Good morning from Portland Oregon.
Gorgeous sunrise.
Enjoying the fresh air after a bout of rain…. 52 degrees… a beautiful day in Oregon and a great day to be a Renegade.
Last week, across campus, the hustle and bustle signaled the gearing up for Spring 2018. Every office and every department is excited to welcome students back to our hallways and classrooms.
Let me start by bragging about some serious talent we have at BC. This week, I worked on a video project with Manny de Los Santos, Monika Scott, Jennifer Serratt, and Dylan Wang. Just great creative talent, all working together to get a great product.
Talent in action
Welcome Center is Gearing Up
The Welcome Center at BC is getting ready for a busy week of helping students last minute to register for classes. Next week on Tuesday and Wednesday, from 9AM to 5PM, everyone is encouraged to come by the BC Welcome Center for help to register for the classes you need for Spring 2018.
My Favorite restaurant featured in the Californian
I shared my excitement almost exactly a month ago that Felix Adamo stopped by to take some photographs during a lunch meeting at Don Perico. I loved sharing in my blog post that Felix was a student photographer for the 1975 Raconteur when BC won the Rosebowl championship. So here is the piece with photos from Felix Adamo that Monika requested. The link to the actual Californian article is provided at the end.
Sonya Christian, Jennifer Johnson, Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg at Don Perico. Photo by Felix Adamo.
As a rookie Math Faculty at Bakersfield College in the early 90’s, I discovered, then fell in love with the Chile Verde, Chicken Fajitas and the avocado pico de gallo at Don Perico. I was new to teaching and still new to the United States, and I loved exploring the food and scene of Bakersfield and Southern California.
I still remember clearly the first time I walked through the lunch buffet line at the little restaurant on Oswell, the food, a rich color, a variety of flavors and mouthwatering aroma…..It somehow reminded me of my hometown of Kollam in the southern tip of India, and Don Perico quickly became my favorite spot to grab a warm meal close to BC, and close to my heart.
For very many years now, I’ve been known to recommend Don Perico to friends and colleagues. And the lunch buffet is still my first choice when I get food off-campus – and not just for the food. The staff and servers treat you like family. For decades before her retirement, Amelia greeted me by name and always with the largest smile. I would look forward to my visits to also see her and catch up on stories about her family.
I had moved away from Bakersfield for ten years, but when I returned for the most important interview of my life, I knew I needed to prepare and put myself in the right frame of mind. Of course I went straight to Don Perico, walked through the door, and there was Amelia with a big smile! “Sonya! Where have you been?” she asked. That was the meal that kept me going through my interview to become BC’s 10th President. At times when I found myself with my picture in the Californian, Arturo, at Don Perico, would greet me with a smile let me know “I saw you in the news…..and that was a nice photo of you!” Great warmth, great caring.
CSUB_Sonya
The years go by, and Amelia has since retired, but the new faces still welcome me just as warmly with a smile, and it remains my favorite for many reasons… the food, the atmosphere, the friendly staff, and it just feels like home.
Thank you Amelia, thank you Arturo and thank you Don Perico for being the place with great food, warm smiles, and the place where before you know it they greet you by name.
Sue Vaughn, BC’s Director of Enrollment Services, got the opportunity to be interviewed about our “high-tech, high-touch” institutional philosophy in a report by the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO).
The report, titled “The State of College Completion Initiatives at US Community Colleges,” examined the changes BC has made in the last five years to better serve our growing population of over 30,000 students, 55 percent of whom are the first generation in their family to attend college. The article highlights our Achieving the Dream and Pathways projects, Multiple Measures, Summer Bridge and Completion Coaching.
Sue Vaughn at Bakersfield College’s Opening Day
“At the institutional level, [BC] is engaged in efforts to change its developmental education approach,” the article says. “The use of technology in tandem with in-person support allows for more frequent touch points with students.”
We’re honored to be one of many case studies featured in this report, and we’re inspired by the work other institutions are doing to make higher education a reality for everyone in America.
The list also highlighted former BC student and Arvin Mayor Jose Gurrola’s efforts to close the gaps in his city’s fiscal deficit, and Aera CEO Christina Sistrunk’s partnership with GlassPoint Solar to promote renewable energy. I’m so grateful for Aera’s investment in our STEM Success Center, and it is amazing to watch her efforts to move the company toward sustainability.
Mayor Jose Gurrola
The article also highlighted CSUB’s search for a new president to succeed Horace Mitchell this spring, and we’re looking forward to building a relationship with whoever the university chooses later this year. BC has played an integral part in thousands of people’s lives across Kern County, and some of this campus’ biggest advocates are making huge waves that will ripple throughout our community in 2018 and the decades to come.
Lots of Reasons to Watch the Skies in 2018
Nick Strobel
Nick Strobel’s most recent article highlights the many things we can look forward to in the skies above in 2018. He mentions lunar eclipses, meteor showers, satellites, and more. Astronomy is a truly wondrous thing. It was Mark Twain who said in the voice of Huckleberry Finn, “We had the sky, up there, all speckled with stars, and we used to lay on our backs and look up at them, and discuss about whether they was made, or only just happened.”
Take some time to look above. In the article Nick says, “Saturday night in the pre-dawn sky low in the southeast you’ll see the conjunction of Mars and Jupiter among the dim stars of Libra. When the waning crescent moon passes Mars and Jupiter in the early morning hours of Jan. 11, all three will fit in the same field of view of your binoculars.”
Truxtun Avenue Roads Improvement Project
Trustee Bill Thomas
The groundbreaking ceremony for the $6.9 million project to widen Truxtun Avenue took place Friday at Jastro Park. The project, which will add two lanes of traffic on Truxtun between Empire Drive and Elm Street, is another traffic decongestion effort supported by the Thomas Roads Improvement Project (TRIP), made possible by retired Congressman and now KCCD Trustee Bill Thomas.
While commuters will be inconvenienced by the construction, in the long run it will help reduce the traffic congestion at Truxtun Avenue and Oak Street, one of the busiest intersections in town.
I’d like to thank Trustee Thomas for his dedication in securing funding for roads in Bakersfield. The city wasn’t initially built to sustain the level of growth we’ve experienced in the last twenty years, but TRIP is working to make life easier for hundreds of thousands of motorists in the area.
Social Media gems:
I loved this picture of Tom Moran and his daughter Mallory
A Fun video of Carlos Barbaran December in Denver
So what about Neo?
That’s all for now.
Until next time.
With much Renegade Pride and Collegiality.
sonya — the luckiest and happiest college president ever
(walking to Powell’s Books)
Good morning Bakersfield. It is August 19, 2017, the birthday of my grandmother, Hilda Sparrow. And a great day to be a Renegade
I woke up to a flurry of emails early Saturday morning from BC employees supporting students. How cool is that! Here are two examples:
Email from Dr. Manny Mourtzanos at 7:00 a.m. Saturday morning to the student
Good morning, [name of student]. I was so inspired to read your message to President Christian, as well as her response this morning. I can’t think of a better way to start the day. We’re here to help. I’d love the chance to meet. Let’s make it happen early and often. I will be at the Welcome Tent by the Fine Arts building on Monday morning from 7:30 – 10:00 am. If you’re in the area during that time, please drop in. My office is located in FA-69 (Fine Arts Building). If I’m not there, someone will be able to help you schedule an appointment with me. I’d like for us to discuss your plans for law school, as well the many professional options our program can offer you. It is a unique program developed by the State Bar of California, and reserved for only a handful of colleges in California, including Bakersfield College. You’ve picked a great college to attend!
Be well,
manny
Then at 7:03 a.m. on saturday, this email from Maria Wright to the student popped into my inbox
Maria Wright
Good morning [name of student],
Welcome to BC! As President Christian mentioned in her email, I am the Director of Academic Support Services and I look forward to supporting you on your pathway to success! Please stop by to meet me next week, my office is in the Center for Student Success (CSS) building, second floor, room 184-A.
When we meet, I will give you a tour of our support services. In the meantime, I am attaching a document that will help you to identify some of the services available to you.
I look forward you to meeting you and please do not hesitate to contact me with any questions or concerns!
With Renegade pride,
Maria Wright
I am the luckiest and happiest college president ever!
August 21st, first day of classes
On Monday, August 21st, the campus will be alive with students filling each hallway and classroom. BC has been growing in enrollments over the last four years and this fall we are seeing another 6.5% growth. So students, parking is going to be crazy the first two weeks. I ask that you to have a friend or family member drop you off and pick you up, or car pool, or take public transportation, or bike to school. Plan on being early.
