Campus events for Feb. 26-27: Campus community update, Basketball Sophomores night, and more!

These are the events happening around campus for Fri., Feb. 26 and Sat., Feb. 27.

Fri., Feb. 26

Intramural Yoga, Athletics bldg., room 3025
Fri., Feb. 26: 11:30 a.m. – 12:20 p.m.
Take time out from your day to rejuvenate and build core strength. Free to students, faculty, and staff.

Writing Under Pressure, Library classroom 4214
Fri., Feb. 26: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Do you ever go blank at test time or when you have in-class writing? Learn how to prepare for timed writing tests and follow a six-step plan for writing essay test answers.

Winter Quarter Campus Community Update, Room 2308
Fri., Feb. 26: 1-2:30 p.m.
A Campus Community Update (CCU) is scheduled for Friday, February 26 from 1-2:30 p.m. in room 2308 – building 2300. The meeting’s topics:

• Vision, Mission & Strategic Plan
• New Allocation Model
• Enrollment
• Key Initiatives and Updates

The CCU will be recorded and the link to video, provided after February 26.

From the Human Resources Office:  If you are planning to attend the meeting in person, please abstain from wearing personal care products (including hair products, perfume or cologne) containing chemicals or fragrances that might impact individuals with chemical sensitivities.

Thank you.

Student Winter Formal, PUB Main Dining Room
Fri., Feb. 26: 6-9 p.m.
great gatsby
Shoreline Community College students are formally invited to Shoreline’s Annual Winter Ball. This year’s ball is themed “The Great Gatsby” and entrance is FREE.

A FREE dinner buffet (with vegetarian options) will be catered by BlueFin Sushi & Seafood. Live music performances by student artists, a fun photo booth, and lots of dancing will also be provided!

The Winter Ball is only open to Shoreline students (ID required) and it’s happening on:
Friday, February 26, 6-9 p.m. in the Main Dining Room

Dress code: semi-formal
Please remember to bring your student ID.

Sat. Feb. 27

Phins Basketball at Home
Sat., Feb. 27: 2-6 p.m.
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Women’s and Men’s Phins Basketball teams play at home this Saturday against Peninsula College. It’s the last home game of the season, so it’s time to celebrate our Sophomore Men’s and Women’s Basketball players. Come on out and support the teams and honor our Sophomores! Women play at 2 p.m., and Men play at 4 p.m. The Sophomores for each team will be honored just prior to their game.

#GoPhins!

Campus events for Thurs., Feb. 25: Food and wellness, Artist Reception with Andrew Fallat, and more!

These are the events happening around campus for Thurs., Feb. 25.

Social Science Open House, Room 1402
Thurs., Feb. 25: 12:30-2:30 p.m.
social science
Come meet Social Science faculty in a friendly, low-pressure environment outside the classroom. Students will interact with faculty to learn more about the Social Sciences, hear about exciting upcoming classes before Spring Registration and create an educational plan for the rest of your quarters here at Shoreline. Personalized attention, helpful information about future pathways, and snacks included…this open house has something for everyone!

Celebrating Food and Wellness around the World, PUB 9208
Thurs., Feb. 25: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
During the summer of 2015, Alison Leahy, Nutrition/Dietetic Faculty, and Amy Rovner, eLearning Support, conducted a MOOC (Massive Online Open Class) that celebrated food and its relationship to wellness, focusing on a global approach. Over 1300 participants investigated culinary and dietary practices from six regions around the world, looking at the correlation and interconnections between food and health.

Join us to discuss the class, what they learned, and plans to host the class again in the future.

For more info about the guest speakers, visit our biographies page.

All About WOIS: Washington’s career research tool! Computer Lab 1302
Thurs., Feb. 25: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
Slide7
Learn more about one of Washington’s greatest secrets … WOIS!

Learn to use WOIS/The Career Information System to explore careers, create goals for your future, make educational plans to reach your goals, and find the training programs and the right schools to help you achieve your dreams.

Whether you are ready to find a job right now, or you want to make a plan for more education and future employment, WOIS has the exploration and planning tools for YOU!

Workshop is open to all and no RSVP needed.
Questions about the workshop? Contact Sheryl Copeland at scopeland@shoreline.edu or 206.533.6712.

Intramural Zumba, Athletics 3025
Thurs., Feb. 25: 12:35-1:25 p.m.
Take time out from your busy day to dance your way fit. Free to students, faculty, and staff.

