Reminder! Classified Staff Retreat this Fri., August 14
The 1st Annual Classified Staff Retreat is this Fri., August 14 from 8:30-11:45 a.m. in the Automotive Showroom (2100 building).
The event will feature keynote speaker Tena Crosby, who is a communications expert and professional trainer. Come enjoy refreshments, door prizes and engaging breakout sessions!
Please contact Alan Loveless with any questions at wloveless@shoreline.edu.
Employee Change Report for July/August 2015
Please click here to view the employee change report for July/August 2015. Any changes that occur after today will be reflected on next month’s report.
Seattle Public Library To Host Octavia’s Brood Event August 26
In case you’ve missed it, the Community Book Read book for 2015-16 is Octavia’s Brood, a collection of social justice-themed science fiction stories.
And now the Seattle Public Library is hosting a conversation with two of the contributors to Octavia’s Brood from 5–8:30 p.m., on Wed., August 26, on the Seattle Central Library’s Atsuhiko and Ina Goodwin Tateuchi Plaza.
The two contributors—Walidah Imarisha and Gabriel Teodros—will be discussing the book, their stories, the inspiration and legacy provided by African-American science fiction writer (and Lake Forest Park resident) Octavia Butler, and the connection between science fiction and social justice.
Several faculty, staff, and administrators are planning to attend the event and would like to encourage others to join us.
Imarisha co-edited Octavia’s Brood with Adrienne Maree Brown and wrote one of its stories (“Black Angel”). On the faculty of the Black Studies Department at Portland State University, Imarisha is billed as a “writer, organizer, educator and spoken word artist.” Teodros is a multiracial—he claims, Ethiopian, Scottish, Irish, and Native American descent—Seattle hip-hop artist. His story, “Lalibela” appears in Octavia’s Brood and, in addition to talking about his writing, Teodros will also perform at the library’s event.
Octavia’s Brood is a collection of social justice-themed science fiction stories that feature things like time travel, shape shifting, dystopian worlds, re-imaginings of “model minorities,” and the possibilities of using visionary fiction to develop new ideas of future worlds. The works are inspired by the writings of Octavia Butler, an award-winning science fiction writer (Kindred, Parable of the Sower, and Lilith’s Brood) who lived in Lake Forest Park before her death in 2006.
Shoreline Community College has adopted Octavia’s Brood as it’s community read for 2015-2016 and is developing events and programming to generate conversation and action around the themes explored in its pages. The entire campus community—staff, administrators, students, and faculty—will be invited to read and discuss the stories inside Octavia’s Brood during winter quarter, and faculty are being encouraged to incorporate some of its stories into their classes in the coming year.
Community read organizers are also hoping to bring some of the people behind the book—like Imarisha and Teodros to campus—for conversations about social justice, science fiction, the art of writing, and reading appreciation.
Click here to find out more about the Seattle Public Library event.
And click here if you’d like to find out more about Octavia’s Brood.
If you would like to know what you can do to become involved in the college’s community read, contact Yvonne Terrell-Powell or one of the current community workgroup members (like Caroline Conley in the library, Joyce Fagel in sciences, or Tim Wright in history and multicultural studies).
Library Building Update and Schedule for August 14-31

These are extraordinary days at Shoreline Community College, and here in the 4000 Building, we’ve been doing extraordinary things to make the facility ready for two new partners in serving our students well: the Math Learning Center and The Writing & Learning Studio will join Tutoring, TSS, and the Library under one roof. In order to support the relocations for MLC and TWLS, the building’s 4200 and 4300 floors will be closed to the public Fri., August 14 through Mon., August 31. We are lucky to have the following colleagues stepping in to meet needs during this uncommon interruption:
TSS will open up 4102 so that students have lab access for their computing purposes during this interim from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m., M-Th (August 17-20 and August 24-27).
An ID card station will be staffed in the Student Services area in FOSS, coinciding with several orientation events later this month, including:
12-4 p.m. Mon., August 17
10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Tues., August 18 through Thurs., August 20
10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Mon., August 24 through Thurs., August 27
12-4 p.m. Mon., August 31
Instructors wishing to put material on reserve prior to September can contact Chris Matz, Library Director, via phone at 206-546-4558 or via email at cmatz@shoreline.edu for assistance at any time.
Tutoring services and the Library will re-open on Tues., September 1 and keep standard break hours (8 a.m. – 5 p.m. M-Th; closed Fridays) until Fri., September 18. MLC and TWLS will announce their own schedules as Opening Week approaches.
I am proud to work with staffs from all four offices who, with tremendous help from Facilities and countless well-wishers, worked tirelessly to get everything ready before the new academic year begins. We all look forward to bragging on our accomplishments these past few months in a formal setting very soon.
Chris Matz
Director, Ray W Howard Library

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