Where did this summer go? It flew by so quickly! But, here we are and fall is about to begin. It’s my favorite time of the year, gearing up to welcome students back on campus for a new academic year.
Fall 2017 Opening Day
Sonya Christian — 2017 State of the College
On Thursday, August 17th, we celebrated our Opening Day – a time where faculty and staff come together to review all we’ve accomplished and the things we look forward to accomplishing this year. This year, the indoor theater was packed and Jennifer Marden needed to organize an overflow room. And plz note that there are three reds in the planning team — Jennifer Marden, Monika Scott, and Kristin Rabe!
President Dezi Von Manos
Our morning began with a welcome by SGA President, Dezi Von Manos – a BC Communication major and a true student leader. I will see if I can have her talk posted on my blog next week. I promise you, you will be inspired by her and her story.
One of the highlights of the morning was Kay Meek, President of the KCCD Board of Trustees. I heard so many positive comments from everyone on how much they appreciate Kay and how much they appreciated hearing from Kay. Trustee Meek was very positive about the future of KCCD and talked about how much the college will benefit from Measure J. She pointedly looked at me and said she wants the Veterans Resource Center sooner than later to which the audience responded with an applause. Thank you President Kay Meek for attending our Opening Day. We are so fortunate to have you at the helm of KCCD.
Kay Meek, President of the KCCD Board
Kay Meek — A Renegade Fan
This was my fourth State of the College address as President of the college. Here are snippets of the content of my remarks.
Let me start with our Core Valuers which permeate everything we do. During the State of the College I had our new employees read the Core Values. Here is Neeley Hatridge reading the core value of Diversity.
Neeley Hatridge
Sonya Christian — BC Core Values
We have also been laser focused on the safety and security of our campus. BC has a dedicated Public Safety department led by Chief Counts. Since we are an open campus with no walls surrounding us, our Public Safety department makes sure that we go through professional development to be able to respond to all kinds of emergencies. Our slogan is, if you see something, say something, do something. Here is Chief Christopher Counts addressing the BC employees on Opening Day.
Chief Christopher Counts
I have been blogging about the Guided Pathways work at BC and the strategy of creating Completion Coaching Communities around the 10 metamajors. Well, at Opening Day, we had a team from the Arts and Humanities metamajor model that their roles will be as completion coaches for the students in that group. Each speaker was exceptionally good and I thank Grace Commiso, Manny Mourtzanos and especially Lesley Bonds in working with the group.
Grace Commiso, Lesley Bonds
Here are the completion coaches who spoke at Opening Day
Manny Mourtzanos (Dean and Administrative Lead):
Dr. Manny Mourtzanos
1972….Not only the year I was born, but also the number of students in the Arts & Humanities pathway. 1,972. How can one person possibly know each of these students on a personal level enough to make a difference?
That’s why we have “Completion Coaching Communities.” By bringing together specialists and discipline experts, we can share the duty to ‘know’ our students. As the Pathway Lead, I can ‘know’ our 1,972 by reviewing data. I might not know their stories, but by working with our Data Coaches and colleagues in Institutional Effectiveness, we can identify which students could benefit from additional support, resources, information or intervention. As Pathway Lead, my ‘breadth’ of knowing students is wide, though shallow. However, discipline experts are uniquely positioned to have a shorter ‘breadth’ of students to know, but they can be known in a much ‘deeper’ and more meaningful way. For example, of our 1,972 students, 101 of them are Spanish majors. As the discipline expert for Spanish, Qiu Jimenez is poised to coordinate efforts with the other three full-time faculty in Spanish to know their students on personal level….that’s only 25 students each…a very doable mission. As the Pathway Lead, I’m committed to bringing our experts together, along with our Data Coaches, Faculty Chairs, Counselors and Ed Advisors, to identify students in need of additional support, and using our infrastructure to reach them.
You’ll hear today from my fellow Completion Coaches. We each have different responsibilities to ensure that we know our students so that they:
Complete college-level English and math in the first year,
Complete 15 pathway-applicable units by the end of their first term,
Complete 30 pathway-applicable units by the end of their first year, and
Complete 60 pathway-applicable units in two years
With that, I invite my fellow Completion Coaches to share with you their experiences as Coaches responsible for these 1,972 students.
Eleonora Hicks (Data Coach):
Eleonora Hicks
My name is Eleonora Hicks. I am a sociology professor in the Behavioral Sciences department and since I find quantitative analysis “super” exciting, I also function as a data coach and work closely with BC’s completion coaching communities within the framework of our guided pathways.
There are four main pillars in the guided pathways approach. The first pillar involves not only achieving clarity but to quote President Christian, it involves achieving relentless clarity in the curricular pathways that students follow to complete their academic and career goals.
As a member of the Arts & Humanities Completion Coaching Community, I am the Data Clarifier. It’ is my responsibility to provide clarity, help my fellow coaches understand the right questions to ask, , interpret questions they’re not sure how to ask, and make meaning of the cohort reports I provide as a liaison with the Office of Institutional Effectiveness.
As a data coach and part of a completion community, I have specifically worked within the framework of Pillar #1 by collaborating with the Office of Institutional Effectiveness in several ways: I have helped my Completion Community see the classes in which our students are enrolled, provided feedback about the clarity with which we communicate program requirements, goals, and outcomes and am currently assessing the most common courses across programs within meta-majors, which could become an important tool in advising and course mapping.
Yvonne Armendariz (AccuSQL Lead) Good morning, my name is Yvonne Armendariz and I am the Basic Skills Program Manager. As a Completion Coach, I lead our campus efforts to utilize a tool called AccuSQL to track attendance for all student support services. So while Eleonora distributes to her Completion Coaching Community a report based on student cohort data in Banner, I can help provide you a report that shows our students’ behavior throughout the semester.
At the beginning of each semester, I will set up automated reports for each instructor to receive every Monday morning at 7 am. These reports will have detailed information regarding the students in your course that attended an academic support service the week prior. This report will include student name, ID, center where services attended, and time spent. For weeks, 4, 8, and 12 each instructor will receive a cumulative report for all students that have attended a support service at that point. Any Completion Coach can use this information to track, in nearly live time, how engaged your students are in academic support services.
If you have any questions regarding your AccuSQL reports, please feel free to contact me or reach out anyone within the Academic Support Services Department and they will put you into contact with me. Thank you.
Jonathan Schultz (Counselor):
Jonathan Schultz
I am Jonathan Schultz, a Counselor and Completion Coach. While there are many things I love about the pathway model, the group collaboration is my favorite. Having a group of people, working together is not only fun, but it really helps our students succeed and get on their path to completion. A perfect example of this is over the summer, I received an email from Helen Acosta, Department Chair of Communication, replying to a student who she met at Summer Bridge. This student had questions about what career path would be best for her. Helen, knowing the system we have in place on campus, referred her to me since I am the “Personal and Career Exploration” counselor, and we were able to help her set up an appointment to begin researching career options and begin her on a path.
As a Counselor focused on undecided students entering our campus, I review cohort progress data, take direct responsibility for reaching out to undecided students in groups, and work with them to move them toward a clear, attainable educational goal using various career exploration tools, working with job placement specialists, the transfer center, and my colleagues in academic support services. I take responsibility for recognizing and intervening when I see our students are off-path to help them get back on-path by taking the right courses at the right time. As a Completion Coach, I commit to ensuring each student I meet leaves our interaction with a clearer sense of purpose and the tools they need to navigate their pathway successfully.
Roberta Ayala (Financial Aid Tech):
Roberta Ayala
My name is Roberta Ayala and I am a Financial Aid Technician. With nearly 80% of students being the first in their families to attend college and over 65% relying on financial aid to pursue their goals, we know that helping students start on the right path financially is critical in their success.
As a Completion Coach, I work to ensure our students’ success and remove any financial barriers along their path while shaping their behavior for their long-term success. I achieve this by assisting students throughout the financial aid process including completing their FAFSA, keeping open communication regarding status and requirements, and providing support throughout their journey.
More specifically, I track and provide financial aid information to my fellow coaches within the A&H pathway. It is my personal goal to educate my fellow coaches and our students, and to provide them with the many financial resources available. With the list of the 1971 students Eleonora provides, I am able to quickly identify those students who have incomplete FAFSAs, are missing critical documents, or are in danger of losing their financial aid. By identifying the students early, I can contact each student with a tailored message to ensure they set off on the right path financially toward their educational goals.
