Call for Nominations for the WA ACT Transforming Lives Awards 2016

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Dear Campus Community,

Please consider nominating a current or former Shoreline Community College student for the Washington ACT 2016 Transforming Lives Awards.

You can check out the 2015 Transforming Lives Awards booklet cover here and the booklet here.

The criteria and nomination form can be found herePlease do not hesitate to contact Lori Yonemitsu at lyonemitsu@shoreline.edu if you need assistance with the form or have questions.

To nominate a current or former student: please complete form on page 2 of the criteria and nomination form and include the written statement (“compelling story”) from the nominee and return to Lori Yonemitsu at lyonemitsu@shoreline.edu no later than 5:00 p.m. on Thurs., Nov. 12, 2015.

About the Washington ACT (Association of College Trustees) 2016 Transforming Lives Awards
The Washington ACT Transforming Lives Awards recognize current or former students whose lives have been transformed by attending a Washington State Community or Technical College.  One (1) current or former student from each of the 34 Community and Technical Colleges will be nominated by the College’s Board of Trustees. A subcommittee of the Shoreline Community College’s (SCC’s) Board of Trustees will review all nominations received from the campus community, determine the College’s nominee for the 2016 Washington ACT Transforming Lives Awards and submit the nominee’s name to the ACT Awards Committee.

The ACT Awards Committee will select a total of five individuals (awardees) from the nominations submitted by the CTCs and each of the five awardees, will receive a $500.00 (Five-Hundred dollar) monetary award. In addition, the ACT will honor all 34 current or former CTC nominees at a Transforming Lives Awards Dinner, scheduled for January 24, 2016.

CRITERIA:
Nominations must come from the current or former student’s Board of Trustees, based on the following criteria:

The nominee may be either a current or former Washington Community or Technical College student who has completed or made significant progress toward completing a degree or certificate that has helped him or her prepare for, or achieve success in future or current endeavors.

The nominee must share a compelling story** in written format (maximum 500 words) about overcoming barriers to achieve higher education goals and how the education and support received at his/her Community or Technical College was life transforming (e.g. new employment, self-sufficiency, etc.). ** Please note: All 34 stories will be published in the Transforming Lives Booklet. The booklet is widely distributed to Legislators, CTC Stakeholders, the Public and is posted to the ACT’s website.

NOMINATIONS:
To nominate a current or former student: please complete form on page 2 of the attached and include the written statement (“compelling story”) from the nominee and return to Lori Yonemitsu at lyonemitsu@shoreline.edu no later than 5:00 PM on Thursday, November 12, 2015.

4000 Building brainstorming makes it rain ideas

Pierce College Library

The Pierce College Library and Cascade Building was a McGranahan project.

Three brainstorming sessions with employees and students brought forth plenty of ideas for what uses and looks might be in store for the 4000 Building at Shoreline Community College.

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Seong Shin, of McGranahan Architects, makes a comment during one of the Orct. 28 brainstorming sessions.

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Work to make room for learning support centers this fall began this past June.

The No. 1 current use – the Ray W. Howard Library Media and Technology Center – isn’t likely to change, but there are other programs and uses in the building and libraries in general have been morphing to accommodate changes in technology and user expectations.

Leading the brainstorming sessions on Oct. 28, 2105, were Seong Shin, principal for interior design services, along with other personnel at McGranahan Architects of Tacoma. McGranahan is the firm the college has been working with on a variety of refresh projects across campus. The goal is to imagine the look and uses for the building in the coming years.

To prime the conversation pump, Shin showed slides from other projects, including one McGranahan worked on at Pierce College. Comments ranged from color schemes to re-imagining the technology that might need to be accommodated in the future.

To gather more comments, an online survey has been reopened and is available at:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/7K9LTT9

While the 4000 Building and library went through an extensive renovation 15 years ago, there have been some more recent usage changes.

