Free CPR and AED training available for employees

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 personnel will begin providing a two-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 a 5-7 percent survival rate.
  • Paramedics can take eight to 12 minutes to arrive, but someone suffering sudden cardiac arrest needs help immediately.
  • 75 percent of all out-of-hospital heart attacks happen at home

Automated external defibrillators (AEDs) in the workplace save lives. An 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 eight new AED machines, for a total now of 12 on campus. Learn where they are on campus and how to use them.

FRIDAY, JAN. 29 – 1:30-3:30 p.m., Room 3002

The course, free to Shoreline employees, will include a certification card. The training is voluntary, requiring supervisory permission to attend. Class size is limited and your pre-registration is required. Wear comfortable clothing.  If a class is full, you will be placed on a waitlist for a cancellation or coming class.

To register, call or email:

Choosing a Major or Career Path workshop, Wed., Jan. 20

Please tell your students about this informative workshop, and please feel free to come and join us yourself!
WQ16 Choosing a Major[1]

Join us Wed., Jan. 20 at 12:30 p.m. for the workshop Choosing a Major or Career Path. We’ll meet in room 1305 (computer lab).

Unsure about your major or career?  Want to learn how to connect your strengths, interests, and values to major and career options?  If so, join Gwyn Hoffman-Robinson, SCC counselor, for an interactive workshop to learn more about the process of identifying your educational and career path.

Workshop is open to all and no RSVP needed.

Questions about the workshop? Contact Gwyn Hoffman-Robinson at gehoffman@shoreline.edu or 206.533-6613.

Interested in Career Counseling with a professional counselor? Stop by Counseling Services in FOSS 5229 or call us at 206.546.4559 to schedule an appointment with a professional counselor.

Interested in taking a 2-credit career exploration and planning course? Check out SCC’s class schedule under Human Development!

Hope you can join us!

Reminder: aSAP training Tues., Jan. 19

Working on an aSAP for the 2016-17 Budget Process?

If you need assistance developing this year’s aSAP proposal consider attending one of the live training dates below.

Live Trainings dates for the aSAP Process (as noted on the Employee Calendar):
January 19, 2016 10 a.m. Room 1504

General Instructions can be found on the Strategic Planning and Budget Committee homepage.

Video Tutorials are available at the following links:

Reminder! aSAP training Thurs., Jan. 14

Working on an aSAP for the 2016-17 Budget Process?

If you need assistance developing this year’s aSAP proposal consider attending one of the live training dates below.

Live Trainings dates for the aSAP Process (as noted on the Employee Calendar):
January 14, 2016 2:30 p.m. Room 1402
January 15, 2016 11 a.m. Room 1402
January 19, 2016 10 a.m. Room 1504

General Instructions can be found on the Strategic Planning and Budget Committee homepage.

Video Tutorials are available at the following links:

Amy Kinsel talks Immigration and Refugees with the GAC, Thurs., Jan. 14

global eyes
Join the GAC on Thurs., Jan. 14 from 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. in the PUB 9208 for Dean Amy Kinsel’s talk, Immigration & Refugees: We’ve seen this Newsreel Before.

Anti-immigrant rhetoric has filled the airwaves during the early months of the 2016 presidential race, especially since Syrian refugees began pouring into Europe and terrorist attacks shook Paris, Beirut, and other places.  But this rhetoric is not new. Despite its reputation for welcoming the “huddled masses” to our shores, U.S. immigration and refugee policies have served to shut doors to tens of thousands of desperate “tempest-tossed” people seeking safe haven from religious, political, and military strife.

In this talk, Dean Amy J. Kinsel shares some of the reasons the U.S. has shut the door to immigrants and refugees in the past and compares past American immigration and refugee policies to the situation today.

For more information about the speaker, visit our biographies page.