Paul Beckworth (Discipline Faculty, Starfish Implementation Lead):
Paul Beckworth
My name is Paul Beckworth, and I was not born in 1972. I’m a history faculty member and serve as BC’s lead for veterans. While our Dean, Manny Mourtzanos, set the stage with a focus on the 1972 students in the Arts & Humanities Learning & Career Pathway, I am focused on specific, intrusive support to history majors. As a coach, I know I have a direct responsibility for knowing the 222 of History majors at BC.
Launching into a new year brings new possibilities, not just for us but for our students. The possibility to finish strong can become a probability through vigorous course work and “intrusive caring.” One of our primary roles as educators is to help students finish what they started. But you might be wondering how do we, as teachers, get students to stay on the path that the awesome counselors and advisors put them on? If a student isn’t in my class, how can I play a role in helping them finish what they started?
We know students see us more often than anyone else on campus. They come to talk to us, sometimes about class, but often times about life. Struggles often show up in classroom performance. What an opportunity to keep them on their path to getting a whole team behind them, not letting them deviate from their goals!
So, beyond creating an environment in my classroom where students can learn and grow collectively as historians, I am committing to take responsibility for ensuring their success as BC Renegades.
As a member of a Completion Community, I work with my colleagues in the History department to ensure the data Eleonora provides remain a constant focus for each of us in our department meetings. We will work together as a department to ensure our syllabi reflect our emphasis on academic support services and student engagement.
I get to say, I am a completion coaching community team member. Listen, guided pathways is happening with us, not to us. Our students are coming in with pre-entry attributes that we must work with. We meet them where there are. Where are they? They are here! And they are BC!
Regina Hukill (Department Chair, Math):
Regina Hukill
My name is Regina Hukill and I am the Math Department Chair and a member of the STEM Completion Coaching Community. But today I am here as a department chair to ensure that math completion is a clear focus for everyone as we work to help students stay on path to complete college-level English and math.
In the past year, we have been engaged in an intensive strategy to engage every student in academic support. Using Basic Skills funds, we developed an Extend the Classroom for Math as well as for English. By using, Extend the Classroom to target those students taking basic skill math courses who need extra one-on-one tutoring in math and to help them complete the math they need to stay on their academic path.
We are happy to see that the Extend the Classroom for Math location has been moved from being tucked away in a corner of the Writing Center, to a more desirable location which will be in the Math Science Building. A convenient location can really make a huge difference in the number of students we can get to participate in this program.
Our two professional math tutors, Christopher Anderson and Alana Austin will be there to help students from 7 am to 8:30 pm Monday through Thursday, and on Fridays from 8 am to noon. Math faculty will continue to support the Extend the Classroom by providing help as well. We have found that instructors like Josh Lewis and Donna Starr who are available in the Extend the Classroom get a good number of their students participating. Some of my fellow math faculty coaches and I are committing to allocate points in the course that students can earn by getting tutoring outside of the classroom to emphasize our goal of math completion for all students.
Keri Wolf (Discipline faculty, Extend the Classroom):
Keri Wolf
My name is Keri Wolf, and I have been involved in Extend the Classroom as an English faculty member and Completion Coach to ensure college-level English completion is a clear focus for each of you. BC has 253 English majors, but we know every single student who steps foot on campus with an AA in mind needs to complete English 1A. With our goal for students to complete college-level Math and English courses during their first year, this places English faculty in a unique position to foster a collaborative environment through classroom interactions and extending the classroom programs.
Extending the classroom provides a distraction free, collaborative learning environment. Supplemental Instruction study groups allow students to gain the support of not only an experienced peer who knows the instructor and that specific section’s material but also the support of classmates.
As a Completion Coach, I work with my colleagues in the English Department to expand our use of SI, specifically for English 53, an accelerated course to the transfer-level English 1A. As a result, students who take English 53 their first semester and then follow it with English 1A their second semester are able to complete English in the first year.
Since English provides these foundational courses, extend the classroom exposes students early to the network of support services. And many students have credited SI as pivotal to their success.
Transfer and CTE are all pathways to a job: The Community College Chancellor’s Office is focused on “jobs” at the email of a college degree whether it is an Associates degree or a Baccalaureate degree. The whole Guided Pathways approach starts with the “end in mind”. At BC, we have organized our 72 programs into 10 Metamajors and within each metamajor there are both CTE pathways and transfer pathways. So, during the State of the College address, I invited both Janet Fulks and Cindy Collier to speak about Transfer and CTE respectively and our work for 2017-18.
After the State of the College, we heard from Chancellor Tom Burke who reviewed the Measure J plans, his goals for the next two years and his visit to the Kern Valley Prison to see students in the Japanese course do presentations. He was clearly moved by the testimony of the students. Thank you Chancellor for attending BC’s 2017 Opening Day!
I always look forward to hearing from the leadership of the employee groups. Bernadette Martinez with CCSEA, Isabel Stierle with CCA, Steve Holmes with Academic Senate, and Sue Vaughn on behalf of Management.
BC’s Academic Senate President Steven Holmes always has fun during campus wide gatherings. He is known to be in flip flops for most of the year and at the last campus wide gathering, Debbie Rosenthal challenged him to get a pedicure. And here he is at the next campus wide gathering, confidently displaying his pedicured toes with dark red nail polish 🙂
And here he is in a video that Zav captured when Steven was removing the license plate from my Land Rover.
Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg
After we heard from the employee groups, Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg introduced us to the new employees including the 55 new faculty. Nan concluded her remarks with the quote: Only the educated are free. Powerful!
Thank you to Coach Matt Moon and Coach Zach Peters for leading us through a stretch break. Also thank you to BC SGA leaders Dezi Von Manos and Jose Cortez.
Accreditation:
We are working on our Institutional Self Evaluation report (ISER) and will have the accreditation evaluation team on campus in October 2018. Jason Stratton, History Faculty, and Liz Rozell, Dean of Instruction, are leading this work. They did a real nice job jeopardy-style to engage the audience.
Wondering about the two of them leading the work on BC’s Institutional Self Evaluation after I saw this photo.
Liz Rozell, Jason Stratton — Chairs of ISER
The morning concluded with the Margaret Levinson Faculty Leadership Award being presented to Dr. Kimberly Bligh for all of her dedication to BC and our students. As you know, she was instrumental in the advancing and growth of Summer Bridge.
This is how Prof. Kimberly Nickell introduced Dr. Kimberly Bligh.
I am always amazed by the leaders I get to work with on our BC campus. And as I work with these leaders, I experience their drive, vision and pursuit of excellence. Dr. Kimberly Bligh is the epitome of this leader.
From the implementation of the CAS workshops, Summer Bridge, creating her math textbook, and directing Title V, as well as many other projects she is involved in, I have witnessed Kimberly leading the charge, and with each endeavor her drive, vision, and pursuit of excellence is apparent. Kimberly strives to elevate the BC campus, promoting student success while mentoring and inspiring others to be leaders. That is true leadership.
So please, let’s put our hands together for our 2017 Margaret Levinson Leadership award recipient, Dr. Kimberly Bligh.
Kimberly put together a tribute to those who supported her as a thank you during her acceptance speech of the Levinson award. Here it is
The final award presented was the Norm Levan Faculty Colloquium Announcement awarded to Rafael Espericueta.
Here is the description of Rafael’s talk.
Every day you make use of software based on deep learning. You use it every time you do a Google search, or look for a movie to watch on Netflix. It’s used to enable computers (and phones) to recognize objects, understand spoken language, diagnose illness, and countless other applications.
Recently, deep learning has made profound breakthroughs that are making possible tasks that hitherto have been impossible for computers to accomplish. And the breakthroughs keep coming! Soon autonomous vehicles will be driving our roads, and human driven vehicles may well become a thing of the past. Many jobs will disappear, as machines become more capable of tasks once reserved exclusively for humans.
Deep learning will increasingly effect all of our lives, and it behooves us all to gain at least a basic understanding of this exciting new and disruptive technology. It now seems likely that machines may soon actually attain sentience, or at least act as though they were as sentient as you or I.
The ethical ramifications of this technology are vast and will be increasingly pertinent. Our very species’ survival may well hang in the balance. But whether you are terrified at imagined dystopias this technology may engender, or excited by utopic visions of the future this technology can make possible, artificial intelligence is evolving at an exponential rate. The day of the sentient machine is coming, whether we like it or not. The more one knows about what’s coming, the more power one yields to help steer it in a more desirable direction.