Tackling Procrastination and (a lack of) Motivation, PUB 9208
Thurs., Feb. 25: 1:30-2:30 p.m.
clocks
Part 3 of the Time Management Series:

Do you find yourself busy doing things you don’t need to do in order to avoid the things you are actually supposed to be doing? Do you want to create some goals to help guide how you are spending your time? Come learn some strategies for tackling procrastination and increasing motivation!

*This session will be recorded and posted online. To view go to our website:www.youtube.com/user/ShorelineCCvideos

SCC Art Gallery Artist’s Reception with Andrew Fallat, Art Gallery (1000 bldg.)
Thurs., Feb. 25: 5-7:30 p.m.
andrew fallat poster
Join us for an artist’s reception with Andrew Fallat to celebrate his solo show: “The Banal in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” The show is housed in the Admin bldg (1000) art gallery now through March 4.

The reception celebration will include collaboration with English and Writing students from Shoreline Community College, who will share writing inspired by Fallat’s work at the reception.

About the show:
Through the exploration of kinetic systems and phenomena, Andy Fallat’s work focuses on the condensation of a narrative into an three dimensional object. Building machines and sculptures that are slightly above human scale, he calls attention to our place within a system. Fallat creates creatures and interactive situations with industrial and classically sculptural processes that question our relationships to them and each other.

The work presented in this exhibit is a series of sculptures and low reliefs. They are machines that imitate life. The hope, fear, and complexity that Fallat finds on walks around his neighborhood. It is a shrub as potent as its cousin the mighty spruce. They are lines that become form and patterns that mute shape. It is what happens when two things point to the same mark.

Intramural Personal Training, Athletics bldg., room 3007
Thurs., Feb. 25: 6-6:50 p.m.
Come get free, hands-on training to help you reach your fitness goals.

Campus events for Wed., Feb. 24: Humanities degree planning, body image workshop, Dr. Esquibel on sundown towns, and more!

These are the events happening around campus for Wed., Feb. 24.

Planning for a Humanities Degree, Room 1725
Wed., Feb. 24: 11 a.m. – 12 p.m.

humanities flier copy
The Humanities faculty advisor will discuss degree requirements and course sequencing for the Associate Arts-General Transfer, the Associate of Fine Arts, and the Associate of Music Degree. In addition, the advisor will work with students to draft an educational (course) plan.

Margin to Center: Dr.Elena Esquibel on Sundown Towns, PUB 9208
Wed., Feb. 24: 11:30 a.m. – 12:30 p.m.
elena
Dr. Elena Esquibel earned a Ph.D. in Communication Studies at Southern Illinois University. During her Doctoral program, she focused on Intercultural Communication, Performance Studies, and Critical Communication Pedagogy as well as Critical Race Theory and performance ethnography as theoretical methodologies. She is a professor in the Communications Department at Shoreline.

Dr.Esquibel will discuss the hidden history of sundown towns or “all-White” communities that have historically banned African Americans after dark. Specifically, looking at southern Illinois as a case study.

Community Read: Octavia’s Brood, PUB 9208
Wed., Feb. 24: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
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Join us for our weekly meeting of the Community Read of Octavia’s Brood. This week we’ll be discussing the stories: Manhunters, Aftermath, Fire on the Mountain.

Don’t know what Community Read is? Read on:
Each year a new book is selected for our Community Book Read. Together we share our impressions and ideas. Weekly analyses of the text are led by a variety of college volunteers, bringing with them their unique backgrounds, expertise and perspectives. This keeps the discussion fresh, lively and relevant.

This year’s book is Octavia’s Brood: Science Fiction Stories from Social Justice Movements. 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.

More Than the Mirror: Maintaining a positive body image in an image obsessed society, PUB 9102
Wed., Feb. 24: 12:30-1:30 p.m.
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Do you or someone you know struggle with body image concerns?  Would you like to learn about body image and practice techniques for improving body image?  If so, join Gwyn Hoffman-Robinson, SCC counselor, for an interactive workshop in recognition of National Eating Disorders Awareness Week, 2016.

Did you know?

• The rate of eating disorders among college students has risen to 10 to 20 percent of women and 4 to 10 percent of men (NEDA, 2013).

• Full-blown eating disorders typically begin between 18 and 21 years of age (Hudson, 2007).

• 35 percent of “normal” dieters progress to pathological dieting. Of those, 20-25 percent progress to partial or full-syndrome eating disorders (Shisslak & Crago, 1995).

• Eating disorders are the mental illness with the highest mortality rate (Arcelus, 2011).

• Help-seeking decreases significantly when people are not aware of the options available to them (Ben-Porath, 2002; Friedman, 2009; Nolen-Hoeksema, 2006; Gould, 2007).

Intramural Yoga, Athletics Room 3025
Wed., Feb. 24: 12:35-1:25 p.m.

