1 00:00:12,050 --> 00:00:19,140 Brian Burns: Good morning everyone. So we'll get started in a bit. We just wanted to give time for folks to just gather in, 2 00:00:19,710 --> 00:00:28,980 get comfortable. I'd like you to imagine as we are, you know, all gathering in, that instead of sitting on our computers, we're showing up at our beautiful PAC, 3 00:00:29,340 --> 00:00:44,640 we're having our lovely breakfast, we are reconnecting with our colleagues and our friends. So I'd like to, you know, give us a few moments. So just to let you know, everyone's camera is on by default, and you do have option to turn it on and off if you wish, and 4 00:00:45,870 --> 00:00:55,530 everyone is muted. However, the chat for everyone is open, so we can certainly say hello to each other and look through that participant list and 5 00:00:56,340 --> 00:01:09,030 welcome. So like I said, we'll officially started in a few minutes. I just wanted to give maybe 10 minutes or so, for us to just get, you know, just to say hi to everyone and sit down and get comfortable, 6 00:01:09,900 --> 00:01:18,210 get your coffee, whatever breakfast items you might wish, and we'll get started in probably about 10 minutes or so. 7 00:08:09,570 --> 00:08:26,790 Right, I noticed some, some folks noticing the the deafening silence here. So, yes, we are giving just a few more minutes for folks to sign in and making sure that that everyone is, is comfortable and we're going to, to get started very shortly. 8 00:08:28,230 --> 00:08:34,110 And, you know what, yeah I think now's a good time, actually. So let me turn on my camera. 9 00:08:39,133 --> 00:08:47,799 All right, good morning, everyone. So my name is Brian Burns I'm the Professional Development Coordinator here at Moorpark College and I teach English as well. 10 00:08:48,833 --> 00:08:54,466 I really want to thank you for joining us this morning, and I really want to thank you for participating and 11 00:08:54,933 --> 00:09:00,033 this, this whole week of professional development, and I really want to thank you for your contributions to the campus. 12 00:09:00,533 --> 00:09:06,333 You know, Professional Development week as a tradition that's very important. It sets the stage of all this stuff coming up for the rest of the term. 13 00:09:06,733 --> 00:09:16,099 And today the convocation is the is the culmination of all of that. So, thank you for coming. So there are, there's some information I'd like to go over before we get 14 00:09:16,533 --> 00:09:27,933 officially started and then we'll jump right into our programming, without further ado, although I do have some I do right now, because I have some some notes to let you know. So 15 00:09:28,700 --> 00:09:43,600 the session if anybody has been going to our campus updates, you might have heard some of this before, but just as a reminder, the session is closed captioned. So you should have that option down at the bottom of your screen to hit that closed caption button if you prefer, and 16 00:09:44,866 --> 00:09:53,599 the session is recorded, you probably heard that, you probably heard that robotic voice reminding you that this session is being recorded and it will be posted later on. 17 00:09:54,766 --> 00:09:55,099 Excuse me. 18 00:09:56,233 --> 00:10:05,166 Everyone is muted. However, we do have the open chat, and I see a number of us taking advantage of that. Of course, we're going to ask you as as we're having that chat open, 19 00:10:05,833 --> 00:10:10,466 unfortunately, unlike the, the more straightforward Q&A that we do during the 20 00:10:10,900 --> 00:10:21,566 campus updates the open chat is, you know, we'll definitely keep an eye on it, but if you have specific questions and ideas that you wanted some input on, that's probably something to hang on to and 21 00:10:22,300 --> 00:10:32,700 you know, contact whoever you think is probably the right person to contact. I don't know if we're going to have a lot of time for for actual Q&A for this particular session. 22 00:10:33,900 --> 00:10:46,100 We'll be keeping a look at the chat and we're certainly welcoming and happy to have the opportunity to, to have some interaction, to see the audience getting involved, and all of that important work. 23 00:10:47,200 --> 00:10:49,000 So...excuse me. 24 00:10:51,200 --> 00:10:58,633 I do want to, and so in just a moment. I'm going to introduce the the first segment of our of our morning. I do want to 25 00:10:59,133 --> 00:11:07,233 mention though, and to thank very much everyone involved in Professional Development week and Convocation day it is truly a collaborative effort, 26 00:11:07,666 --> 00:11:13,066 you know, I have the privilege of being the coordinator of all these different things, but there's so many people involved, 27 00:11:13,333 --> 00:11:18,099 and so I'd like to thank some people, but I know I'm not going to get everyone, so I really do apologize for not getting everyone, 28 00:11:18,400 --> 00:11:33,400 but off the top of my head, I do want to thank President Sokenu and the rest of our exec team, I do want to thank our, our deans, especially Dean Howard Davis, who is the the PD Tri-Chair and Dean Matt Calfin, 29 00:11:34,533 --> 00:11:37,833 who has been instrumental in putting all of this together. 