Whatever your own field of study, deep learning will become increasingly relevant to your future. Come to Rafael’s talk to learn more about deep learning – what recent breakthroughs have been made, and what we may expect in the near (and distant) future. Though it may sound like science fiction, this is an engineering reality right now. Come learn what it has accomplished, as well as what it portends for our species’ future!
Friday, Nov. 3rd Levan Center
11:30 AM (an hour later than usual)
Mathematics Department…Rafael Espericueta
There were three major initiatives for the year that I highlighted: (1) Completion Coaching Communities intended to create a case management approach and in this case a cohort management approach to ensure that no student goes unnoticed. (2) Measure J as we move to implementation and (3) accreditation. The videos were produced by the very talented Manny de Los Santos using the Superhero theme. Enjoy them!
Let me introduce you to our superheroes Todd Coston and Liz Rozell:
Let me introduce you to our Superhero Bill Potter, Director of Facilities
Let me introduce you to numerous superheros that form a completion coaching community around each student.
I can’t thank everyone involved enough for the incredible way the day turned out. It’s a group effort from various multiple departments.
The talented Manny de los Santos!
Manny de Los Santos
ASL Interpreters
I’d like to thank Tom Moran and Brittany King, for their work interpreting during Opening Day.
Tom does so much on campus and it’s always a joy to see him. He was also a giant supporter during the Measure J campaign, and even has taught me how to sign both “Yes on J” and “We are BC!” Thank you Tom!
Food Services at BC
During Opening Day, Mary Jo took the time to thank our Food Services crew for all the work they do to provide food for students and catering at important events like we have on Thursday.
Eric Sabella and the crew worked hard to provide breakfast burritos and lunch wraps for the faculty and staff on Opening Day, then got straight to work on a beautiful barbecue chicken dinner for everybody at the New Student Convocation that evening. I’d like to thank them for their tireless work and for keeping us fueled with delicious food.
Mary Jo Pasek posted this photo on her Facebook! I can always count on MJ to have some of the best photos.
Thank Yous
I have to give special thanks also to our team of ushers: Lori Ortiz, Savannah Andres, Roseanne Lewis, Trudi Blanco, Cecilia Lopez, Yolanda Aguilera, and Bernadette Martinez. Thank you Chris Glaser for leading this effort.
Video, media services, and photographers: Kristin Rabe, Kevin Ganger, Manny De Los Santos, Earl Parsons, Eric Carrillo, and John Farrand.
Content Contributors, Lesley Bonds, Grace Commiso, Manny Mourtzanos, Eleonora Hicks, Yvonne Armendariz, Jonathan Schultz, Roberta Ayala, Paul Beckworth, Regina Hukilll, Keri Wolf, Janet Fulks, Cindy Collier, Jason Stratton, Liz Rozell, and Chris Counts.
Our fabulous emcee, Francis Mayer, and the planning team, Jennifer Serratt, Monika Scott, and Aricia Leighton.
New Faculty Seminar
On Monday, our 55 new faculty members met in the first seminar in a year-long series that will help them connect with BC resources and make the most of their time at Bakersfield College. We are excited to welcome this new and very dynamic group of faculty to the college – the largest incoming class of new faculty in our history!
Topics ranged from how to get involved in pathways and completion communities to learning the ropes of human resources. We look forward to offering New Faculty Seminars every month for the rest of the semester.
Flex Week
BC’s fall 2017 Flex Week was a busy one, packed with almost 60 workshops, including four Opening Day breakout sessions focused on important campus initiatives. Workshops ranged from practical skills related to accessibility using Google and Grackle, to workshops designed to help faculty integrate new creative media, like PowToons—and everything in between. In addition to Flex workshops and Opening Day breakout sessions, the Pathways Institute drew a sizable crowd of completion coaches and other dedicated faculty and staff from all over BC. As of Thursday afternoon, Flex Week drew over 385 logins/sign-ins, including over 208 individual attendees. Thanks, BC!
Dr. Chike Akua
As part of Flex Week on Wednesday, acclaimed public intellectual Dr. Chike Akua hosted workshop about how to keep students of color engaged in their academic pursuits and education as a key to fighting structural inequality.
BC was honored to host this important professional development workshop with Akua, a member of the Teacher Transformation Institute and author of books such as “Honoring our Ancestral Obligations: 7 Steps to Black Student Success”. Akua’s presentation, titled “Education for Transformation: Keys to Releasing the Genius of Black Students”, focused on concrete ways that instructors can supplement their curricula with the contributions of African-Americans and other marginalized groups that have been omitted from textbooks or otherwise edited out of the canon of human intellectual achievement.
“Who are the models of intellectual authority you’re putting before your students?” Akua asked. “Even though the population of our students has changed, in many ways, our curriculum has not.”
By drawing attention to marginalized innovators in math, science, art, architecture and countless other fields, it allows students within those marginalized groups to see themselves reflected in a given field of study, and Akua showed data that reflects how students that are able to relate to their study material grow more confident in their academics and matriculate more successfully through their educational pathway.
“This has become one of the critical mediating factors in my students’ success,” Akua said.
Akua also used the events in Charlottesville last weekend as a lens to guide his discussion on the role educators have in shifting the toxic perceptions about race relations in America today. When educators begin engaging students to critically examine the world around them while spreading awareness of structural inequality and social issues like the school-to-prison pipeline, Akua posits that we’ll begin seeing the national conversation about race change, and in many ways the shift has already started to happen with the work of organizations such as Black Lives Matter and the ongoing debate about law enforcement accountability in communities of color.
“Their innate sense of justice will cause students to speak out on issues,” Akua said. “Allow your students to bring their whole personality to class.”
Akua also stressed the importance of a diverse faculty in bridging the “engagement gap” in education, while showing data indicating that higher learning institutions need to do a lot better at hiring people of color. The national leader for hiring African-American faculty among major four-year state institutions is The University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa, whose faculty is only 6.8 percent black despite having an 11.1 percent black undergraduate population, according to the website College Factual. The state leader among four-year colleges in California is UCLA, whose black faculty only comprises 3 percent of the faculty population despite making up 4.8 percent of the student population.
“It’s important to have faculty who look like your students,” Akua said. “How can we say we’re a nation who values diversity with these numbers?”
Akua’s conversation gave our faculty a lot to think about how they might be unintentionally alienating a lot of their marginalized students while giving some good advice about how to keep those students engaged.
Welcome International Students
In addition to welcoming new faculty and staff, we have 90 students from around the world in our ISA program for Fall 2017, majoring in everything from Business Administration to Theatre Arts. There are 18 students from India, which represents 20 percent of the group. There are 15 students from Saudia Arabia and 10 from Vietnam, as well as representatives from Nigeria, China, Bangladesh, France, Ivory Coast, Australia and more for a total of 29 countries to be welcomed into the BC family.
New Student Convocation
Bakersfield College welcomed its 104th class of incoming freshman to the family Thursday night at the Outdoor Theater during the New Student Convocation.
The annual event is a gathering before the start of the fall semester for new students and their families to learn about different programs on campus and what will be expected of them for the upcoming year. Todd Coston was in the audience as a parent of a young woman starting her freshman year at BC. I snapped this picture. See if you can spot Todd off in the distance.
Steven Holmes led BC faculty through a pledge to provide students with the support they’ll need to make it through a short but eventful school year, while SGA President Dezi von Manos led students through their pledge to rise to the occasion and perform the hard work it requires to achieve their dreams. Dr. Janet Fulks led the families, friends and supporters of the students through a pledge as well.
I grabbed these photos from Lawrence Salcido’s Facebook page. Thank you Lawrence!
There was amazing entertainment throughout the event, with a DJ booth in front of the Outdoor Theater providing music while students visited booths for the Agriculture and Automotive programs, the Student Health Center and countless other student organizations. When students walked into the theater, they were greeted with a performance from a few students in last semester’s Commercial Music class. Jennifer Garrett led the BC choir through the national anthem, “When You Wish Upon a Star” and Simon and Garfunkel’s “Bridge Over Troubled Water”,
The BC cheerleaders closed the convocation with an exciting performance. Thank you Heather Foss for your dedication to the BC Cheer Team. And thank you Becki Whitson for all of the years you spent with the team. We miss you and hope to see you at the games.
