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Valentage wins Eisenhart Award during final year at RIT

Anyone familiar with Nancy Valentage knows that when professional kudos come her way—such as a coveted RIT teaching award and a heartfelt retirement farewell—she will humbly accept the attention with gratitude and redirect the spotlight.

Valentage, associate director and professor in RIT’s physician assistant program has won an Eisenhart Award for Outstanding Teaching for her commitment to student success. The recognition is bittersweet for Valentage, who is retiring after 31 years at RIT.

“I love teaching,” Valentage said. “PA students are such a passionate group. They know this is going to be their life’s work and they are very serious. It’s been a gift to interact with them.”

From behind the scenes, Valentage has played a pivotal role in the development and continued success of RIT’s physician assistant BS/MS program. She joined RIT in 1994 to create the program with colleague Heidi Miller. Their first class graduated in 1996 with 17 students.

Since then, Valentage has seen more than 860 PA students graduate. As professional requirements of the field changed, Valentage and Miller added graduate curriculum and, in 2014, welcomed the first cohort of BS/MS students. The colleagues also introduced the symbolic white coat ceremony in which the PA faculty welcome graduating students into the profession.

A career in academia presented itself to Valentage, and she has been grateful for the opportunity to learn from her students and grow professionally. RIT recruited Valentage from the former Genesee Hospital. Her supervising physician had trained her to teach dental and medical residents how to collect patients’ medical histories and conduct physical exams. She continued to practice her profession for many years into her new role.

During her tenure at RIT, Valentage earned her MS in health systems management (formerly known as health systems administration) in 1998 and completed a critical care fellowship at Unity Hospital in 2007. Both experiences broadened her knowledge of the healthcare industry and gave her new clinical skills to share with her students.

“I was able to talk to students about the business of healthcare and bring back new technical skills and procedures to the classroom,” she said.

The opportunity to design the PA teaching lab and classroom in the Clinical Health Sciences building is another proud achievement for Valentage.

“I carefully researched what would be upcoming and new, and our facility is still state of the art,” she said. “We have individual bays for teaching, and the ability for students to record their practice sessions. And we have a simulation lab.”

Valentage lobbied for the digital anatomy table that the College of Health Sciences and Technology purchased this fall because “technological tools give our students a competitive edge.”

Another advantage, she said, is RIT’s five-year BS/MS program. “RIT is only a handful of schools across the country that take students directly from high school.”

Valentage is proud of the PA education RIT offers students and the network of clinical partners she and Miller have cultivated during the last three decades. She enjoys the opportunity to pair alumni working in the region with students gaining clinical experience during their fifth year. It strengthens the professional community among RIT’s physician assistant alumni.

Becoming a physician assistant can be a great career for people who want to be change-makers, Valentage said.

During retirement, she looks forward to volunteering, traveling, spending time with family friends, and practicing her new hobby—fly-fishing. Valentage’s father taught her to fish, but this method poses a new challenge for her to explore.

“I started fly fishing about two years ago, and I consider myself a novice,” she said. “I simply love the serenity of being out in nature, even if I don’t catch as many fish as I do with the other methods. Fly-fishing is an art for sure.”

Locally, Valentage fishes in Oatka Creek and in the Ausable River when she is in the Adirondacks. Her retirement plans include fly-fishing in Montana and surf fishing in the Florida Keys.

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