30 00:11:40,300 --> 00:11:45,400 The other Tri-Chairs of the PD Committee: Beth Gillis-Smith and Gabby Chacon. 31 00:11:45,766 --> 00:11:54,599 And I would really like to thank all the facilitators who were running sessions and sometimes multiple sessions during the week. Thank you for all of the, all of your work as well. 32 00:11:55,133 --> 00:12:03,399 I really want to thank Michael Ashton and John Loprieno, Dina, you know, I'm sorry if I get your name, your last name wrong, Dina Pielaet, 33 00:12:05,533 --> 00:12:07,099 close enough? Okay, thank you. 34 00:12:09,033 --> 00:12:17,433 And I also really want to thank the students, this is our first opportunity to have students involved directly for, for Convocation day I saw Kristen 35 00:12:18,166 --> 00:12:27,799 giving a shout out to them in the chat, but I just wanted to mention that as well that we have some student representation as well, and we'll see what we'll hear from some students during the programming. So thank you everyone for being here. 36 00:12:28,266 --> 00:12:31,799 Let's take a look at the agenda, real quickly. You have it on your screen, as I've been speaking, but we'll run through it. 37 00:12:32,066 --> 00:12:40,066 So we're going to have our welcome from our president, we're going to have some remarks from our academic senate president, our classified senate president, and the ASMC president. 38 00:12:40,433 --> 00:12:50,099 We'll introduce our new faculty, classified staff, and campus leadership, and then we'll have some remarks from some of our Board of Trustees and our chancellor. 39 00:12:51,833 --> 00:13:00,466 Then a break. And during that break just, you know, the first part of the break, we'll just be time just to kind of stretch and move around and things like that, and then in the second half of that break, we'll have 40 00:13:01,066 --> 00:13:12,699 an MC, a student success video that was produced by some of our students in our in some of the staff at our Teaching and Learning Center, and I think that's a really powerful and meaningful video. So I really hope that you can 41 00:13:13,233 --> 00:13:23,299 find some time to watch that. And after that, we'll reconvene and we'll get into our first segment of our college service awards for the 5,10, and 15 years. 42 00:13:23,833 --> 00:13:29,866 And then we'll start in with some discussion with our racial and social justice work groups. So we'll do the first two groups there. 43 00:13:30,300 --> 00:13:34,900 Then we'll take another break and again the idea is to get up and move around, rest your eyes, that sort of thing, 44 00:13:35,233 --> 00:13:44,333 for about five minutes, and then we'll reconvene and we'll do some exercise will do some dance work with our dance instructor, Beth, Beth Megill will help us out on that one. 45 00:13:45,633 --> 00:13:54,666 Oh, and Michael is reminding me that Convocation is also up on YouTube and he's put in the chat here this YouTube link if for whatever reason you prefer to be on YouTube, but rather than 46 00:13:56,366 --> 00:14:04,766 rather than in the Zoom call, or if anybody is on Zoom or sorry, if anybody is watching on YouTube right now, thank you also for for joining us. 47 00:14:06,066 --> 00:14:18,466 Okay, and to finish off the agenda here after our, our dance break we're going to get back into our racial and social justice work group presentations with, with the second two themes, themes three and four. 48 00:14:19,500 --> 00:14:20,300 And then we'll, 49 00:14:21,533 --> 00:14:26,966 you know, really, culminate and on a high note by going over our awards for 50 00:14:27,500 --> 00:14:33,500 For 20 plus years of service on the campus, And I think that's a really high note and something to look forward to. 51 00:14:33,766 --> 00:14:44,466 And then, of course, you're certainly welcome to continue afterwards for Academic Sen- Academic Senate general meeting that everyone is welcome to. So thank you all for coming and 52 00:14:45,933 --> 00:14:50,733 we'll move right into the next piece of our agenda and welcome to Convocation. 