MLK Jr. Celebration events continue all week!

Join us for Shoreline Community College’s Annual MLK Jr. Celebration – Reclaiming Narratives: Connecting our Past to the Future. Check out the schedule of events below:

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Wednesday – January 18th, 2017

Listening to our Narratives: Dialogue skills for tough conversations
10:30-11:20 a.m. in PUB 9208
Come to this interactive workshop to learn how to engage in dialogue instead of debate. How do we share our stories to move toward common ground. With Shoreline Professor, Brooke Zimmers.

Reconstructing Resistance: Fighting White Nationalism and Racism with professor Kate Boyd
11:30 a.m. – 12:20 p.m. in PUB 9208
This workshop provides an anti-fascist framework for understanding the rise of white nationalism in the current moment. Participants will unpack commonly held myths about white nationalism while learning about the history of the movement and its current efforts to mainstream. Grounded in an understanding of cultural organizing, we will explore how white nationalists have engaged culture and participants will develop their own anti-racist and anti-fascist cultural organizing practices. Participants will leave with concrete strategies to disrupt, defuse, and dismantle white nationalism and racism.

Film Showing 14: Dred Scott, Wong Kim Ark & Vanessa Lopez
12:30-2:30 p.m. in PUB 9208
The documentary film 14: Dred Scott, Wong Kim Ark & Vanessa Lopez explores the recurring question about who has the right to be an American citizen. 14 examines the citizenship clause of the 14th Amendment through compelling personal stories and expertly-told history. Under the Fourteenth Amendment, “All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside ”Descendants of Dred and Harriet Scott and those of Wong Kim Ark tell the stories of how their ancestors fought all the way to the Supreme Court and changed American history. Q&A following film hosted by the Alliance of Latin American Students (ALAS)

March/Rally Debrief
2:30-3:20 p.m. in PUB 9202
Join us for an informal discussion reflecting on the March and the power of demonstrations.

Thursday, January 19th, 2017

Poetry and Writing Appreciation
9:30am – 10:20am in PUB 9208
We’ll spend this time celebrating a work or works by one or two key African American writers. We’ll examine their use of language, imagery, metaphor, rhythm, rhyme, and other literary features; their engagement with social and political issues; their existential confrontation with suffering; and their ability to craft something beautiful and lasting. Potential authors include Gwendolyn Brooks, Toni Cade Bambara, and Douglas Kearney. Shoreline Faculty member Davis Oldham will Facilitate.

The Food Pantry Kick-off
11:30 a.m. – 1:30 p.m. in PUB 9201 & 9202
Shoreline Community College is committed to meeting the needs of our students. In response to students facing food insecurity, Shoreline will be expanding students’ access to The Food Pantry. We will be having a kick-off event during MLK week and students who are facing food insecurity will be able to access food, general items, and other resources. Sponsored by Center for Equity and Engagement and Student Leadership.

Film Showing: 13th – Q&A with the Black Student Union
11:30 a.m. – 1:20 p.m. in PUB 9208
The title of Ava DuVernay’s extraordinary and galvanizing documentary 13TH refers to the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which reads “Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States.” The progression from that second qualifying clause to the horrors of mass criminalization and the sprawling American prison industry is laid out by DuVernay with bracing lucidity. With a potent mixture of archival footage and testimony from a dazzling array of activists, politicians, historians, and formerly incarcerated women and men, DuVernay creates a work of grand historical synthesis.

“Echao p’alante”: Working Towards an Inclusive and Intersectional Understanding of the US Civil Rights Movement
1:30pm- 2:30pm in PUB 9208
The Civil Rights Movement simply did not just start in 1954 and end in 1964. Our primary school education, history books, and associated media have in many ways collapsed and limited our understanding of the US Civil Rights Movement by esteeming certain types of action and actors while vilifying others often at the expense of the collaborative movements that many have worked so hard to build. This workshop will draw on multiple forms of media in order to contextualize and highlight multiple forms of resistance and sustained struggle against oppression culminating in all of the participants working together to build an inclusive and intersectional visual timeline of the civil rights movement. Presented by BSU Advisor, Jessica Gonzalez.

Friday, January 20th, 2017

Letter Writing to Incarcerated Individuals
9-11 a.m. in PUB 9202
Drop by and write a letter of encouragement to individuals who are incarcerated. Paper and supplies will be provided.

White Allyship/Accomplice-ship
12:30-1:20 p.m. in PUB 9208
What is allyship and accomplice-ship? What are the differences and how can you tell if you are being one or the other? Join this session to find out more about these terms and how you can assist in making space for others. Workshop presented by Professor Rachel David.

Wednesday, January 25th, 2017

Community Book Read Event with Anastasia Tolbert
12:30 p.m. – PUB 9208
Anastacia Renee Tolbert is a queer super-shero of color moonlighting as a writer, performance artist and creative writing workshop facilitator. She has received awards and fellowships from Cave Canem, Hedgebrook, VONA, Jack Straw, Ragdale and Artist Trust. She was recently selected as the 2015-16 poet-in-residence at Hugo House, a place for writers in Seattle. Her Chapbook 26, recently published by Dancing Girl Press, is an abbreviated alphabet expression of the lower and uppercase lives of women and girls.

