Author Archives: SonyaChristian

Faculty Accomplishments: BC Stars Shine

Good morning Bakersfield.  It is Saturday, March 12, 2016…..A good day to be a Renegade!

Alexx Dominguez and Sonya Christian March 10 2016

With Alex Dominguez

What a hectic week at BC.  Just on one day, March 10th, we had the Board of Trustees for their monthly board meeting on campus, the Houchin Blood Bank drive hosted by SGA on campus, and had a group of 74 Highland High School seniors visiting who completed their Abbreviated Student Ed Plans (ASEPs) on campus.  I was happy to hear Stewart Hathaway, Academic Senate President of Porterville College, do a shout-out to Steve Watkin and our Outreach department.   The day actually started early morning with Corny Rodriguez and me presenting our Facilities Master Plan, in light of a potential bond for the November 2016 ballot, to the newly formed Government Relations Committee (GRC) of the Kern County Hispanic Chamber of Commerce (KCHC).  Most of the members of this group are up and coming young professionals who have already established themselves as leaders in this community.  They are very enthusiastic about Bakersfield College and as Corny and I were leaving we snagged this photo with Alex Dominguez, past SGA president and a member of the GRC.  Jay Tamsi, President of the KCHC is a wonderful partner!   Jennifer Marden commented to me at the end of the day as I was rushing off to Sacramento for the IEPI advisory committee meeting: “Just another normal day at BC”.

Clayton Fowler March 10 2016

Clayton Fowler and team at the Houchin Blood Bank Drive. March 10, 2016

Victor Diaz with Highland  Students March 10 2016

Victor Diaz in action. Outreach Department bringing 74 Highland High Scots to campus

It was wonderful having our Board members on campus along with colleagues from Porterville and Cerro Coso.  Danielle Hillard and Jennifer Marden did an exceptional job planning the day.  We changed the venue from the Indoor Theater to the Gym–lunch was in the Huddle and the Board Meeting on the Mezzanine overlooking the floor of the gym.  Josh Ottum, our new faculty member in music who is launching the Applied and Commercial Music Program and his student Omar performed for the Board. Manny Mourtzanos and John Gerhold were walking around being proud of Josh and the music program at BC.

Josh Ottum and Omar March 10 2016

Josh Ottum and his student Omar

It was wonderful seeing Ron Frolich who sits on the Ag advisory committee and is a strong supporter of BC and BC’s Ag program.  I remember decades ago when I was a rookie Dean and Ag was assigned to me.  It was Bill Kelly and folks like Ron Frolich who taught me about the Ag program and Ag in the Central Valley in California.

Billie Barnes Sonya Christian Ron Frolich March 10 2016

Bill Barnes, Sonya Christian, Ron Frolich

Chef Sabella and team did a phenomenal job and Kristin Rabe and I were commenting that we were so happy after devouring the Cous Cous and Quinoa salad.  I think Kristin actually used the word “euphoric”.  And of course, Todd Coston and Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg are always thrilled when we have great vegetarian options available.  Ramon Puga and the facilities crew did an outstanding job.  Thank you!

We had individual Board members briefly tour five of the capital projects that are listed on the proposed bond list–Math Science; Health, PE and Athletics; Student Services neighborhood; Agriculture; and the Veterans Center.  During their Board reports each Board member was complimentary about their tour, and impressed with the faculty and staff.  I enjoyed Trustee Storch‘s comments about his Math Science tour as well as his visit to the Veterans Center.  He played with the STEM umbrella and rearranged the sequence to consider what it would be like with the following arrangement: Math Science Engineering and Technology, or “MSET”.  And then Trustee Corkins jumped in by introducing an “A” for Agriculture — STEAM rather than STEM.  Trustee Meek was very supportive of having a robust Veterans Program.  She highlighted the statewide Guided Pathways summit hosted by BC and acknowledged the presentation by President Jill Board.  Finally she remarked positively on the Arvin Forum that was held the same evening as the Summit.  Trustee Agbalog was very complimentary about his tour, and commended both president Rosa Carlson and Jill Board and the achievements of their students.  Trustee Wright reflected on how much of a positive impact the colleges have on their students as well as on the employees.  He said a very heartfelt “thank you” to all of the faculty and staff at all three colleges.  Trustee Beebe was very appreciative to everyone for their work.  Trustee Carter was also appreciative and acknowledged individuals by name for their wonderful work. Thank you Trustees! 

Three presidents 2 March 10 2016

President Jill Board, President Sonya Christian, President Rosa Carlson

Now, let me take a moment to focus on BC.  There are few blogs I enjoy writing more than those highlighting the amazing accomplishments of BC’s incredible team of educators.  Every time I turn around, I’m finding out about another award, another fabulous achievement, or another incredible event or work produced by a member of our super-talented Renegade family.

Jennifer Garrett

Jennifer Garrett

Jennifer Garrett

BC’s very own director of Choral Activities, Dr. Jennifer Garrett has been honored as the recipient of the 2016 Outstanding Collegiate Educator Award, as bestowed by the Kern County Music Educators Association.

In less than three years as a full-time faculty in the Performing Arts Department, Dr. Garrett has built upon the tradition of excellence laid by Dr. Ron Kean, and under the leadership of Performing Arts Faculty Chair Dr. John Gerhold, is propelling the BC choral programs into a prominent spotlight at regional, national, and international venues.

Last summer, Jennifer completed a successful performance tour of Italy with BC’s Chamber Singers and she’s entertaining similar invitations to tour Australia in 2018.  Jennifer very clearly told me where I would be spending June 2018–in Sydney Australia, enjoying our students performing at the Sydney Opera House.  You should mark your calendars as well.  As a member of the BC entourage during that summer tour of Italy, I got a first-hand, front-row view of Jennifer’s incredible dedication to her craft and love of music, as well as her commitment to her students’ success.