Here is the BC Fight Song
Go out and Get Them
There’s an awesome video BC counselor Jonathan Schultz put together on YouTube speaking to student athletes about taking advantage of opportunities. Jonathan presents a very simple but true philosophy that successful people are able to do seemingly impossible things because they are willing to go lengths others aren’t to be the best.
“You have to do what others won’t if you want to have what others don’t,” Schultz said. “I never waited for an opportunity to come to me. I went out and found an opportunity.” When you’re willing to go the extra mile in your athletic, creative or cognitive development, people will recognize the work you’re putting in and opportunities to succeed will open up that you never thought possible. The greatest athletes were the ones who had the drive put in time and effort that their coworkers didn’t, transcending what people previously thought was humanly possible. “What are you doing that other people in your exact situation are not doing?” Schultz asks. “What pushes you outside of yourself? What’s your why?”
Football Practice Begins!
I loved seeing this post on Instagram. BC Football is gearing up!
Are you following BC on Instagram?! What about Facebook and Twitter?
FCDC Summer Chair Academy
The Faculty Chairs/Directors Council met this week as well to wrap up the summer. This group of dedicated individuals discuss, review, and resolve operational issues and to provide collaborative interaction between student services and instruction in development of seamless process to meet student needs. Welcome to the new department chairs this year: Mark Osea, Counseling; Helen Acosta, Communication, and Kirk Russell, Library.
Eclipse Information
Nick Strobel
Nick Strobel also sent an email out to various campus groups sharing some awesome details about the upcoming eclipse. He said,
“You’ve probably heard something about the upcoming eclipse of the Sun on Monday, August 21. The eclipse for us in Bakersfield will be just a partial eclipse. See the Planetarium’s homepage at www.bakersfieldcollege.edu/planetarium for the stats for Bakersfield and how to view the Sun safely.
What’s the big deal about this total solar eclipse? Here are some reasons:
Total solar eclipses (New Moon totally covers the Sun’s photosphere surface) are RARE and awesome!
First one in the lower 48 states since 1979.
First one to sweep across the entire country since 1918.
First one to be solely visible in the United States since 1776 (yes, 1776)
Approximately 391 million people in the U.S. will be able to see the eclipse (total or partial).
Literally millions of international tourists will be coming to places in the path of totality. The totality strip is just 68 miles wide.
The few minutes of totality are the only times we can view the Sun’s corona (outer atmosphere). The corona is about as bright as a full moon.
A great story. Thank you Joe Coughlin of Coconut Joes
When Joe Coughlin of Coconut Joes heard about the passing of the celebrity Glen Campbell, he picked up his guitar and strummed the Rhinestone Cowboy.
Does that get your attention…..Well, click on the link and read his August 12th Opinion piece in The Bakersfield Californian — Gentle on My Mind: My long unique connection to Glen Campbell. http://tinyurl.com/y8bssflx. A pretty cool story.
I never heard Gentle on my mind by Glen Campbell. Thank you Joe for introducing me to this piece by Glen Campbell. I enjoyed it.
Rosebowl Watch
Thought you would enjoy the Facebook exchange with community members about the Rosebowl watch. I actually wore it for Opening Day. Here is a screen capture.
So what about Neo?
At 5 1/2 months, he is 52 lbs, and teething. Can you guess where he is in the picture below?
Neo
Being obnoxious and then sweet like an angel when he is asleep.
That’s all for now.
Until next time.
With much Renegade Pride and Collegiality.
sonya — the luckiest and happiest college president ever
Good morning Bakersfield. It is Saturday, August 5th, and at 5:15 a.m. it is 74 degrees … a beautiful morning, a great week full of community leaders, BC leaders, veterans and congressmen. A great week to be a Renegade.
I had a series of productive meetings this week. The Kern Promise completion coaching community met for the first time and I forgot to take a photo. Darn it. But I might have pictures of some of the individuals in my photo library on word press.
Lisa Kent, Shanell Tyus, Maria Wright
Lesley Bonds
Shanell Tyus with Lisa Kent and Maria Wright. Lesley Bonds
Just a great group of BC folks discussing the students in the cohort to make sure that they are positioned to successfully complete their first milestone at the end of the fall semester — 15 credits of course work. In addition, we are focusing on students completing their college-level English and college-level math in their first year. Jennifer Achan, Director of Financial Aid, did a detailed presentation of the Financial Aid status of each student. Keri Kennedy, the counselor responsible for this cohort, reviewed the courses that these students are enrolled in. We also have a student in the group. Here are some of the faces of the completion coaches for the affinity group The Kern Promise.
Jennifer Achan with Nan Gomez-Heitzeberg. Keri Kennedy.
We also submitted the 2017-2020 Educational Master Plan (EMP) for Board approval. Thank you Dr. Janet Fulks for leading the effort on the EMP work. I love this picture of Janet with her granddaughter.
Janet Fulks
I thought you might enjoy some excerpts from the President’s letter in the EMP
Bakersfield College (BC) started in 1913 as a vision and a plan for educational opportunity and community service with 13 students in a borrowed classroom on the Kern High School campus. From that hopeful start, BC now provides approximately 30,000 students a year with educational opportunity, serves as a cultural center for its community, and trains the workforce for a vibrant community of industry partners.
BC’s Vision today remains true to that founding vision:
“Building upon more than 100 years of excellence, Bakersfield College continues to contribute to the intellectual, cultural, and economic vitality of the communities it serves.”
The visionaries of 1913 could not have imagined the growth or rapidly changing society, however, they would instantly recognize the individuals today who tirelessly help our students (many still first in their families to go to college) attain their dreams. It is the shared work of college faculty, staff, and administrators, and our community.
BC’s 2017-2020 Educational Master Plan embarks on a systematic Guided Pathways redesign of how we guide students to complete their educational goals. Guided Pathways is built on four pillars:
Clarifying educational pathways for both Career Technical Pathways and Transfer Pathways.
Getting students on the path starts by getting 9th grade students to see college in their futures.
Keeping students on the path calls us to ensure that every precaution is taken to keep students on their educational pathway to degree completion.
Ensuring learning invites as to develop a learning environment both in and out of the classroom to create adaptive learners who can communicate effectively, think critically, demonstrate competencies, and engage with their communities.
The 2017-2020 Educational Master Plan calls for an approach that better serves BC’s 30,000 students by grouping them into 18 completion communities – 10 meta-majors and 8 affinity groups, which include the identified underrepresented groups in BC’s Equity Plan. Each meta-major and affinity group will be surrounded by completion coaches ranging from 10 to 20 faculty and staff that will form a safety net around their cohort of students. The high-touch, personalized approach of these completion coaching communities combined a with the high-tech data analytics will help coaches to monitor progress and target student communications.
BC History on Facebook
Keith Wolaridge, Tom Gelder
This week, Keith Wolaridge shared a Facebook post with me featuring historical photos of the Bakersfield College campus. The post on Kern County Historical Society’s page was posted by Fatima Al-Bugharin. It’s incredible to see how supportive, interested, and dedicated the residents of Kern County are to BC.
Thank you Keith for your support of Bakersfield College. Here you see Keith with Tom Gelder, being recognized for his leadership role on the Measure J committee. Keith is also a community mentor in BC’s Astep program with Dr. Paula Parks.
In 1913, Bakersfield leadership and the community were visionaries. They knew that higher education was absolutely critical for Kern County and so they created a community college in Bakersfield. In the 50’s, leadership and the community again showed their commitment when they supported BC’s move to have its own campus.
The land was chosen – it was empty, barren, and probably very dusty and it was right there – 1801 Panorama Drive… this 153-acre lot on the China Grade Bluffs. The ground was not yet broken, but the seeds for the future were planted and the location was chosen; this was the place. This was the place where hundreds of thousands of students would make their way “up the hill” to attend college for the very first time.
Sixty years later, many things have changed, but one constant piece remains – Bakersfield is a community that realizes the importance of a college education and undeniably supports Bakersfield College.
On Wednesday, August 2nd, morning, Paul Beckworth and BC student and US Navy Veteran, Robert Enger were featured in a story on ABC 23 about the Forever GI Bill. Straight from the story, Paul Beckworth said,
It will extend the benefits for stem majors up to one academic year which is indicative of the federal government recognizing we need stem majors and this is a way we can help veterans get those degrees so they can enter the workforce.