53 00:14:53,500 --> 00:15:03,500 On screen text: "People will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel."- Maya Angelou 54 00:15:03,500 --> 00:15:06,500 [Julius Sokenu]: I sit here. 55 00:15:07,900 --> 00:15:09,400 alone on campus. 56 00:15:10,766 --> 00:15:14,399 I can't help but think about what Moorpark College means to me. 57 00:15:15,966 --> 00:15:18,366 Smiling faces and welcome buttons. 58 00:15:19,500 --> 00:15:25,933 Bunnies running in and out of a warren of bushes behind and around the Administration building. 59 00:15:28,000 --> 00:15:35,800 Moorpark is clusters of students in the Campus Center dining room talking about politics or a new video game. 60 00:15:37,300 --> 00:15:45,066 That line of students, staff and faculty snaking through raider walk waiting to order lunch from Peters truck. 61 00:15:52,400 --> 00:15:54,333 Moorpark College is Blues Tuesday. 62 00:15:56,100 --> 00:16:04,966 College is the siren song of music students rehearsing in that pocket of shade between the Music building and HSS. 63 00:16:09,433 --> 00:16:14,466 It is the football team holding Monday afternoon rallies in the Academic Center. 64 00:16:16,333 --> 00:16:20,566 It's department meetings, yard cones, In n Out trucks for new student welcome. 65 00:16:29,433 --> 00:16:35,633 The upper campus is a stream of light grazing the evening before majestic presence. 66 00:16:47,866 --> 00:16:49,699 Moorpark College is clever and irreverent. 67 00:16:51,600 --> 00:16:56,633 Who else has a zoo named EATM, and a child development center called the CDC? 68 00:17:01,066 --> 00:17:10,666 Excellence. Pride. Forensics. Women's basketball. Robotics team. The nursing pinning ceremony. 69 00:17:22,666 --> 00:17:29,799 April brings our multicultural day with bagpipes and kids from Campus Canyon fresh with promise. 70 00:17:31,533 --> 00:17:37,133 Food trucks promising us Thailand, Italy, China and good old American hotdogs. 71 00:17:39,866 --> 00:17:48,066 I think of the collectible t-shirts and mugs as our community comes together to celebrate cultural differences. 72 00:18:02,400 --> 00:18:04,933 Moorpark College is a state of mind. 73 00:18:06,266 --> 00:18:09,666 The aspiration fueled by the opportunity to make life better. 74 00:18:11,066 --> 00:18:12,699 Moorpark College is FM & O. 75 00:18:13,933 --> 00:18:22,899 Moorpark College is Nursing students volunteering thousands of hours in the community to make a difference. 76 00:18:25,433 --> 00:18:32,099 Moorpark College Review that stellar voice of young students as well as seasoned faculty and staff. 77 00:18:36,333 --> 00:18:40,399 Each semester, we look forward to meeting up with friends, in the Learning Center. 78 00:18:41,933 --> 00:18:46,133 We attend that interminable committee meeting favorite colleagues. 79 00:18:47,400 --> 00:18:53,100 We look forward to our hugs and smiles, a hand on the shoulder as we speak to each other, 80 00:18:54,466 --> 00:18:55,866 face to face. 81 00:19:01,200 --> 00:19:05,666 Graduation, our ultimate celebration of students success. 82 00:19:06,766 --> 00:19:07,699 Job well done. 83 00:19:08,933 --> 00:19:16,799 Chairs and people filling the quad to catch a glimpse of their loved one receiving their diploma on stage. 84 00:19:34,266 --> 00:19:38,766 The Moorpark College family works so hard... 85 00:19:40,433 --> 00:19:42,699 and now even harder to keep our students thriving. 86 00:19:44,833 --> 00:19:45,899 Bless their hearts. 87 00:21:05,333 --> 00:21:10,633 Even though the reality of the moment keeps us apart. We're still all together. 88 00:21:12,433 --> 00:21:13,733 We are Moorpark College. 89 00:21:14,900 --> 00:21:17,733 My friends and colleagues, welcome home. 90 00:21:24,333 --> 00:21:25,166 Julius: Hi everyone. 91 00:21:27,700 --> 00:21:31,366 Thank you, thank you, thank you for joining us this morning. 92 00:21:33,166 --> 00:21:34,932 Welcome to Moorpark College. 93 00:21:37,066 --> 00:21:50,332 I want to welcome each and every one of you, the 100 plus students who are joining us on Zoom. I want to welcome our faculty, our classified professionals, our administrators, welcome. 94 00:21:51,366 --> 00:22:09,999 Welcome to the Board of Trustees members who are joining us, welcome to our Moorpark College Foundation members, welcome to our partners in the community who are here with us today, our stakeholders. Moorpark College is your college. We are Moorpark College. 95 00:22:11,266 --> 00:22:17,566 Thank you for joining us this morning, you and each one of us here have been through a lot this year. 96 00:22:19,366 --> 00:22:27,499 Dancing in the storm, right? Great theme for a professional development week and great theme for a year. 97 00:22:28,766 --> 00:22:35,066 Dancing in the storm, finding and developing innovative solutions in challenging times. 