Award

Jennifer accepting her 2016 Outstanding Collegiate Educator Award

Of course, no volume of words can ever do the talent of Jennifer’s singers their true justice, so to experience the full scope of her ensemble, check out these samples of recordings by the BC Chamber Singers under Jennifer’s expert direction:

Dr. Garrett’s award is a testament to her amazing talents — and it was only a matter of time before the whole of Kern County knew about them.  Congratulations, Jennifer!  I am so glad you are at BC.

Gina Herrera

Art adjunct professor Gina Herrera was selected to be a featured artist at the Los Angeles Art Association’s The Foolish Game. She was honored by having 2 of her sculptures displayed in the show.

She has also been chosen for 2 fully-funded summer residencies this summer. One will be at Hambidge in Rabun Gap, Georgia, and one is Ox-Bow in Saugatuck, Michigan.

David Koeth was chosen as one of the “Driven by Art” artists for the Bakersfield Museum of Art.  Chicago had the cows, New York had big apples, Lake Tahoe had bears, Sedona had javalinas; Bakersfield has old trucks. David will be painting a fiberglass truck that will be a public art piece.  I can’t wait to see this piece of work.

Delta Kappa Gamma

The Delta Kappa Gamma Society International was organized in 1929.  Its mission statement is that DKG Society International promotes professional and personal growth of women educators and excellence in education.  The Alpha Alpha Chapter in Bakersfield was organized in 1939.  Over the years many members and DKG leaders have been BC faculty and/or administrators.

They include Grace V. Bird, Margaret (Peg) Levinson, Ruth Maguire, Dorothy Albaugh, Jerry Ludeke, Janet W. Tarjan, Hillary Neumeister, Lynne Hall, Gayle Richardson, Mary Jo Anhalt, and many more.

Dr  Mitchell w-Delta Kappa Gamma leaders

Gayle Richardson and Janet Tarjan, guests BC faculty Valerie Robinson and Pat Smith, and BC Future Teachers Club alumni and CSUB alumni and current teachers Jennifer Garcia (2nd grade) and Tayci Stallings (6th grade), and current BC students and guests Samaria De alba and Maria Holland were among the attendees at an exciting Women’s Networking Open House at the Dezember Reading Room in the CSUB library in February.  Dr. Horace Mitchell, President of CSUB, welcomed everyone and shared stories of commitment to the success of women professional educators at CSUB.

Dr  Deb

Dr. Debby Rosenthal

Debby Rosenthal, our new Chemist presented recently at the Instructional Design Institute held by the State-wide Academic Senate.  Her talk titled Utilizing Technology to Enhance Time-on-task and Critical thinking Skills was well received.  Here is a brief description of her presentation:

Electronic classroom management systems assist in developing “flipped” classrooms or variations of the concept. Pre-chapter quizzes can cover rote terminology and embed videos for concepts that demand mental visualization. When students attend class and encounter the information a second time, lectures and activities are more productive and their confidence is enhanced. Ultimately, the goal is for students to form a deliberate habit of covering material (in all their courses) before it is presented in the classroom.

When attempting to solve higher-level, multi-stop problems, any mental concept that must be addressed is considered a step and often overlooked when teaching. Pre-chapter quizzes can be used to break down problems into questions that instructors naturally ask themselves in order to solve advanced problems.

One objective of the presentations is to encourage instructors to use technology for lower-level instruction to increase time students are exposed to their subject. Instructors will also be asked to be cognitively aware of their own critical thinking skills and model a series of  mental questioning that can introduced to students using technology.

Kimberly Bligh Terence young Feb 2016Kimberly Bligh and a BC team attended the ATD Conference in Atlanta, Georgia.  Kimberly took time out of her schedule to drive from Atlanta to Conyers to spend time with Terence Young, one of our student athletes who got seriously injured playing football for us last term.  Jeff Chudy and Sandi Taylor have been supporting Terence all these months and he is now back in San Diego for his second surgery as a result of his football injury.  I am so proud of all these individuals who go out of their way to support our students.  You inspire me!

Oliver Rosales:  Among a “murderer’s row” of incredible educators, no one at BC throws more of himself and his passions into his work than BC Associate Professor of History Oliver Rosales.  And when that passion lands his work — and BC — front and center of a nationally-televised broadcast…well, that demands some recognition.

In celebration of last fall’s 40th anniversary of the seminal Delano Grape Strike, Oliver coordinated a series of on-campus events and observances of that 1965 occurrence that’s not only one of the Central Valley’s watershed moments of the past century, but one of the most important workers’ rights events in U.S. history.

rosales1

Oliver Rosales

The specter of what happened in Delano 40 years ago still looms large — so when Oliver brought a fleet of nationally-renowned scholars for a Delano Grape Strike symposium, C-SPAN decided to air that discussion live.

Held in conjunction with our friends at CSU Bakersfield, the symposium drew more than 350 attendees and was viewed nationwide on C-SPAN.  Lorraine Agtang, who participated in the 1965 Delano Grape Strike as a member of the Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee, joined a panel discussion on the strike and its legacy.  The discussion also branched deeper into the formative days of the Farm Workers Movement.

It was a fantastic event that you can still watch on the C-SPAN website.  Fantastic work, Oliver!

Grape-strike

 

Reggie Williams: As with Oliver’s symposium, it’s truly exceptional when work generated right here on our campus can stand on a national stage and be rightfully recognized for its brilliance.

Reggie Williams

Reggie Williams

I wrote here on the blog last October about BC Philosophy Professor Reggie Williams’ thought-provoking talk at the Levan Center about race, wealth and inheritance.  Well, now the rest of America will get a chance to hear his enlightened presentation when Reggie delivers his work at next month’s National Council for Black Studies Conference in Charlotte, NC.