Thanks to your loyal support through Measure J, our student veterans will be getting a brand new, state of the art, stand-alone Veterans Resource Center. Thank you Bakersfield, Thank you Kern County! Thank you Congressman McCarthy for your work on the Forever GI Bill and for your continued support of our veterans. Also, a big thank you to all of our political leaders such as County Supervisor Leticia Perez and Assemblyman Rudy Salas. And finally, thank you to all our BC student veterans for trusting us with your education — you can go far and BC is here to support you.
On Thursday, Congressman McCarthy was at BC participating in the Veterans History Project.
Zav Dadabhoy, Kevin McCarthy, Armando Trujillo, Mary Jo Pasek
The United States Congress created the Veterans History Project in 2000 to collect, preserve, and make accessible the personal stories and accounts of American war veterans so that future generations can hear directly from the veterans, in their voices, and better understand the realities of war.
Love this photo — a Manny selfie 🙂
Manny de Los Santos, Kevin McCarthy, Marvin Belcher
Mary Jo Pasek, Miriam Kann
One of the veterans interviewed was Miriam Kann. You see her here with Mary Jo Pasek. Steven Mayer of The Bakersfield Californian did a great story on Kann in the July 27th paper titled Bakersfield woman, on eve of 100th birthday, says she joined up because she was ‘mad at Hitler’. Loved the header…. Here are some excerpts from the article
Then in her mid-20s, Kann joined millions of other American women who participated in the war effort in those dark days when Hitler’s armies had occupied much of Europe and the Japanese Imperial Navy had control of much of the Pacific.
She served in San Francisco and at other locations training new pilots using the Link Trainer, an early flight simulator. Many, she said, credited the training with saving their lives.
Steven Mayer concludes with:
“On the flight, several of the guys were just ga-ga over her,” recalled Kim Whitaker, an Honor Flight volunteer.
But one man, Jack Henslee, asked for her number.
“I met her on Honor Flight in 2013, and we have been seeing one another ever since,” Henslee said. “She’s a lady.”
The joke going around is that Kann is robbing the cradle, as Henslee is a mere lad of 91. But she seems sweetly embarrassed by the suggestion.
And just in case anyone might suggest something untoward is going on, Henslee repeated his admonition.
“She’s a lady,” he said.
She certainly is.
Miriam Kann turns 100 today. Happy 100th birthday Ms. Miriam Kann. We thank you for your service to our country.
The veterans were interviewed at Bakersfield College on Thursday, August 3rd. Dick Taylor, Armando Tuijillo, and Kevin McCarthy did the interviews. Thank you Dick Taylor for your continued support of Bakersfield College. And thank you for bringing the Airforce Band to BC’s outdoor theater. Here is a link to my July 1, 2017 blog featuring the Airforce Band. https://sonyachristianblog.com/2017/07/01/time-flies-when-youre-at-bc/
Here is the list of veterans who participated.
Andrew Perales, Marvin Belcher (WWII), Greg Underwood (Vietnam), Tom Svare (Vietnam), Augustine Flores (WWII), Jessica Brown (Navy 2011-2015), Aaron Coates (Iraq War), Henry Ochsner (WWII), Victor Killingsworth (WWII), Miriam Kann (WWII)
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Thank you to all involved with this project, including Mary Jo Pasek, Manny De Los Santos, and John Farrand.
Here is John and Manny in action, a post from Mary Jo Pasek’s Facebook.
Bakersfield College Students Intern with Congressman Kevin McCarthy
Mary Jo Pasek got this great photo from Robin Lake-Foster.
Congressman Kevin McCarthy’s 2017 Summer Internship Program
Included in this group photo, albeit gloomy weather, are college students from the 23rd Congressional District who participated in Congressman Kevin McCarthy’s 2017 Summer Internship Program, where they spent two weeks in McCarthy’s Bakersfield District Office and six weeks in the DC offices, where their time was shared serving three weeks in the Congressman’s congressional office and three weeks in the Office of the Majority Leader.
The students from Bakersfield College are:
Halle Cornejo (left back row, auburn hair and cream blouse) Austin Machado (kneeling down in front row, white shirt with striped tie Nicolas Montero-Garcia (to the right of the Congressman, pink shirt, no jacket) James Priest (next to Nicolas, gray shirt with striped tie)
#WeAreBC
BC’s Ag Department
BC is located in California’s agriculturally rich San Joaquin Valley and has the history and resources to move Ag students in the right direction. Our Ag program has rich history too, dating back to it’s beginnings in 1915 — making it one of the first community college agriculture programs in the nation. Since then, BC continues to educate students for a career in all ag fields.
This week, a fun email was forwarded to me. Charles Parker, Agriculture Education Consultant shared Ag Teacher Trivia – how many of these did you know?
Charles wrote, “To start of the year, I thought I would provide you with some teacher trivia. Enjoy and let me know if I am missing anyone.”
COUPLES
LeAnn English, BC Ag Dept.
LeAnn English, Bakersfield College and Matthew Riley, Bakersfield College
Allison Ferry, COS and Charles Abee, COS
Koren Martins, Mt. Whitney and Zach Brown, El Diamante
Courtney Serafin, Golden West and Jared Castle, Hanford
Elizabeth ??, Strathmore and Donald Thornburg, Woodlake
Jenna Villacana, Kern ROC and Jacob Eyraud, Bakersfield
RELATIVES Audrey Bonomi, Sanger and Amy Vivenzi, Washington (Sisters)
Don Clark, Wasco and Vernon Clark, Foothill (Dad and Son)
Alex Gutierrez, Caruthers and Nancy Gutierrez, Reedley College (Brother and Sister)
Erin Hanger, Summit Charter and Robert Hanger, Kern Valley (Brother and sister)
Roz Lopez, Central and Robert Calvert, Selma (Mother and Son)
Charles Parker, Regional Supervisor and Steve Parker, Taft (Brothers)
Matthew Riley, Bakersfield College and Carolee Trimble, Kern ROC (Brother and Sister)
FORMER STATE FFA OFFICERS Joe Buffington, Bishop (Nevada)
Vernon Clark, Foothill
Amber Cleaver, Delano
Kristi Mattes, Minarets
Natalie Ryan, North
CHILDREN OF AG TEACHERS Annie Andersen, Hanford and Eric Andersen, Retired
Adam Bullard, Independence and Edwin Bullard, Retired
Robert Calvert, Selma and Roz Calvert, Central
Vernon Clark, Foothill and Don Clark, Wasco
John Coon, Redwood and Bob Cummings, Retired
James Corbett, Monache and Max Corbett, Deceased
Erin Hanger, Summit Charter and Greg Hanger, Retired
Robert Hanger, Kern Valley and Greg Hanger, Retired
Nicole Potstada, Sanger and Leanne Potstada, Retired
Matt Riley, Bakersfield College and Roger Riley, Retired
Glen Sailors, Coalinga and Tim Sailors, Retired
Carolee Trimble, Kern ROC and Roger Riley, Retired
Matt Wenstrand, Caruthers and Gerald Wenstrand, Retired
Brad Wyman, Sierra and Edward Wyman, Retired
Bill Kelly
LONGEST TENURED TEACHERS Bill Kelly, Bakersfield College – 51 years
Frank Tebeau, COS – 41 years
Kristi Mattes, Minarets – 40 years
David Caetano, Tulare – 38 years
Charles Parker, Region Supervisor – 37 years
Ralph Mendes, Kern ROC – 36 years
Ken Dias, Clovis – 35 years
Darlene Gilles, Madera – 33 years
Student Affairs Retreat
Grace Commiso, lead for meta-majors and Lesley Bonds, lead for affinity groups.
Bakersfield College’s approximately 30,000 students represent a multitude of individual goals and needs. With a student to counselor ratio of approximately 1000:1, the Guided Pathways structure prompts the development of Completion Coaching Communities, which are the mechanism for ensuring that the individual student needs are more effectively met within the context of meta majors. By assigning a fully-equipped support team to each of 10 meta majors, Bakersfield College is able to address the specific needs of each meta major in a more personalized, more relevant way.
Going a step further, BC has identified eight affinity groups where additional personalized support exist, and has developed completion coaching communities around those groups as well, providing another layer of support and personal resources for students.
Through the development of these structures, Bakersfield College has developed a strategy for applying a very personal, case management approach to helping our 30,000 students stay on the path to success. Thank you to
Completion Coaching Communities will focus their work on supporting students in their progress toward critical milestones in the journey to successful, timely completion:
Completion of 12 to 15 credits in their first semester of college.
Completing both college-level Math and English in the first year.
Completion of 30 credits in the appropriate pathway in the first year.