For example, the Math Learning Center and The Writing and Learning Studio this past summer moved from other areas on campus into library main-floor spaces and opened to students for this fall quarter. In the fall of 2014, tutoring services relocated from the 5000 Building (FOSS) to offices on the library main floor. In the spring of 2014, the former TV studio on the lower floor became a black-box theater space used by a variety of digital film, theater and other programs and classes.

Trustees OK funding for housing study

Shoreline Community College is going to look at the feasibility of building and operating student housing on campus.

At the Oct. 28, 2015 regular meeting, the college Board of Trustees on a unanimous 4-0 vote approved spending up to $200,000 from existing one-time funds to conduct a study to determine the feasibility of constructing and operating a student housing facility on campus.

The college Master Development Plan approved by the city of Shoreline in 2014 includes the possibility of on-campus housing.

Discussions to provide housing for Shoreline Community College students have been ongoing for the past five years. A number of locations both on- and off-campus have been considered along with a variety of funding and ownership strategies.

This feasibility study will be based on the on-campus site of the existing soccer field and track on the north end of campus. The study will look at financing using what is known as a Certificate of Participation (COP) issued by the state of Washington on behalf of the college. Revenue from rental fees generated by the housing project would be used to pay off the COP debt. While the initial cost of the study will be covered by the college, that expense could be folded into the overall cost of the project.

The housing would be open and available to all students. Besides a strong draw for international students, Shoreline has a number of programs that attract domestic students from outside the area, including automotive technology, nursing, dental hygiene, manufacturing, music technology and biotechnology.

Last Weekend for Shoreline’s Hit Show, Avenue Q!

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Get your tickets for Shoreline’s Theater Department’s hit presentation of Avenue Q – running through this Sun., Nov. 1. This laugh-out-loud show is “an autobiographical and biographical coming-of-age parable, addressing and satirizing the issues and anxieties associated with entering adulthood” – as told by puppets!

One of the longest-running Broadway shows, Avenue Q is the winner of the TONY® “TRIPLE CROWN” for BEST MUSICAL, BEST SCORE and BEST BOOK. Avenue Q is part flesh, part felt and packed with heart. This musical tells the timeless story of a recent college grad named PRINCETON who moves into a shabby New York apartment all the way out on Avenue Q. There, he meets KATE (the girl next door), ROD (the Republican), TREKKIE (the internet sexpert), LUCY THE SLUT (need we say more?), and other colorful types who help PRINCETON finally discover his purpose in life!

Filled with gut-busting humor and a delightfully catchy score, not to mention puppets, Avenue Q is a truly unique show that has quickly become a favorite for audiences everywhere. Although the show addresses humorous adult issues, it is similar to a beloved children’s show; a place where puppets are friends, Monsters are good and life lessons are learned. That said, it’s not recommended for minors under the age of 15.

Selling out fast – Get your tickets here now!

Shoreline’s Community Integration Employment Program Offers Thanks to the Campus Community

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In honor of National Disability Employment Awareness Month, Rosemary Dunne, Program Manager for Shoreline’s Community Integration and Employment Program (CIEP), wishes to thank the campus community for supporting the CIEP’s efforts and mission.

In particular, the CIEP staff wants to thank the following people and departments who currently employ, or who have started the conversation about how to employ, CIEP students on campus:

Mary Kelleman, Leah Pearce, and the entire Bookstore Staff
Jennifer Berlin – Lancer Hospitality
Mary Bonar – Visual Arts
Steve Eskridge and Kathy Langer – Athletics
Tasleem Quasim – Education
Patty Jones – The Ebbtide
The Deep Roots Community
The Student Leadership Center

For more information about CIEP, its students and how the people named above are supporting it, please continue reading below and check out the article we published today on Shoreline’s News Site about CIEP. Please contact Rosemary at rdunne@shoreline.edu with any questions about how you can support CIEP.

Thank you! And Happy National Disability Employment Awareness Month!