The conference is among the most high-profile of annual events furthering the development of Black/Africana Studies as a respected academic discipline.

Reggie presents his findings collected in pursuit of the central reasons behind America’s overwhelming Black/White wealth gap.  As Reggie discovered, while income disparity does play a role in the gap in wealth disbursement along racial lines, it is much more closely tied to 200-plus years of laws and practices surrounding inheritance in America.

Philosophy…and more

Staying with Reggie and his co-workers in BC’s standout Philosophy Department, I received a great email from Moya bragging about her colleagues.  She says:

I am so proud of my department, and I have to share with you how great they are! Just because I am so vain and humility has its limits.

Here are some highlights of BC’s active Philosophy department:

Reggie Williams and Rene Trujillo are continuing the monthly Gadfly Café sponsored by the Levan Center where faculty, staff, students and the community gather to discuss how relevant issues affect our lives.

Anne Poetker is coordinating the Philosophy Department’s Student Colloquium, where, supported by the rest of the philosophy faculty, students submit papers and read them for the experience of being professional academics and to potentially win a $500 scholarship.

Moya Arthur is leading a book group for faculty and staff reading Jared Diamond’s latest book, Until Yesterday in anticipation of Jared Diamond’s lecture at BC (which is coming up on Apr. 6).

It’s always fantastic when faculty members like Moya reach out about the great work happening in their corner of our BC universe.  First, it’s a perfect way to help keep me up to speed on everything going on on our bustling campus at any given time. There are just too many plates spinning every day to stay intimately involved with each one of them, so I’m a huge fan of the updates!

But more than that, emails like this come to me all the time — and they serve as an inspiring glimpse at the day-to-day quality work happening at BC.  From Philosophy to Biology, from Nursing to Agriculture, from Art to Engineering, every single department at BC is home to its own collection of daily work engaging both students and the broader Kern County community in the pursuit of academic or social enlightenment.

Student colloquia and book groups may not “grab headlines” like a county award or a national television broadcast or presentation audience — but those types of activities are the lifeblood of what make BC so vital, day in and day out.

Across the board, the abundant heart exhibited everyday by the faculty and staff who serve this campus and our students is an inspiration to me.  I couldn’t ask for a better band of colleagues.  We are….BC!

Enjoying our community: Boy Scouts

Good morning Bakersfield.  It is Saturday, March 5, 2016…..A good day to be a Renegade!

This past week has been full, fast paced and exhausting – so much so that when I got home yesterday, I just wanted quiet time.

Here are just a few highlights of my week:

Karen with group Feb 28 2016

Karen Goh with Audrey and Martin Chavez and Audrey’s mom Oralia

February 28th, there was a wonderful mariachi concert organized by Andrae Gonzales in memory of his dad, Manny Gonzales, who was a counselor at BC for 37 years.  The indoor theater at BC was sold out and there was a big picture of Manny on the stage….a picture taken when he was in Italy. Nice!  The music was just wonderful.  It was a very enjoyable afternoon enjoying seeing the community at BC and hanging out with friends. It was also wonderful meeting a few more members of the Gonzales clan.  I must say that the two people I see everywhere are Mayor Harvey Hall and Karen Goh–supporting community events.

BC at Veterans Summit March 3 2016

 

On Thursday, March 3rd, I was at the Veterans Summit in the City of Industry.  Paul Beckworth and I presented on the role administrators play in Veteran Services.  The process of preparing for the talk was what I enjoyed the most.  I got to research and find out at a more detailed level exactly what we are doing at BC as well as in other  veterans programs in the community and across the state.  We had a good group from BC–Armando Trujillo, Educational Adviser; Jamie Pacheco, BC’s Financial Aid Tech who is a liaison to Vet Services; Paul Beckworth, History Faculty; and Terri Goldstein, Director of DSPS, who is not in the picture.

Here is a photo with a few of our vet club students

Vet Club March 1 2016

Here are four blog posts that I did over the last three years on our student veterans:

Nov 11, 2015 Veterans Day, Vet Fest and Remembering America’s Best:
http://tinyurl.com/gwj7xu5

Nov 11, 2014 Student Veterans and BC’s 2nd annual Vet Fest: http://tinyurl.com/zfcafsb

August 24, 2014 Welcome email to our student veterans: http://tinyurl.com/zqtvmzt

July 17, 2013 GI Bill Workshop for Veterans Coming Thursday http://tinyurl.com/jmjc8uv

 

KCOG BC Award March 4 2016

Rich McCrow, Veronica Lucas, Sonya Christian, Ron Kean, Gustavo Enrique

BC won three awards at the Kern Council of Governments (KCOG) awards night.  It was quite the evening:

 

Regional Award of Merit for Local Government:
1+1+2 = Game Changer, a collaborative project in Arvin. Partners: BC, Supervisor Leticia Perez, KHSD Superintendent BryonSchafer, and CEO of Kern Tax Mike Turnipseed.  Thank you Rich McCrow, Veronica Lucas and Gustavo Enrique for putting together the proposal working in collaboration with our partners.  Check out my August 4, 2015 blog on this project http://tinyurl.com/glpeubo

KCOG Award Garden Fest March 4 2016

Prof. Lindsay Ono, Sonya Christian

Regional Award for Merit for Community Involvement: Garden Fest.  Lindsay Ono and Sally Stern.  I am so proud of this program at BC.  Sterns and Ono tirelessly work, along with others from the Ag department, to bring this magnificent event to the community.  So, mark your calendars…April 16th and come out out with friends, family and loved ones and enjoy your Saturday at your community college.  For more information check out the website http://891418088421670332.weebly.com/. Talking about BC’s Ag department, check out my brief post on Nov 19, 2014 on the first ever Kern Ag Summit http://tinyurl.com/hpgkc8b

 

Ron E. Brummett Regional Award of Merit for Lifetime Achievement: Ron Kean. It was wonderful seeing Ron Kean receive this Lifetime Achievement award.  After accepting the award he told a story about his World Music class this semester where he worked collaboratively with Matt Garrett and Matt’s history class.  Matt had a student from the Navajo Nation, and Ron did a piece inspired by Navajo music and the student just loved it.  Beautiful….BC has the best faculty ever.