Additional details will be added as they become available. For questions or comments, please contact Jamie Ardena in the Multicultural Center at jardena@shoreline.edu or 206.533.6618.

Auditions for The Producers: A Mel Brooks Musical! Jan. 19-21

Auditions for The Producers: A Mel Brooks Musical will be held Jan. 19-21. Auditions will be in the Main Theater (1600 bldg.) from 5:30-8 p.m. on Jan. 19 & 20 and from 5-6 p.m. on Jan. 21. Call backs will be Jan. 21 from 6-9:30 p.m. Sign up for an audition slot here.
the-producers
Come prepared to perform a short musical theater excerpt that shows their skills as a singer, and a short (1 minute) monologue. Please, audition not to exceed 3 minutes.

The show will run: May 12, 13, 14, 19, 20, and 21. Dr. Charles Enlow will be the producer and musical director.

About the show:
The Producers is based around the character of Max Bialystock, a down and out Broadway producer whose latest work flopped on opening night. Max, plagued by his former success and scrabbling to stay afloat, experiences a change in fortune when downtrodden accountant, Leo Bloom, discovers there is money to be made in Max’s theatrical failure. As a result, the two formerly defeated business men form an unlikely union with the goal of creating the worlds worst musical. The plot develops as the duo enlists the help of ridiculous and often farcical characters on the way such as former Nazi and on-going Third Reich enthusiast Franz Liebkind, Ulla the blonde bombshell secretary/receptionist and the flamboyant homosexual director Roger De Bris. As a result of the characters combined brainpower and ludicrous behavior Spring Time for Hitler is born in Broadway.

Sign up for an audition slot here.

Contact John Nold with questions: jnold@shoreline.edu

Tutoring Services hours and locations for winter quarter 2017

Greetings from Tutoring Services! We are looking forward to supporting Shoreline students in their winter coursework. This email provides our schedule of services for Winter 2017.

The main Tutoring Services office in 4228 is open Mondays – Thursdays 9am-6pm and Fridays 9am-4:30pm.

Below, please find the hours and locations for the drop-in Learning Centers (LCs) and groups hosted by Tutoring Services:

The BCLC (Bio/Chem) in 4201 is open Mondays – Thursdays 9am-5pm and Fridays 9am-1pm. (Biology faculty also host a Biology Open Lab for any BIOL students in 2602 on Saturdays 10am-3pm.)

The Physics LC in 2923 is open Tuesdays – Thursdays 12:30-3:30pm and Fridays 9:30-10:30am.

The AELC (Acct/Econ) in 4229 is open Mondays 10:30am-12:30pm, Tuesdays 10:30am-1pm, Wednesdays 10:30-11:30am, and Thursdays 10:30am-1pm.

The BUSTC & eLearning Center in 1304 is open Mondays 11:30am-2:30pm (no tutor on Monday), Tuesdays 11:30am-3:30pm, Wednesdays 11:30am-2:30pm, Thursdays 11:30am-3:30pm, and Fridays 10am-2pm.

The Conversation Groups in 4229 are as follows:
Japanese, Tuesdays 1-2pm
French, Tuesdays 2-3pm
Chinese, Tuesdays 3-4pm
ESL, Wednesdays 11:30am-12:30pm
Spanish, Wednesdays 12:30-1:30pm
ASL, Thursdays 1:30-3:30pm

And, of course, we also provide one-on-one tutoring for students seeking weekly help in any of their Shoreline courses. We accept applications through Week 9, and the applications are available in 4228 or online here: https://shoreline.formstack.com/forms/tutoring

We hope you all have a good, successful Winter Quarter ahead!

Tutoring Services & Academic Support
Shoreline Community College
Library 4228
206-546-4776

Interim Leadership for the Library

Library Director Chris Matz has left the College, effective January 13, 2017, to take a position at the University of North Texas in Denton. We thank him for his service to Shoreline.

Amy Kinsel, Dean of Social Sciences, Library, and Parent Child Center, has assumed leadership of the Library until further notice. Dean Kinsel will be assisted in overseeing the daily operation of the Library by Leslie Potter-Henderson (instructional management), Clare Bryant (financial management), and Charles Chitty (building management).

Please direct questions about Library operations to Dean Kinsel (akinsel@shoreline.edu or 206-546-4679).

Vice President for Human Resources and Legal Affairs – Personnel Update

Dear Colleague,

Stephen Smith, Vice President for Human Resources and Legal Affairs, has chosen to resign from Shoreline Community College effective January 17, 2017. President Cheryl Roberts expressed appreciation for Smith’s eight years of service to the college.

Veronica Zura will provide interim leadership to the Human Resources Department. Ms. Zura will report directly to President Roberts. Stuart Trippel, Senior Executive Director and CFO, will provide day-to-day operational supervision. Alison Stevens, Executive Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs, will provide leadership for Title IX.

The College will review the position to determine its appropriate title and areas of responsibility. An open search process will be conducted in the coming months.

Respectfully,
Cheryl
Cheryl Roberts, Ed.D.
President