Completion of 60 credits in the span of two years.
The photo you see below is of four superheroes in our Academic Support area. They are geared up this year to provide intensive tutoring services for English and math in particular to support students in their courses.
Eileen Pierce, Maria Baltazar, Yvonne Armendariz, Maria Wright
I popped in and out of the retreat in between my meeting schedule. So I caught a few of the discussions that inspired me. Here you see BC’s Financial Aid Director who is a bundle of energy and works with an incredible team in our Financial Aid Office.
Jennifer Achan
Jennifer Achan
Jennfier Achan
Did you know that BC currently has over 45,000 active Financial Aid accounts? I did not. Did you know that students have a window between October 1, 2017 and March 2018 to file for financial aid for the following year. The sooner applications come in the better their chances of getting things squared away. So why wait. Plz complete your applications before the end of October this year!
Go team Financial Aid!
National Endowment for the Humanities Grant
We received an announcement this week that BC has been awarded $100,000 from the National Endowment for the Humanities to complete a three year project titled, “Energizing Humanities in California’s San Joaquin Valley.” Complementing the local legacy of energy production, Energizing Humanities in California’s San Joaquin Valley examines the concept of energy broadly from historical and literary perspectives, as well as the intersection of humanities with music/performing arts. Each year, faculty cohorts will engage critical scholarship within the fields of history, literature, and cultural performing arts. A regional conference highlighting faculty pedagogical innovation, student panels, as well as keynote speakers, will conclude the grant project.
Several other projects receiving grants from NEH will help preserve fragile historical and cultural collections and make them more accessible to the broader public, such as grants to safeguard a collection of Native American and Medieval and Renaissance art at the Philbrook Museum of Art in Tulsa, Oklahoma; for the preservation of Civil War artifacts recovered from the USS Monitor warship in Newport News, Virginia; and new initiatives in Arkansas and Georgia to digitize historic local newspapers for inclusion in the Chronicling America database at the Library of Congress.
Thank you to the National Endowment for the Humanities for your support of BC!
Here are the three faculty who will be the Principal Investigators for the grant. Oliver Rosales, History (lead); Andrew Bond, English; Josh Ottum, Music.
Special Thank you to Oliver Rosales, Andrew Bond, and Josh Ottum
BC Team at CTEOS
Craig Hayward, Karen Snow, Stephanie Baltazar, and Corny Rodriguez
The California Community College CTE Employment Outcomes Survey (CTEOS) began as a pilot project with fifteen colleges in 2012. CTE Dean’s, frustrated at the lack of relevant outcomes measures for CTE students, determined to pool resources and to scale up employment outcomes surveys that had been conducted by some individual colleges. The CTE Outcomes Survey has grown to include all 113 California Community Colleges, and several non-credit CTE programs. In the photo, BC’s Team at CTEOS on Aug. 3rd and 4th.
Craig Hayward was a presenter at the event and his talk was titled Accreditation and Calculating Employment in the Field of Study with the CTEOS (CTE Outcomes Survey)
It’s an insightful and thoughtful piece commending Bakersfield for the little things that make this town special to those who live here and the experiences that brought Asha to appreciate Bakersfield too. She said after coming back to Bakersfield, that she “constantly recognized faces in passing cars, when shopping or walking downtown.” and “Servers in coffees shops recognize your face and remember your usual order.”
Besides the friendly and familiar faces, Asha explained that quickly after coming back, she “soon met mentors who actually invested time and effort in young people…. millennials who lacked direction but had the potential to thrive.” and she said Bakersfield is the perfect incubator for young professionals.
Asha Chandy worked tirelessly, side-by-side with the fabulous Nicole Parra, to help Bakersfield College pass Measure J…
Nicole Parra
Asha Chandy, Nicky Damania, Sonya Christian
Of course, how can I forget the campaign dog Bruce.
Thank you Bakersfield for passing Measure J and for being a rock of support for our young people, higher education, and all BC students! Thank you Kern County!! Have I mentioned recently that I am the luckiest and happiest college president ever?
Former Taft College President, David Cothrun
Former Taft College President Dr. David Cothrun wrote a piece in the July edition of the Bakersfield Life Magazine praising the quality of life in Taft, where he’s lived for the last 21 years. I so enjoyed this piece and wanted to share it with the larger community.
Despite being retired from Taft College since 2001, Cothrun has chosen to stay in the area because of the “community that cares and gives back” and non-profit organizations that provide transportation for health care and events while funding scholarships and creating a welcoming atmosphere for students with disabilities.
Cothrun took a moment to highlight Taft College’s important Transition to Independent Living (TIL), a two-year residential program that teaches students with disabilities the skills they need to become independent and able to live alone. The TIL program is one of the only ones of its kind in the United States, and it’s providing amazing opportunities for success that disabled students never had before.
Cothrun has been in the Taft Rotary club for 37 years and the Taft Chamber of Commerce Board for 14 years. He also serves on the Kern County Board of Trade. Read the whole article at Bakersfield.com.
Van Ton-Quinlivan
Van Ton-Quinlivan
The Chronicle of Higher Education published an interviewabout the future of career training and vocational education with Van Ton-Quinlivan, the Vice Chancellor of Workforce and Economic Development for California community colleges.
The video, which corresponded with a Chronicle of Higher Education report titled “The Future of Work: How Colleges Can Prepare Students for the Jobs Ahead”, focuses on the plight of stranded workers, an unemployment statistic that’s become a catch-all term for those who don’t see themselves in our future automated economy. After the recession of 2008, work productivity increased even though unemployment increased due to a confluence of technological advances and developments in artificial intelligence and machine learning. Many people looking to return to the economy found themselves without the skills needed to compete for positions in a post-industrial world.
Ton-Quinlivan discussed the numerous paradigm shifts that will have to happen in education to get distressed workers the skills to return to the economy. Where educational institutions once had the luxury of extensively training students before they enter the work force, they now have to scale their educational services to prepare for workers who need to come back to school to keep up with evolving technologies and business practices.
Ton-Quinlivan wants to “modularize delivery of education” with low-impact, 3-6 month Certificates of Specialization that would allow adults to continue education while contributing to the workforce. She also would also like to see the California community college system forge more direct partnerships with employers through apprenticeships and structuring curricula to meet the demands of the labor market.
“The economy is becoming more and more unforgiving to those without skills,” Ton-Quinlivan said. “With apprenticeships, you’re not divorcing the education from the employer needs.”
One way companies are bridging the skills gap is through on-site “maker-spaces”—augmented learning environments where laborers can work directly with expensive new equipment to develop competency.
In addition to maker-spaces, Van Ton-Quinlivan emphasized the role of community colleges in identifying a student’s skill sets and shepherding them into the best education program to utilize and develop those skills. She highlighted a capstone program a few California community colleges conducted for veterans to transition from security work into positions as systems operators or utility workers based on a pre-employment screening. These kind of creative collaboration between counselors, educators and industry leaders can close the education gap in California and transform people’s lives.
It is wonderful seeing California Community College leadership setting the national trends in education. So proud!
Super hero Anna Meyer
Aaron Kidwell
As I was heading out from a meeting on wednesday to the Student Affairs retreat, I saw Aaron Kidwell and stopped to talk with him. He raved about how Anna Meyer, who is in payroll in the Human Resources department. Thank you Anna for doing what you did to support Aaron and thank you Aaron for sharing. Here is a photo of Aaron that I snapped when he shared his good news.
Talking about Anna Meyer, there is another Anna who is a superhero in HR, Anna Gonzalez, who was at BC and is now at the District Office. I had the opportunity to work with Anna on faculty recruitment and Jennfer Marden and I had an Anna Gonzalez fan club going.
Lori Carlson, Anna Meyer, Anna Gonzalez
Tonya Davis at BC
Talking about Human Resources, KCCD has a new Vice Chancellor of Human Resources, Tonya Davis who comes to us from southern California. Here are two photos of Tonya that I snapped on July 18th when she was at BC for a meeting. She specifically wanted to check out the Veterans hub a small space that supports our student veterans. Through Measure J, our first project will be a wonderful Veterans Resource Center. We ran into fabulous Dennis Spencer on our way back to the office. Here you have Tonya with Armando Trujillo, Advisor to the BC student veterans and Dennis Spenser.
Armando Trujillo, Tonya Davis
Dennis Spencer, Tonya Davis
Summer Bridge Continues
Some photos from this week’s summer bridge
So what about Neo?