Some of the other awards:

Regional Award of Merit for Transportaion: The Thomas Roads Improvement Project.  Thank you Bill Thomas for all that you have done for Kern County and Bakersfield College.  You rock!

Regional Award of Merit for Innovation: Downtown Bakersfield Development Corportaion. Congratulations Cathy Butler and team.

This morning I woke up to another great piece by Nick Strobel in the Californian–Astronomers turn the Hubble telescope toward a super-Jupiter exoplanet orbiting the brown dwarf 2M1207.  This is the first directly imaged exoplanet. Nick has posted the article on his BC website at http://tinyurl.com/zqc6726.  

Yesterday, I was introduced to Stella and John Rous at Starbucks and they just made me so happy with their enthusiastic support for Bakersfield College and all that is happening at the college.  Wonderful people.  You know my dear friends and colleagues, this kind of support for BC is not an anomaly.  It is regular and consistent.

Now you can see why it is so easy to be president of Bakersfield College!

Boy ScoutsThat faith in the future and what we can accomplish in the coming years is also prominent with another group I spent time with recently, the Boys Scouts of America Southern Sierra Council.  Attending their 2016 Volunteer Recognition Dinner at the Kern Ag Pavilion, it was reinforced for me how clearly many of the key tenets of Bakersfield College run in sync with the interests of other organizations like the Boy Scouts.

In this case, it was the mutual desire of both groups to extend our connections, increase our interaction and reaffirm our commitment to Kern County’s vibrant rural communities, particularly areas like Arvin and Lamont.

cropped tom pauline jay sonya jan 2016

Sonya Christian, Jay Rosenlieb, Pauline Larwood, Tom Larwood

It was a great evening of learning about Boy Scouts, enjoying the numerous volunteers who put in significant numbers of hours to advance this worthy cause, and running into community leaders like Pauline Larwood and Tom Larwood.  I am so inspired by what both of them have given to this community.  Pauline served as a Trustee on our KCCD Board, and Tom and I were fellow Rotarians in East Rotary Club prior to my time in Oregon.  When I think about the research work on Valley Fever, I think Tom Larwood.

President of the Boy Scout Board, Jay Rosenlieb talked about the fundamental principles of scouting and the commitment of the Southern Sierra Council to help spread its message into all four corners of Kern County and beyond.

I appreciated hearing about the focus on service to community, to its neighbors, and to the betterment of each individual scout in their brotherhood.  CEO Jesse Lopez is doing great work.

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I asked Jay for his remarks. Here is an extended excerpt:

On August 6, 1945, almost 71 years ago, an event occurred that changed the course of history. On that day, an atomic bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, Japan, bringing about the end days of World War II.

Following the end of the war, the men and women who spent years focused on the coordinated and mission driven efforts on the battle fields and the home front returned to their homes. In this massive homecoming and re-entry to life without war, the soldiers, sailors, airmen, factory workers, and builders brought with them the culture of community and singleness of purpose forged from the fight against tyranny, imperialism, and the horrors of human depravity.

As families were started and raised, the culture of community and singleness of purpose from the war effort continued and infused the very fabric of these United States. Social and civic organizations flourished, places of worship grew without bounds, and movements like the Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts experienced broad appeal and support. This sense of community, belonging, and involvement came to be expected in nearly every corner. While the post World War II era was not without significant social and moral challenges and failures (for example, the violence and struggles of segregation), it is just as clear that our American culture yearned for and achieved the building of strong communities, families, and lives.

…..

We, as volunteer leaders and supporters must expect Scouting to be front and center in our culture, in our communities, and in our lives. We must expect to see Scouting in all of our areas of influence and in all of our relationships.

We must expect to see Scouting in our schools; if there is not a troop or a pack at your neighborhood school, take those steps necessary to start a pack or a troop at the school.

Expect to see Scouting at your place of worship; if it’s not there, take those steps necessary to form a pack or a troop at your church, temple, or mosque. Expect to see Scouting in the youth programming of your place of worship. Expect to see Scouting on Scout Sunday. Expect to see Scouting in the faith life of your place of worship.

Expect to see Scouting at work– in your conversations with your co-workers. Expect to introduce them to all that is good about Scouting.

Expect to talk about Scouting in your social circles, with your friends, with your colleagues, both professional and personal. Expect that nearly all with whom you have a relationship will have a story of Scouting. Expect to tell them about Scouting today and all that it offers in a world of challenges to individuality, to self-reliance, to decency, to morality.

Expect Scouting in the lives of the youth around you; if it’s not there; encourage them to join a pack, a troop, a crew, a team, or an explorer post. Encourage them to seek the challenges of leadership and examination of their lives and direction. Encourage them to seek community and the sense of belonging.

Expect to see Scouting in your own life; volunteer, be a part of Scouting. All I can ask you is that you say “yes” when you are asked to do more. This is our charge, this is our work, this is our challenge, this is our privilege.

…..

“Scouting prepares our youth for leadership by teaching them the importance of service to others. The Scouting movement shows dramatically that public service still beckons the best among us to do battles with complacency, neglect, ignorance, and the emptiness of the spirit that are common in a maze of social justice.