Take time out from your day to rejuvenate and build core strength. Free to students, faculty, and staff.

Phins Basketball on the road against Everett
Wed., Feb. 24: 5-9 p.m.

Screen Shot 2016-01-19 at 4.24.58 PMThe Phins Men’s and Women’s basketball teams take to the road to take on Everett. #GoPhins!

Campus events for Tues., Feb. 23: The age of mass incarceration, teaching and learning conversation, and more!

These are the events that are happening around campus Tues., Feb. 23.

Advising Day, Advising & Counseling Center, room 5229
Tues., Feb. 23: 10 a.m – 4 p.m.

advisingRegistration for spring quarter begins next week! To prepare for the occasion, general advisors will be available in the in the Advising & Counseling Center to talk with students about:

  • Locating your SID and PIN
  • Determining your assigned registration date
  • Reviewing Educational Plan for next quarter’s course selection
  • Previewing the Class Schedule of course offerings
  • Creating a potential schedule
  • Understanding pre-requisites for course selections
  • Learning about payment options and financial aid

Come grab free snacks, free advice, and check if you are on track to meet your goals!

You can also participate live online. For details, please email Advising Services at advising@shoreline.edu.

Margin to Center: The Age of Mass Incarceration, PUB 9208
Tues., Feb. 23: 12:30-2 p.m.
razor wire
Join us for a discussion on this age of mass incarceration and the ways in which people of color, specifically African Americans, are disproportionately targeted and imprisoned. We will screen a portion of The Central Park Five which is a documentary that tells the story of 5 Black and Latino teenagers who were wrongfully convicted of raping a white woman.

This discussion will be facilitated by Dr. Johnson, professor in the Equity and Social Justice Department, and Rezina Habtemariam, Acting Director of Student Life.

Intramural Zumba, Athletics room 3025
Tues., Feb. 23: 12:35-1:25 p.m.
zumba2
Take time out from your busy day to dance your way fit. Free to students, faculty, and staff.

Teaching & Learning Conversation: Rachel David and Kathie Hunt, Library classroom 4214
Tues., Feb. 23: 1-2 p.m.
Dean of Humanities Kathie Hunt and Professor Rachel David lead a conversation about the very interesting question, How do we know if our unconscious biases affect students, and what can we do about them?

There’s a national conversation about race and power, and there’s a national conversation about community college students and their willingness to engage and ability to succeed.  But there is a smaller conversation that many instructors have with ourselves every day about whether our own understanding of the world helps or hinders our students. Join your colleagues for a safe conversation about a tender topic in order to deepen your teaching practice around student engagement.


Options in Nursing workshop, PUB 9202
Tues., Feb. 23: 1:30-2:30 p.m.

nursing symbol
Are you intending to apply to a nursing program? Come learn about options in nursing professional training. At this session, we will cover:

•Nursing degree levels and titles
•Nursing programs in WA state
•Core nursing prerequisites
•Which degree plan to follow here at Shoreline
•Nursing related experience
•Other helpful transfer tips

Evaluating Sources for Research & Essay Writing, Library Classroom 4214
Tues., Feb. 23: 2-3 p.m.
Evaluating outside sources for an essay or research paper can be vexing!  How do you know if a source is reliable? This workshop will teach you how to evaluate sources so you can join any scholarly conversation with confidence!

Intramural Zumba, Athletics room 3025
Tues., Feb. 23: 5:05-5:50 p.m.
Take time out from your busy day to dance your way fit. Free to students, faculty, and staff.

Publicizing your event through DAAG

To our awesome campus community,

You are amazing at putting on fun, educational, informative, and relevant events and programming for our students and community, and PIO wants to be amazing at making sure your fun, educational, informative, and relevant events and programming get publicized to the campus community at large. One way to help us get the word out about your event/workshop/goings-on is by submitting information to Day at a Glance (DAAG), the blog and daily email message that gets sent to Shoreline employees and staff.

If you have something you’d like to share with the rest of the college staff and faculty, just fill out our general submission form. That form is your one-stop-shop for getting items placed on college calendars, DAAG, or even Shoreline Today (the daily email for students) and social media, if appropriate.

And submissions to DAAG don’t have to only be about events. If you have a message for the campus that doesn’t include a calendar item, you can submit it using the same general submission form and we’ll distribute it the same way we would an event, minus a calendar listing.

Please note that all submissions will be reviewed by PIO prior to publishing. For questions about submissions or to provide additional documents/images to go with your submission, please email Rachel Evans at revans@shoreline.edu or call 206-546-4501.

Thank you for helping us spread the word about your awesomeness!