and production for designers, and is an online instructor in all aspects of photography. He is also the founder of The Birch Mountain Integrated Marketing Group and The Berkshire Storytellers Project that assists companies with “targeted marketing” (marketingisaprofitcenter.com). Thad represents the continuum of experienced and enthusiastic professors that I experienced in the 1960s and observed again in 2004; an accolade to City Tech for having students educated by the best and the brightest — a faculty committed to student success.

Teaching Philosophy

The undergirding of Thad Kubis’s teaching is a philosophy focused on “integration” of individual processes into an expected end result. Kubis said:

I believe in teaching graphic communication as a process; a series of interconnected, integrated procedures that offer a highly researched and developed end result. Teaching students the importance of workflow and making good decisions are highly relevant to my teaching strategy for integrating design to print production and to digital-based multimedia.

Thad is also addressing the current requirement for online teaching during the COVID-19 crisis. Similar to nearly all schools in the nation, City Tech has moved to online teaching for now.  Thad converted this situation to a positive and said:

Overall, despite current conditions, the industry had been moving to an independent based production workflow. I think the current COVID-19 crisis has accelerated this move, and the students I teach have adapted to distant learning, which will soon become ‘distant working’. I feel that our students will then be ready to adapt to such a work environment and, hence, be desirable to employers.

The City Tech Communication Design Program, building on the solid foundation in visual expression of the first two years, develops students’ abilities to frame, research and solve increasingly complex visual communication problems.

Adopts Interactive Book to Support Online Teaching and Learning

To support online teaching, Thad has been using the only interactive book in the graphic arts driven by Ricoh’s free Clickable Paper app, Introduction to Graphic Communication (igcbook.com). This PRINTED, ink-on-paper, book provides access to videos of technology at work, lectures by prominent industry experts, chat rooms, websites, and interaction between and among students and faculty. Students can even communicate with the book’s authors — all from a printed book interfaced with a smartphone or tablet having the Ricoh Clickable Paper app. Kubis explained:

In a world where everything is interconnected, integrated, interactive, such a foundational book as part of my teaching array, makes more than sense to me. The visual elements of the online offering are powerful tools to use when leading online instruction. I have recommended that the book be made the required text. Of the three books that I use to develop, update, and instruct, Introduction to Graphic Communication has become the lead book; my key source for teaching online or in the classroom. I am considering developing a Facebook, LinkedIn, and Instagram portal of knowledge that will integrate the teaching and production value of the book.

Professor Kubis represents the City Tech faculty experience and enthusiasm that I observed in the 1960s, in 2004, and now again in 2020 — an impressive continuum!

City Tech’s Diversity — The Envy of Colleges and Universities Across The Nation

City Tech is one of the most racially diverse colleges in the nation. It is a model for other schools striving to enhance diversity that better reflects our nation while addressing the shortage of educated and skilled employees, a situation likely to continue well into the future. The graphic communication industry is not immune to this, and City Tech’s Communication Design program is doing its part to prepare future employees of diverse cultural and racial backgrounds. City Tech has slightly over 17,000 students of which 29% are African American, 34% are Hispanic, and 20% are Asian; an enviable mix when many public colleges and universities are under pressure to diversify — to “look” like the communities that they represent. City Tech “looks” like the greater New York City metropolitan area from which approximately 90% of its students come. The gender split is equally impressive with 55% being men and 45% being women.

City Tech has a comprehensive curriculum that addresses the specific needs of communication design and information technology by integrating theory, hands-on experience and industry exposure to applied skills through internship programs with local New York City printing, publishing, advertising, and design companies.

The graphic communication industry demands an educated, action-based, trained employee pool that can seamlessly be integrated into the fields of printing, publishing, advertising, design, packaging and related areas. City Tech’s Communication Design program is preparing such future employees. According to Professor Kubis, City Tech’s Communication Design program is more than needed, it is demanded.