“Scouting prepares our youth to live lives based on unchanging values, as an example of what a young person can be and should be. I see the legacy of Scouting, a new generation of worthy leaders for America’s 21st century – strong leaders, thanks to Scouting. Strong leaders of character, of faith, of skill. And with such leaders, America will continue to be the beacon of hope and decency and justice for the rest of the world.

“Good homes and good parents produce strong boys and girls, but Scouting tempers the steel.

“Resolute and united, this must be our commitment, this must be our oath, this must be our prayer, and this must be our parting pledge to one another. God Bless the Boys Scouts of America.”

(Note: Quoted material is from a 2010 speech by Robert Gates, National President of the Boy Scouts of America)

That’s the same type of cooperative spirit we foster at BC.

Here is a fun picture  from last year.

manny and sonya outside vons 2014-2

Me and BC Dean of Instruction Manny Mourtzanos….bet you didn’t know HE was a Boy Scout!

Engaging our Community: Bakersfield Chamber

Good Morning Bakersfield.  It is Saturday, February 27, 2016…..A good day to be a Renegade!

Jameik Riviere Feb 26 2016

Got back home late last night after watching an incredible Renegade men’s basketball game at Moorpark College, 114 miles southwest from BC.  The Renegades won 96-78 in what was an intense, fast, and smart game.  It was super cool to see the pride on the face of our Athletic Director, Sandi Taylor, and the other fans who came out to Moorpark.

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Below you can see the progression of my tweets as the game unfolded. Each tweet was accompanied by a picture of the game – to see the pictures along with the tweets follow me on twitter @sonyachristian.

@GoGadesGo 18-12 playoff @MoorparkCC #RenegadeBasketball @coachrichhughes @coachstaylor008

@coachrichhughes in action @GoGadesGo powering thru 25-14@MoorparkCC #WeAreBC @coachstaylor008  #RenegadeBasketball

#RenegadeBasketBall on the move 54-39 @MoorparkCC #BCRocks @GoGadesGo @coachrichhughes @coachstaylor008

@coachrichhughes with his winning team team 66-48 @MoorparkCC. Rockin payoff. @GoGadesGo @coachstaylor008 #WeAreBC

#JaneokaRiviere on the move. @GoGadesGo dominate 70-59 @MoorparkCC #BCRocks @coachrichhughes @coachstaylor008

@GoGadesGo playing fast. Playing smart. 80-69 @MoorparkCC @coachrichhughes @coachstaylor008 #WhatAGame @baksports

#LawrenceMoore controls the ball 88-72 with 1:33 min to go. @coachrichhughes @GoGadesGo @coachstaylor008 #WeAreBC

96-78 What a win at the playoff! @GoGadesGo @coachrichhughes @coachstaylor008 #RenegadeBasketball #WeAreBC #BCRocks

The Rooter bus left BC at 4:00 p.m. yesterday to bring out a group of Renegade fans to cheer on their team.  The fans were intense and noisy in their support, and concluded the last 10 seconds of the game with the “We Are…BC” chant.  Needless to say, I have no voice left today.

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Check out the details from Francis Mayer at http://tinyurl.com/haseu6c.  

Also for photos by Joe Bergman check out: http://tinyurl.com/z75za8j

Here are my previous blogs on this winning coach and winning team:

February 20, 2016: http://tinyurl.com/zl559bg

February 12, 2016: http://tinyurl.com/jhuyl8l

Honestly, I am the luckiest person, to be the President of this amazing college with its amazing people.  I wish I had time to do a blog every day….but alas, time is my biggest enemy.  But here are some quick snippets:

Nick Strobel brought us news that on Feb 11, teams using advanced LIGO Project detectors had confirmed the existence of “gravity waves,” ripples in spacetime like ripples on a lake. Quantum theories unify every force except gravity, which is explained by Einstein’s Theory of Relativity. (E.g. light has photons, and gravity might have “gravitons,” but we can’t show/explain it yet.) Our new ability to detect gravity waves might even allow new ways of “seeing” the universe with “gravity telescopes”. This is a very big deal – the kind of Nobel-prize-winning, this-made-waves-in-history sort of event – but might well have escaped our attention except for our astronomy detector Nick Strobel.

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Erin Miller’s talk titled Death of Virtue: Citizenship, Race, and Manhood in Colonial America was extraordinary. A scholar and great story teller, we are so fortunate to have Erin at BC. And thank you Norm Levan for your generous gift to BC that supports the Norm Levan Faculty Colloquium.

It was also heartwarming to attend the Bob Elias Hall of Fame event at the Rabobank last week with over 700 people and to see that a significant number of inductees over the years are Renegades.  I also enjoyed connecting with Wesley Lyons, a student vet at BC.

Talking about our students who are veterans, we have seen an increase in the numbers since 2013 and there is so much more we need to do at BC to support this group.  Here is some recent data I received from our IR office.

data veterans feb 2016

Every year, we all say that there’s so much to do and so many events to attend during the holiday season.  But we’re now two months into 2016 and it feels like my events calendar is just as packed as ever.  While I find there’s little time for reading or movies, I’m still satisfied — because the events I DO attend are such a constant wonderful reminder of the best in our community.

AnnualGala2016_49

Chamber Board

On January 22nd, I had my most recent experience with one of our community’s true crown jewel organizations, the Greater Bakersfield Chamber of Commerce.  Their 2016 Board of Directors Installation Gala and Masquerade Ball event was fabulous, with President Nick Ortiz welcoming this year’s new officers, including new board chairman Steve Murray of Murray Family Farms (succeeding outgoing chairwoman, the wonderful Danielle Wade of Bright House Networks).

