The Board is holding its Mid-Year Retreat on Friday, February 19, 2016 beginning at 9:00 A.M. in the Heritage Room (#302) at Shoreline City Hall.
Board of Trustees Special Meeting (Mid-Year Retreat) Fri., Feb. 19
Shoreline’s Baseball team collecting Clothes for the Cause – donate now!
The Shoreline Community College Baseball team is hosting a clothing and textile drive! We all have clothing that is no longer worn or no longer fits. Instead of discarding surplus clothing and household linens, give your clothes a second life by participating in our textile collection drive.
The Baseball team can accept clothing, shoes in pairs only, towels, stuffed animals, hats, sheets, blankets, quilts, bedspreads, drapes, purses and belts. All items need to be kept dry, so please put them in a plastic bag that is tied tightly. We cannot take: glass, breakables, electronics, pet beds, bed pillows, carpeting, uniforms, hotel linens, or items previously on sale at a thrift store.
Collection will take place in the Shoreline Community College 3000 Building in the Baseball Office 3024-J. Please drop off your items between 2:30pm – 5:00pm on Fridays, February 12th, 19th and the 26th.
If you have any questions please contact Associate Head Coach Rick Teegarden at 206-533-6742 or at rteegarden@shoreline.edu.
Why is donating textiles a good idea? Not only does it help the Baseball team, but it’s eco-friendly too! Check it out:

Campus events for Thurs., Feb. 18: Time-saving techniques, China’s “Left-Behind” Children, and more!
These are the events happening around campus Thurs., Feb. 18.
Intramural Zumba
Athletics building, room 3025, 12:35-1:25 p.m.
Take time out from your busy day to dance your way fit. Free to students, faculty, and staff.
Tools, Tips, Tricks, and Technology: Part 2 of the Time Management Series
PUB 9208, 1:30-2:30 p.m.

Technology has made thousands of apps available to us in order to help with scheduling and organization. Come learn about some of the most popular apps used by students. In addition, we will be exploring Google Calendar (which you have for FREE with your Shoreline e-mail address) and its features to set you up for success. Bring a laptop if you want!
*This session will be recorded and posted online. To view go to our website:www.youtube.com/user/ShorelineCCvideos
UW Dentistry Info Session
Room 2812, 1:30-2:30 p.m.
This is a presentation by Memory Brock, Assistant Director of Admissions at the U of Washington School of Dentistry. Learn how to prepare and apply to dental school! Everyone is welcome.
UW Foster School of Business Transfer Information Session
PUB 9208, 3-4 p.m.

Adam Shinn, Associate Director at the UW Foster School of Business, will be here on campus to give an information session on transferring to Foster. He will answer students’ questions regarding prerequisites, how to apply, how to take the Writing Skills Assessment (WSA), and what makes an application competitive. Open to all students.
Intramural Personal Training
Athletics bldg. room 3007, 6-6:50 p.m.
Come get free, hands-on training to help you reach your fitness goals.
The GAC Presents: China’s Urbanization and the “Left-behind” Children
PUB 9208, 7-8:30 p.m.

In China, a new generation of children is growing up in the countryside with only one or no parent around during most of the time of the year. They are called “left-behind children.” Their population has grown to more than 60 million; half of them are between age 6 and 14. They are left behind because their parents have gone to work in the city, often hundreds of miles away from home. They are part of China’s gargantuan army of migrant workers, estimated at about 170 million in 2014. These laborers power China’s economic machine and turn it into the “world’s factory’. While they work in the city, their children often cannot be with them. Lacking day-to-day parental care and close guidance, the “left-behind” children face many problems and many of them get into trouble. Some develop psychological problems; others fall victims to bullying, physical or sexual abuse, or even serious accidents.
This presentation explains how China’s special, “incomplete” urbanization policy and thehukou (household registration) system function in concert to produce a generation of “left-behind” children and “migrant children,” and their implications.
Join us, together with Kam Wing Chan, Geography Department, University of Washington, discuss about the difficulties the “left-behind children” of China faces. To learn more about our speaker. visit our biographies page.
Reminder! CPR and AED training available for employees, Fri., Feb. 19
Would you know what to do in a cardiac or breathing emergency? The right answer could help you save a life. With a mixture of classroom and hands-on learning, Shoreline Fire Department Medics will begin providing a 2-hour course to give you the skills to potentially save a life.
Consider these facts:
- There are 220,000 victims of sudden cardiac arrest per year in the United States; about 10,000 sudden cardiac arrests occur at work
- Waiting for the arrival of emergency medical system personnel results in only 5-7% survival.
- Paramedics can take eight to 12 minutes to arrive, but someone suffering sudden cardiac arrest needs help immediately
- 75% of all out-of-hospital heart attacks happen at home
AEDs in the workplace save lives. An automated external defibrillator (AED) is a medical device designed to analyze the heart rhythm and deliver an electric shock to victims of ventricular fibrillation to restore the heart rhythm to normal. A bystander with access to an AED can greatly improve the chance of survival. The college has recently purchased 8 new AED machines, for a total of 12. Learn where they are on campus and how to use them.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 2016 – 1:30-3:30pm, Rm 3002
The course, free to SCC employees, will include a certification card. The training is voluntary, requiring supervisory permission to attend. Classroom size is limited, and your pre-registration is required. Wear comfortable clothing. If a class is full, you will be placed on a wait list for a cancellation or coming class.
To register call or email Darlene Carlson or Robin Blacksmith in Safety & Security :
Darlene – 206-546-4633; Dcarlson@shoreline.edu
Robin – 206-546-4503; Rblacksmith@shoreline.edu
Bring a problem; solve a problem: Strategies and routines for helping ESL/International Students Succeed
What: Lauren Wilson and Annamaria Winters in collaboration with the English Department will bring strategies you can use to help your ESL/International students succeed in your discipline courses, including ideas about grading, grammar, and classroom management. They will also describe the pathways International students take to get into your courses.
Why: Many discipline instructors have asked for ideas and information to strengthen their approach to instruction for second language speakers. The discipline of TESOL brings methodology and pedagogical approach to your toolbox.
When: Thursday, February 18, 2016 3:00-4:00
Where: PUB 9201
Contact:
Lauren Wilson lwilson@shoreline.edu;
Annamaria Winters awinters@shoreline.edu;
Maya Smorodinsky msmorodin@shoreline.edu
Kate Boyd kboyd2@shoreline.edu
Claire Murata professionalLearning@shoreline.edu 206.546.5820
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