Campus Updates 02/09/23

EVENTS AND NEWS  

Good afternoon folks!  Hope all is going well.  I’m writing this update from Washington D.C. at the end of the National Legislative Summit.  It was great to be surrounded by passionate trustees, presidents, and students from across the country advocating for community colleges.  Shoreline Trustees and I were able to attend and represent in two meetings with Senator Murray and Maria Cantwell.   

Priorities for the team included: 

  • Improvements in WIOA reporting and enhancements overall.  
  • Growing the Strengthening Community College Training Grants program © Boosting funding for PELL, TRIO, GEARUP, and programs that support childcare.  There was a BIG PUSH for short-term Pell, which if passed, would allow PELL grants for shorter-term certificates and programs (which would be great for growing new opportunities at Shoreline).   
  • Priorities also included supporting the Dream ACT, funding HSIS, MSIS, and HBCUS and many other initiatives focused on basic needs, serving rural communities, and ending tax policies that hurt recipients of many aid programs.   

The energy was high! It was really interesting that we were at the Capitol on the day of the State of the Union.   

Toward the end of last week, I had another Professional Development opportunity.  I now meet quarterly with Eric, President of Cascadia College.  It has been helpful to learn more about shared concerns and strategies to resolve them.   

I also wanted to remind folks of the Buffalo Soldiers: Fighting on two Fronts event next week!  It’s going to be amazing—we just found out three actors/soldiers from the film will join the event.  Please come and enjoy a great evening with your students and friends!  Hope you all have an enjoyable rest of the week. 

Cheers, 

Jack 

Presidents Goals/ DRAFT Outcomes Survey from Jack 

World Events that hit home: You are supported at Shoreline 

President’s Winter Quarter 2023 Virtual Open Office Hours: 

https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84369347745

  • Friday, February 17, 2023; 1:00 – 2:00 PM 
  • Thursday, March 16, 2023; 10:00 – 11:00 AM 

Winter Quarter Updates 

ctcLink Updates: 

Human Resources 

Know someone who wants to join our team? Visit: Job Opportunities at Shoreline Community College 

Events and Updates 

Follow Shoreline Community College on social media! 

COVID-19 Updates   

Cases   

  • For the week between February 1 and February 7, the College saw 10 positive COVID-19 cases reported. This is up 8 from last week. 

News 

Questions?      

Shoreline Community College – Celebrating Black History Month: Dorothy Hollingsworth

Photo of Dorothy Hollingsworth
Photo of Dorothy Hollingsworth

Dorothy Lee Thomas Hollingsworth was born on October 29, 1920, in Bishopville, South Carolina.  Dorothy was the oldest of three children.  Her sister died at 14 of pneumonia and her brother died from injuries sustained in World War II.  Dorothy once said she always knew she wanted to help peoplea desire that grew after learning about social work as a career at an eighth-grade job fair. After graduating from Atkins High School, a missionary from the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church encouraged Dorothy to further her education. She was accepted at Paine College in Augusta, Georgia, and was granted a scholarship from the missionaries. Dorothy continued her education and graduated from an HBCU in 1941, with degrees in social science and education, and was immediately hired as a third-grade teacher.

In 1946, Dorothy and her husband moved to Seattle, WA. The couple sought a new beginning in the hope of escaping the hardships of the South that came with repressive Jim Crow laws and racial segregation. A lifelong learner, Dorothy enrolled at the University of Washington, and in 1959 she received her master’s degree from the School of Social Work.  After graduating, she became a social worker for Seattle Public Schools.  

In the early 1960s, Dorothy became involved in the local civil rights movement, protesting restrictive covenants, fighting for equitable education, and open housing initiatives throughout the city.   In 1965, she was selected as the Director of Head Start, a program that was part of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Great Society’s national anti-poverty initiative—the first in Washington State. Dorothy then became the first African American woman to be elected to the Seattle School Board, becoming board president in 1979. Dorothy served a six-year term helping to guide the city through racial tensions that escalated with the desegregation of schools.

We Celebrate Dorothy Hollingsworth for helping the Seattle, WA community to be more inclusive and equity-minded.

Health Informatics & Information Management (HIIM) Infosession 2/21 12-1pm

Attend an upcoming information session to learn more about Health Informatics & Information Management (HIIM) programs (see list below), career options, student success stories, and to ask questions.

Health Informatics & Information Management (HIIM) Programs:
• Health Information Foundations Certificate
• Comprehensive Coding & Revenue Integrity Specialist Certificate
• HIT AAAS degree
• Health Data Analyst Certificate

https://tinyurl.com/5d9db439

Black History Month: Free Books

You can grab free books at the Multicultural center. We have “Octavia’s Brood”, “Coming of age in Mississippi”, “Freedom Riders”, and so many more! Feel free to come anytime. 

Multicultural Center Grab a Book building location

Biotechnology Program Informational Session February 15th!

Come to learn about Shoreline’s Biotechnology and Biomanufacturing programs!

Wednesday, February 15, 2023
6:00 pm – 7:30 pm
Room 2904 (1st Floor of the 2900 Building)

  • Welcome and Introductions Biotechnology Program Overview:
  • Registration, Faculty, Courses & Internships
  • Biomanufacturing Certificate Overview:
  • Application, Faculty, Courses & Internships
  • Student Q&A
  • Presentations by Program Alumni who Work in Industry
  • Informal Meet & Greet and Networking, Tour of the Lab
  • Light refreshments provided
Biotech info session agenda details