The evening was delightful, particularly the one-on-one conversations.  I enjoyed meeting Tom and Gina Saba whose son goes to BC.  He is apparently enjoying his experience and appreciated the summer bridge program.  Thank you Kimberly Bligh for expanding Summer Bridge 2015 and to the numerous faculty who participated.  You are creating the first experience for our students as they transition to Bakersfield College.  A very important event in their lives.  Here’s to an even bigger Summer Bridge 2016.

Also enjoyed catching up with Kelly and Greg Chamberlain, you truly know how to have fun.  Check out their picture below.

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I am looking forward to getting to know the Bakersfield Chamber Board members many of whom I have heard by name but never met.  Here is a copy and paste from the Chamber website:

Chairman of the Board
Steve Murray
Murray Family Farms, Inc.


Immediate Past Chair
Danielle Wade
Bright House Networks


Chair-Elect
Derek Abbott
Tejon Ranch Company


Treasurer
Andy Paulden
Brown Armstrong Accountants


Vice Chair Public Policy and Political Action
Carla Musser
Chevron


Vice Chair Economic Vitality
Darlene Mohlke
Castle & Cooke California, Inc.


Vice Chair Leadership and Workforce Development
Kathy Miller
Aera Energy LLC


Vice Chair Member Engagement
Karen Goh
Garden Pathways, Inc.


Vice Chair Community and Resource Development
Brooke Antonioni
Trans West Security Service, Inc.


Member at Large
Paul Anderson
Moneywise Wealth Management


BOARD MEMBERS

Susan M. Benham
Dignity Health Memorial Hospital


Don Bynum
Temblor Brewing Company and Gregory D. Bynum & Associates, Inc.


Greg Chamberlain
Bakersfield College


Dr. Sonya Christian

Bakersfield College


Tasha Clayton
Tel-Tec Security Systems, Inc.


David Dobbs
Imbibe Wine and Spirits Merchant


Scott Guseman
Paramount Farming Company


Derek Jeffery
KGET-TV 17


Ronald Johns
RA Johnsfam dba McDonald’s


Duane Keathley
Cushman & Wakefield/Pacific


Karen King
Golden Empire Transit District


J.P. Lake
Rain for Rent


Pritesh Patel
Valley Republic Bank


Tom Saba
Creative Concepts/Saba Agency


Rick Stevens
Stevens Transportation, Inc.


John Stovall
Law Offices of John F. Stovall

The Chamber has repeatedly backed learning initiatives at all educational levels and emphasized that a better educated workforce not only lifts the business opportunities for their member companies, but improves the fiscal outlook for the county and the region as a whole.

With an abundance of partnership ventures available in 2016 (including a second year of the wildly-successful Vision for the Valley conference), it’s great to know Nick, Steve and the entire Bakersfield Chamber are always ready to dig in and work with Bakersfield College and other community partners on our shared goals for Kern County.

 

BC’s talented students….and amazing faculty

Good morning Bakersfield.  It is Saturday, February 20th….A good day to be a Renegade!

This was a short four-day week given that Monday was Presidents’ Day.  But the week was intense.  So many activities on and off campus that last night I fell asleep while watching Shields and Brooks on PBS Newshour talking about the Presidential election.  Crazy….I don’t fall asleep on Mark Shields of the Washington Post and David Brooks of the New York Times.

It was a week where BC held the first statewide Guided Pathways Summit, and the statewide Black Student Caucus thanks to our Student Senator Fitzgerald Graves.  A group of us (Trustee Dennis Beebe, Trustee Kay Meek, Tom Burke, Rich McCrow, Zav Dadabhoy, Steve Watkin, Gustavo Enrique, Juan Torres, Raquel Lopez) attended  a Building Health Communities event in Arvin.  We also had a fabulous student, Sarah, from Arvin attend as well.

Talking about students….. BC students are at it again!

2016 conf champion feb 17 2016

 

Basketball:  Our Renegade Basketball team won the Western States Conference Championship on Wednesday, Feb 17th!  Do take a moment to enjoy these students and Coach Rich Hughes in my previous blog:

http://bcpresidentblog.com/2016/02/12/bc-athletics-basketball-spring-sports-heat-up-the-valley/

Also check out Francis Mayer’s piece at

http://www.gogades.com/index.cfm/fuseaction/pages.page/id/890/article_id/457

and his photo gallery at

http://tinyurl.com/zpgmwkg

 

Some of our students are putting their abilities on display in a way that can occasionally seem like magic — and in two wildly disparate, but creatively linked disciplines. Two departments, BC’s Digital Illustration and Chemistry, have recently completed projects in which they were able to take purely theoretical ideas and apply their knowledge to producing physical products that are both beautiful and intriguing.

 

jackieUCLAgrad

www2.bakersfieldcollege.edu/kvaughn

Chemistry: In the Chemistry department, Professor Kenward Vaughan’s students were given a variety of mysterious compounds and, as a group, students conducted experiments to either identify what the compound was or split the compound in order to identify its original components.

 

I did a June 2014 blog on last year’s OChem Letters.  Check it out:

http://bcpresidentblog.com/2014/06/24/chemistry-research-at-bakersfield-college/

ochem-letters-april-2014

Some students attempted to change their compounds from solid to liquid, or liquid to gas. While those students were working to identify the compound, others were working backward in an attempt to split the compound. By piecing together all the elements that make up the compound, they could try to uncover what individual components could have been combined in order to create it.

After all those assorted theories and experiments were finished, the students put their findings in writing. Throughout the OChem Letters, students offer up ample detail and the thought processes that ultimately led them to their conclusions.

david koeth

David Koeth

This captivating work of our chemistry students not only offers an engrossing look at the ways of the scientific process, but the ingenuity and creative thinking required of science professionals that may not be obvious to the uninitiated.