Shoreline’s CIEP Students Find Meaningful Work on Campus

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A Shoreline CIEP student busy at work in the bookstore.

When the focus of Shoreline’s Community Integration Employment Program (CIEP) shifted recently from helping students with barriers to employment develop job skills to actually helping place students in employment opportunities, CIEP Program Manager Rosemary Dunne looked to Shoreline’s campus community for help in fulfilling the program’s new mission.

“An obvious place to look is our campus,” said Dunne. “Many of our students really like being on campus and being part of this community, so to honor their wishes we reached out to the campus to find paid employment and real life work experience opportunities for them onsite.”

The response, said Dunne, has been encouraging. “There are many areas and departments at Shoreline who’ve been very receptive and creative in working with us. It’s not always easy to do when everyone’s time crunched and looking at the bottom line, but these departments recognize it’s the right thing to do to make that extra step to find space for our students.”

The bookstore is one such department, currently employing three CIEP students.

“The Bookstore in particular has always been very supportive of our program,” said Dunne. “That legacy started with Mary Kellemen (Former Executive Director of Auxiliary and Logistical Services) and has really been carried on wholeheartedly by Leah Pearce (Director, Bookstore) and her amazing staff. Their whole team has been really supportive in creating opportunities for our students with a ‘no problem’ attitude.”

Placing CIEP students in jobs involves being creative with duties and recognizing the worth of the contribution that marginalized populations can make in the workplace. “CIEP students have a range of barriers to employment,” said Dunne, “but that allows people to start thinking outside of the box about how they can recognize and reward each student’s unique skillset.”

Instead of assigning CIEP students a full spectrum of job responsibilities, the goal is to carve out a portion of duties a student can reasonably be expected to accomplish.

For example, Morgan Evert, a CIEP student who’s worked in the bookstore since May of 2015, excels at organizing so she handles duties that encompass those skills. Evert shelves or “faces” books, helps students find what they’re looking for and keeps spaces and equipment clean.

“I really like working in the bookstore,” said Evert. “Everyone is really nice and fun to talk to. And I like working on campus and being able to take part in the fun activities that are always going on because this is a pretty cool college. And it just wouldn’t work very well for me to be working off campus because it would take me too much time to get to and from work and school.”

Examples of CIEP students making meaningful contributions across campus abound. Lancer’s Catering Manager, Jennifer Berlin, recently hired a CIEP student to help with lunchtime rush. Mary Bonar, Program Manager for Visual Arts, is hiring a CIEP student as a lab assistant. And Patty Jones, advisor for The Ebbtide, has supported several meaningful work experiences for CIEP students over the past couple of years, including hiring one student as an Op-Ed writer.

In addition, the Deep Roots Community and Student Leadership continue to embrace CIEP students and provide them valuable work experience.

According to Dunne, the reward to the employing department is immeasurable. “Having a CIEP student around helps boost both morale and work ethic,” she said. “When you see that someone with multiple barriers can come to work and get it done, you realize you can as well and your whole attitude tends to change.”

Of course the goal isn’t to employ the entire program’s roster of 20 students on campus, but rather to honor each individual student’s wish.

“We have several students employed off campus in the larger community,” said Dunne, “but this is a very vulnerable population so it makes sense that many would want to work on campus where they know people, where their support system is and where they feel safe. This is their community, and they want to be a part of it and valued by it.”

In honor of Disability Employment Awareness Month, Dunne and the CIEP program want to thank the following departments who have shown support for CIEP’s mission, either by employing students or beginning the conversation as to how they can employ students:

Mary Kelleman, Leah Pearce, and the entire Bookstore Staff
Jennifer Berlin – Lancer Hospitality
Mary Bonar – Visual Arts
Steve Eskridge and Kathy Langer – Athletics
Tasleem Quasim – Education
Patty Jones – The Ebbtide
The Deep Roots Community
The Student Leadership Center