Well….he continues to love to spend time in his mud/sand bed. Here he is Sunday, July 30th sometime mid morning not happy when I directed him to move away from his frolicking activities in the mud.
Neo July 30 2017
Neo July 30 2017
Neo July 30 2017
Then there is the happy puppy mud face on August 2, 2017
Neo
And then there is his chew toy.
Neo August 4 2017
Neo Aug 4 2017
Neo Aug 4 2017
He is 45 lbs.
That’s all for now.
Until next time.
With much Renegade Pride and Collegiality.
sonya — the luckiest and happiest college president ever
Good morning Bakersfield! It is Saturday, January 23, 2016…..a good day to be a Renegade.
It’s been a wild week here at BC. Of course, every time we start a new semester and welcome thousands of ready-to-roar Renegades back to campus, it’s a time of excitement, activity and barely contained chaos. We have approximately 7% more Full-Time Equivalent Students this spring compared to spring last year. It is a good time to be at BC!
That led to a series of texts to Manny De Los Santos and Francis Mayer followed by phone calls to the creative team.
Did you spot the Sriracha?
So, the Creative Team made it all happen as fluidly as J.J. Abrams himself. From an idea fleshed out by Shannon Musser, Dylan Wang and Francis Meyer, BC’s videographer extraordinaire Manny de Los Santos, with his newly acquired drone, shot an amazing 3-minute short film to kick off Opening Day, bringing the entire world of Star Wars to the Bakersfield College campus.
Watch the Millennium Falcon take off and circle over 1801 Panorama Drive, the Imperial stormtroopers and R2-D2 strolling around campus, and the roar of Zav Dadabhoy aka Wookiee Chewbacca.
Put all that together — and you’ve got Spring Opening Day 2016. Looking out at the collected BC family in the Simonsen Performing Arts Center theater last week made it one of the best semester kickoffs we could have imagined. I received several emails appreciative of Opening Day. Here is one from Gayle Richardson or should I say Darth Richardson:
What an amazing start of a new semester! This is the start of my 69th semester at BC and I am a proud Renegade as I am certain you must know.
Kudos to those who magnificently presented the best Opening Day I have ever seen! I am hoping the live stream will be saved to a land not so far away in order for faculty to take bits and pieces to energize students. Big Smile!
Many years ago I was named “Darth Richardson” by students in 4 consecutive classes. It is a story, Sonya, that I would love to share with you in person.
As a new Star Wars fan, I can’t tell you how much fun it was to sit in Han Solo’s captain’s chair and fly the ship that made the Kessel Run in less than 12 parsecs with my incredible crew — even if it was all just movie magic shot in our BC studio! But truly, all the work we have accomplished in such a short period of time is magic indeed.
Our Star Wars theme carried over as members of the BC team talked about some the amazing accomplishments we’ve achieved together in recent months. Here are the three videos:
Video 1:
Video 2:
Video 3:
Putting all the fun of droids and Jedis and Death Stars aside, Spring 2016 Opening Day also stands out for another important reason: the soft launch of The Renegade Promise. Mark your calendars, on April 29th, BC led by our SGA President Clayton Fowler will be ready to make the Renegade Promise officially to our community.
SGA Prez Clayton Fowler leading the Renegade Promise Team at Spring 2016 Opening Day
Students come to BC to expand their educational opportunities and turn that new-found knowledge toward a broader, more lucrative employment future. What often goes without saying is that our students and their families want the process to happen YESTERDAY and as President Fowler stated on Opening Day, he does not want to spend 6 years at BC to get a doctorate.
Well, we feel like it’s time to SAY it — we want you to move on too! As much as we love each and every BC student, Bakersfield College is committed to fulfilling the new Renegade Promise — assuring that every BC student attains their educational goals, graduates, or transfers as quickly as possible. All this without compromising the quality of learning that is our hallmark….the development of creativity, critical thinking and problem solving.
As a collective, the BC family is making the Renegade Promise a pledge to position students on a path to reach graduation or transfer requirements within our promised 60-credit window. Can this be done in two years? Of course this could happen if the responsibility is shared by BC and the student. BC by ensuring that the courses are available with the necessary academic support and the student committing to 15 credits per term. Now, if the student instead chooses to take 12 or 9 credits per term (remember, most of BC’s students work), it will mean the extension of the timeline for 60 credits from 2 years to perhaps three. Still a huge improvement. Now, should this “shared responsibility” extend to the community as well. Absolutely! The community has done an incredible job supporting education though providing internships and scholarships to help our students prepare for the workforce and quickly make progress on their educational pathways.
The Renegade Promise is a simple pledge…yet not always as simple to pull off as you may believe. Any number of delays, both personal and scholastic, can push a student off-course. Under the Renegade Promise, we’re all taking an active role in trying to foresee those delays for each student and chart pathways around those obstacles.
Top to bottom, Spring 2016 Opening Day was a tremendous day. Huge thank yous go out to several people, including my fellow presenters — SGA President Clayton Fowler, BC Campus Chair Ed Borgens, CSEA President Tina Johnson, Management Association President Sue Vaughn, Academic Senate President Steve Holmes.
Tine Johnson
Ed Borgens
Sue Vaughn
Steven Holmes
Also major thanks to the ushers, the logistics team and M&O team members who made the day happen so seamlessly! Francis it was such a treat to work with you. You have talent! and thank you to the fabulous red, my Obi-Wan Kenobi, R2D2, and Yoda–Princess Jennifer.
Logistics Team
Ushers
Princess Jennifer
Francis Mayer
To wrap up, I’d like to share my concluding remarks from Spring 2016 Opening Day:
Colleagues, we’re all instrumental in keeping Bakersfield College at the vanguard of local intellectual, cultural and economic vitality. As we continue to be accountable, and as we move the dial on student success, let us not forget that what makes life wonderful, rich and expansive is the little somethings that are not rational. It is the pure lightness that fills our hearts when we see the mountains at the far edges of the valley when the air is clear. Or the vibrations we feel when our drumline students perform in the gym. It is the excited text from Cindy Collier after the Deputy Sector Navigators visited our CTE program and her sense of pride in our faculty. Or what I experienced watching Liz Rozell at a breakfast keynote speaking about her life. It is hearing Nan talk about how we got the colors on a building wrong, or lamenting that the beautiful oleander bushes should not be trimmed down to resemble miniature poodles. Or noticing that my mentee from Shafter high who was stuck to me through the whole fall term is now a promising professional. It is the pride of Chef Sabella and team as they prepare a wonderful meal.
This is the essence of who we are as “humans in community.” This is the essence of BC. We impact each other in all we do. When we create the conditions to make our days rich with little somethings, we create the best environment for ourselves, for our colleagues, and for our students. This is the essence of our work to be accountable; but “little somethings” are the fundamentals of excellence.
I received an email from Matt Garrett on November 15, 2015. He wrote:
In 1945 Grace Bird’s message to the student body began by claiming the tune “You can be Better Than You Are” as the school theme song, and explained:
“Your College–your faculty and your student leaders–bring you opportunities to develop skills and enrich understanding. We ask you to bring your minds and your hearts. ‘In preference lies the root and essence of all excellence.’ Among the multitude of activities opened to you during the year, chose wisely.” –Grace Bird
Matt added that Grace Bird was quoting George Santayana’s essay “Value Irrational” found in his book titled “Little Essays” (1921), which prompted me to read this little gem. All three pages of it.
Here is an excerpt from the final paragraph that for me captures the little somethings that define our lives because they come from a deeper place of being:
Values spring from the immediate and inexplicable reaction of vital impulse, and from the irrational part of our nature. The rational part is by its essence relative; it leads us from data to conclusions, or from parts to wholes; it never furnishes the data with which it works. If any preference or precept were declared to be ultimate and primitive, it would thereby be declared to be irrational …
So colleagues, here’s to Spring 2016. A term of great rationality…. a term of data, and moving the dial, …… all this sprinkled with a great deal of irrationality and the little somethings that differentiate BC from the rest.
The Force is with…..BC!
We are….BC!
Check out the 12-minute photo roll video that Shannon put together as everyone was gathering in the indoor theater for Opening Day
The Workforce & Economic Mobility Blog blog shares approaches to workforce and economic development, with a goal of supporting economic mobility for our community while staying committed to the health of our people and the health of our environment.
In the Bhambi & Christian blog, Dr. Brijesh Bhambi join together joined together with the goal of facilitating healing and conversation in our community.