(I found this great picture of David Koeth on the website)

 

Peru-4

Illustration by Karina Hurtado

Digital Illustration: You may not see many clear parallels between organic chemistry and artists, but David Koeth’s Digital Illustration students were confronted with an intriguing challenge of their own — creating visualizations of a trip to Peru expressed only via written word.

Students were given a letter describing the trip, offering descriptive detail about the colored skies, exciting adventures, and even mishaps that took place during the journey.

Peru-5

Illustration by Miguel Fabian

Each student was assigned a “mood” and color pallette to portray and created spot illustrations for different situations found throughout the narrative.

Having only the letter and their own imaginations to rely on, the students were given just three hours to complete the project. Even under that restrictive time crunch, students were able to produce some beautiful art displaying vivid representations of the trip. Our talented students captured and recreated this trip with as much life and imagination as if they themselves had traveled to Peru. Being that no two people are the same, each picture told a unique side of the story.

Peru-6

Illustration by Jaqueline Carmona

 

The students’ depictions included parties, jewelry, hiking through the forest, laying on the beach and even the author’s wife getting airplane sick. The students allowed the trip to be portrayed in such a way that you could live out the trip as if it were your own.  You can see some of these gorgeous illustrations above.

The students here at BC never fail to impress, and never cease to bring great pride to our campus.  And our faculty…..they are the very best. They are scholars, artists, and athletes in their own right, as well as being dedicated teachers who spend hours with their students.  On Wednesday night, one of our Public Safety Officers, Mason,  who is also a student, gave me a ride from the admin parking lot to the gym for the Basketball game.  During this short ride, he excitedly shared with me stories about his amazing instructor, David Koeth, and how David inspires the best in him.

Friends, this is Bakersfield College.  A place of learning, a place of excellence filled with brilliant and committed faculty and staff. We are…BC!

BC Athletics: Basketball, Spring Sports Heat Up the Valley

LawrenceMoore

Lawrence Moore

Good morning Bakersfield.  It is Friday, February 12, 2016.  The start of the long weekend to honor Presidents’ Day.  It is a good time to be a Renegade.

Greg Gallion and Kay Meek Feb 11 2016

Kay Meek, Greg Gallio. Feb 11, 2016

Yesterday, Feb 11th, at our Board meeting, BC received an award from Greg Gallion, CEO of the Houchin Community Blood Bank (HCBC).  Trustee Kay Meek received the award on behalf of the college and clearly she was delighted at the great work being done at BC and the strong partnership with HCBC.  Meek greeted Greg Gallion with warmth and appreciation. BC received the award due to the remarkable work done by our Student Government Association (SGA) and BC staff during the National Caesar Chavez Blood Drive.  This has been an ongoing effort at the college, and the partnership with Houchin.  

I remember having done two blogs on the blood drive at BC since I got here as president.  One in 2013 and another in 2014.  Check it out.

2014 blog at: http://bcpresidentblog.com/2014/04/20/sga-fills-the-bank-at-blood-drive/

2013 blog at: http://bcpresidentblog.com/2013/06/13/bc-in-the-top-10-for-blood-drive/

HCBC is a wonderful organization with the motto People Live when People Give and their CEO Greg Gallion, a fellow Rotarian, is just wonderful.  For more on the work that HCBC does check out http://hcbb.com/.

Clayton Fowler Feb 11 2015

Clayton Fowler. Board Meeting. Feb 11, 2016

I also enjoyed SGA President Cayton Fowler addressing the Board about the Renegade Promise work that SGA has undertaken along with College Council.  (Thank you Clayton, Nicky Damania, and Lesley Bonds for all your work on this project.)

I obtained Clayton’s written remarks to share with you this morning:

According to the College Promise Campaign, in the 21st century, a high school diploma is no longer enough to lead Americans to a good job and decent quality of life. In the next ten years, more than six out of ten jobs will require employees to have more than a high school diploma, while today only 40% of US adults ages 25–64 are adequately prepared for the workforce. Community colleges already reduce inequality in education and income by serving more than 40% of all undergraduates in the U.S. at more than 1,100 community colleges throughout the nation. Therefore, students, staff, and faculty of the Bakersfield College community have called to question, is there something more Bakersfield College can do to help educate our community.

Good Afternoon, I am Clayton Fowler the President of the Bakersfield College Student Government Association. I wanted to present to the Board the ambitious project Bakersfield College will been undergoing to increase student access and success. This venture, modeled after other programs, is entitled the Renegade Promise, which is a mutually agreed commitment that Bakersfield College will promise entering first-year students starting fall 2016.

While still in the development stages, the Renegade Promise will soon offer two pathways designed to give motivated first-time entering students a head start on a college degree. The purpose of the Renegade Promise is to offer structured opportunities for qualified students to enroll in community college courses that provide pathways that lead to a certificate, diploma, or transfer pathways or degrees.

Academic credits earned shall empower students who continue into postsecondary education after graduating from high school to complete a postsecondary degree or certificate in less time than would normally be required. BC would like to offer two pathways starting fall of 2016 with Plan A for Students who are College Ready and then in fall 2017, Plan B for Students who are not College Ready.

The public announcement and details for the Renegade Promise will be presented the 2016 Bakersfield College Student Leadership and Awards Ceremony on Friday, April 29, from 9:30 a.m. to Noon. I am here to invite you all to attend this ceremony to highlight not only our current student leaders, but also for the unveiling the Renegade Promise for student leaders of tomorrow.

Aaron Kidwell with Sonya Christian Feb 10 2016

Sonya Christian, Aaron Kidwell enjoying Renegade Basketball

On Wednesday, Feb 10th, after a long day of meetings, Vice President Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg and Vice President Zav Dadabhoy and I headed over to watch our basketball teams take on Glendale. It made for a great evening and I’m happy to report that we won both games!  Coach Dahl and Coach Hughes rock!

