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Daytona State College Renames College of Workforce and Continuing Education in Honor of Mary Brennan Karl
From left to right: Dr. Randy Howard, Dr. Tom LoBasso, Rick Karl, Erin Brennan Karl, Sarah Karl, and Dr. Sherryl Weems.

Press Release

Daytona State College Renames College of Workforce and Continuing Education in Honor of Mary Brennan Karl

| 1/27/2020

DAYTONA BEACH, FLA. (Jan. 27, 2020) – Daytona State College renamed its College of Workforce and Continuing Education in honor of Mary Brennan Karl, founder of Volusia County’s first vocational school. A formal ceremony recognizing the “Mary Karl College of Workforce and Continuing Education” was held Thursday, January 23, at DSC’s Advanced Technology College.

“It’s no stretch to say that Daytona State would not even exist, if it were not for the efforts of Mary Karl, whose passion for education in Volusia County changed the lives of so many young men and women,” said Dr. Tom LoBasso, DSC President. “It’s amazing that what she started in the ‘30s and ‘40s, vocational training in plumbing, welding, carpentry, electric, and automobile engine repair, are skilled trades that we’re still teaching today at Daytona State.”

Karl was one of Volusia County’s early leaders in education, compiling a long list of accomplishments during her career, first as a teacher at Mainland High School before she was named Director of the Opportunity School in 1931. Her crusade to broaden, strengthen, and enhance the opportunities available to students, along with her tenacious determination, became the driving force behind what evolved into the Volusia County Vocational School. After initially providing training in vital workforce programs during the Great Depression and World War II, the school later retrained veterans for work in civilian jobs.

With the aid of friends and colleagues such as U.S. Senator Claude Pepper, Mary McLeod Bethune, the founder of Bethune-Cookman University, and First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt, Karl was able to secure property from the federal government for the expansion of her school and its further development as a junior college. Her vision became a reality in 1957 when the Florida State Legislature authorized the creation of Daytona Beach Junior College from the pre-existing vocational school. The College has since gone through two name changes, but the property acquired by Karl is still the present-day site of DSC’s Daytona Beach Campus.

“This means a lot to us a family, to have her name remembered,” said Rick Karl, grandson of Mary Karl and Director of Aviation and Economic Resources for Volusia County. “Mary and her husband lost everything in the Depression, so she was not a person of wealth, but her passion is what carried this on. I think of my grandmother and Mary McLeod Bethune taking the train together to the White House to meet with Eleanor Roosevelt, who picked up the phone and called the Pentagon to get this rolling. This is a story of three women collaborating in the 1940s and how a single person, not of wealth, but with tenacity, set out to make this happen.”

Programs offered through the Mary Karl College of Workforce and Continuing Education include Welding, Air Conditioning, Refrigeration & Heating Mechanic (HVACR), Automotive Service Technology, Automotive Collision Repair & Refinishing, Building Trades & Construction Design Technology, Machining, Plumbing, Welding Technology, Cosmetology, and Barbering.

ABOUT DAYTONA STATE: Offering more than 100 certificate, associate and bachelor’s degree programs, Daytona State College has responded to the education and workforce training needs of Volusia and Flagler counties and beyond for more than 60 years. The college enrolls nearly 28,000 students a year at its seven instructional sites, with graduates serving in critical fields including health care, emergency services, business, education, hospitality, engineering, technology and more.

Daytona State has been recognized as a leader in higher education numerous times, consistently by U.S. News & World Report, which ranks the college among the Top Tier Best Online Bachelor’s Programs eight years running. The U.S. Department of Education’s College Affordability and Transparency Center has ranked DSC among the top 50 most affordable public four-year institutions in the country, with less than half the tuition of the national average. Community College Week, a leading publication in higher education, annually continues to feature the college in its list of Top 100 Associate Degree Producers. And for three years in a row, U.S. News & World Report has ranked DSC among its Top Online Bachelor’s Programs for Veterans.

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