It was wonderful to see BC faculty and staff out there at 8:00 p.m. supporting our student athletes.  Right from Aaron Kidwell who was up since 4:00 a.m. that day and taking care of stuff at BC to Pam Boyles, Ann Tatum and Robert Boyles, to department staff AD Sandi Taylor and gang, Educational Advisor Stig Jantz….A true labor of love!

I also learned an interesting tidbit at the game.  In High School and College, the Jersey numbers of the basketball players each digit cannot be higher than 5. Here are acceptable numbers  1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 20, 21…… Apparently, this rule was adopted to help referees hand sign numbers to the scoring table. When a referee reports the number of the player to the scorer’s table. he does so with one hand signaling the number in the tens place and the other hand signaling the number in the ones place. Makes sense?  So, if he signals two fingers on his right hand and 4 on the left, he is designating the player with the jersey number 24.

If you haven’t made it out to the Gil Bishop Sports Center to watch our BC Renegades men’s and women’s basketball teams, you really should.

The men’s basketball team had a record of 21-4 after clinching a shot at the league title by beating Glendale on Feb. 10. If the team wins two of their next three games, they will win the Western State Conference South division title outright for the first time in more than 10 years!

 

The team is led by dynamic 5’7″ point guard Jameik Riviere, who currently leads the state in assists. Nothing stops Riviere from quickly weaving through two or three towering defenders, defying gravity as he hangs in the air a second longer than his opponents as his layup glides through the basket.

At the other end of the height chart, 6’9″ Deandre Dickson throws down amazing dunks several times a game, fielding impressive alley-oop style passes from Riviere.

While those two have emerged as stars, the men’s team routinely has depth in players scoring in double digits, including James Pendleton, Lawrence Moore, Shane Christie and Nick Velasquez, making it hard for opposing teams to keep the ‘Gades from scoring.

BC Basketball vs Barstow(M)-348-JPB

Coach Rich Hughes with his team

The men play their last home game on Feb. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Gil Bishop Sports Center against Santa Monica, and we have a good chance of seeing Head Coach Rich Hughes  cut the net down after the game like Head Coach Paula Dahl did last season when the women’s team won their conference title!

Even though the women’s basketball team has had a season this year where they’ve struggled to put up wins like they did last season, they have played with a lot of heart, and Coach Dahl couldn’t be prouder of her team.

“I’m proud of my kids because they are learning that you can do hard things. I get compliments about their character, that they are polite and continue to work hard even though things have been tough. They are learning that life can be hard, and they are working through it and continuing to fight and get better even when the chips are down, and there’s nothing more I could ask for as a coach,” Dahl said.

Here is a quick update on BC’s other sports:

Baseball:  Coach Tim Painton has a solid bunch of players, and they have gotten off to a great start this season.  His pitching staff is composed almost entirely of freshmen, but on the offensive side, Harrison Smith and Hanz Harker (who have both already signed letters of intent to play at Division 1 schools) are now sophomores, picking up where they left off last season.  Smith already has a grand slam to his credit this year.

Sonya firing the gun spring 2015

Sonya Christian. Starter in Feb 12, 2015

Softball:  The BC Softball team is in its second year under coach Christie Hill, and she’s brought back key sophomores like Trinidad Lee.  Last season, Lee pitched the majority of the team’s innings, and helped them score runs with her bat.  This season, she’ll have help from sophomore Maddie Arambula and a host of freshmen from across Kern County.

 

Track & Field:  The Bakersfield College Track and Field team will have their first home meet of the year Friday, Feb. 12 at 10 a.m. at the “Battle of the Regions.”  Marylin Quintero and Sha’nya Terry have dominated the throwing events this season, while Deonte Henderson and Daniel Aguirre have been strong in the running events.  Tristan McGee won the long jump at an event last weekend, so there will be a great assortment of Renegades to cheer on in Memorial Stadium this season.  Thank you Coach Pam Kelley for inviting me to be the starter last year as well as this year.

 

JeremyPrice

Jeremy Price

Swimming:  The Swim Team opens competition Fri., Feb. 12 at the Pentathlon Event in Ventura. Last season, BC men’s swimmer Erik Wood won the event, while women’s swimmer Sara Klang had a great day in the pool as well.

KlangTime

Sara Klang

This year, coach Matt Moon is looking to freshmen swimmers Brian Bender and Christian Chou to lead the pack in Ventura, and he feels that Klang can build on her performance last season, and possibly claim the title at the five-event swim meet.

But one of the more interesting stories on the team is that of Jeremy Price. Coach Moon says that three years ago, Jeremy wasn’t even “water safe.”

But he took Tina Cummings’ Beginning Swimming course, did the hard work, and now Moon feels he can contend in some of the freestyle events.  Just amazing!

Men’s Golf:  Coach Brittney Goehring is now running both the men’s and women’s golf teams, and she’s in her second season with the men.  The 2016 men’s team has an interesting mix of athletes, from United States Marine Corps veteran Francisco Tomayo to former BC football punter Brady Wylie to freshmen like Brad Chamberlain (who currently leads the team) and North High grad Hunter Hopkins, they prove that you can get a lot of variety — even on a small squad like a golf team!  Fun bunch!

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These are just some of the awesome things that are happening in the Athletics Department! Francis Mayer does a great job with with the gogades.com website — check it out for interesting stories about our student athletes.  Also, when you are at the website, check out the schedule and make it a point to get out and enjoy the great weather nature is providing, and the great performances our student athletes are providing!
We are…BC!

Sonya Christian's Blog