98 00:22:36,666 --> 00:22:48,932 What do we need to dance in the storm? How do we find innovative solutions, while everything seems to be crashing around us: a pandemic, a global pandemic at that, 99 00:22:50,000 --> 00:22:52,633 racial injustice and social unrest, 100 00:22:54,066 --> 00:22:55,666 and economic uncertainty? 101 00:22:56,700 --> 00:23:04,833 How do we continue to do the work of the Guided Pathways? How do we continue to do the work of promoting student success? 102 00:23:06,600 --> 00:23:11,133 How do we do this in the face of the challenges we face as a society? 103 00:23:14,833 --> 00:23:29,199 My friends, my colleagues, my community, my goal in the next 20 minutes or so, is to motivate you, it is to affirm you, it's to challenge you, and I think probably most importantly it is to empower you. 104 00:23:31,200 --> 00:23:32,500 So, next slide please. 105 00:23:34,600 --> 00:23:37,600 What do we need to dance in the storm? 106 00:23:38,433 --> 00:23:54,033 I want to tell you and I pose it to you that we already have the bulk of what we need to survive this pandemic, to go beyond the limits and the differences that separate us, to overcome that hill of racial injustice, and certainly, certainly 107 00:23:54,500 --> 00:24:11,900 to address the economic uncertainty that is happening right now and the economic cliff that is to come. My goal is not to bum you out, but my goal is to affirm you, as I said, but we will need resilience that ability to recover quickly from hardship. Next slide please. 108 00:24:13,400 --> 00:24:31,366 We know that the spring was a challenging time and it's just come up to a range of challenges, the fires, the shootings, a lot of good has happened, but also a lot has challenged our spirit and we arise, we have been resilient. 109 00:24:32,766 --> 00:24:33,632 Next slide please. 110 00:24:35,966 --> 00:24:50,666 The California Community College in early in mid spring, when we're all grappling to transition our 1500 sections to online instruction, but we're all grappling to send our students to our online 111 00:24:51,633 --> 00:25:04,099 A&R, to our online counseling sessions, to our online health center, the California Community College decided to conduct a survey across the system, of our students and our employees. 112 00:25:05,766 --> 00:25:15,166 I'm going to share with you what our students said about the experience of this past spring and then I'm also going to share with you what our faculty said about this past spring. 113 00:25:15,800 --> 00:25:37,333 900 and I'm going to specifically call out the data from Moorpark College. 937 of our students participated in this impacts study. This impact study to evaluate the impact of Covid 19 on our college community. 250 of us, faculty, staff and administrators participated in the survey. 114 00:25:38,900 --> 00:25:52,833 About 50% of the sta- of the faculty participated, 40% of the classified professionals, about 4% of the, of the administrators, and about 1.6% of the respondents were student staff. 115 00:25:54,433 --> 00:25:55,433 Next slide please. 116 00:25:58,033 --> 00:26:14,733 So, our students are talking to us and they're telling us what they experienced during the first few months of the Covid 19 pandemic with us, when we transitioned online. 920 participants in the survey from Moorpark College responded to this particular question. 117 00:26:16,166 --> 00:26:21,032 What is 6.3% of them told us that they could not concentrate on school. 118 00:26:22,100 --> 00:26:29,966 31.7% of people told us that they have to take care of their family members, while going to school and balancing work in life and education. 119 00:26:32,633 --> 00:26:42,566 8% of them tell us that they do not have internet, insufficient internet to do the work that we're asking of them, and 9.8% of them told us that they don't have time to school. Next slide please. 120 00:26:45,166 --> 00:26:48,166 But they persisted, right? They were resilient. 121 00:26:49,600 --> 00:27:00,966 They tell us that they had technological issues and technological challenges, and many of you know this. Those of you in the audience that are students, you know this, our faculty know this, our administration, we know this. 122 00:27:02,833 --> 00:27:15,866 43, 49.3% of our students told us that really one of the challenges they had was us, was our instructors. The discomfort of their own unfamiliarity with the technology that was required, such as Canvas. 123 00:27:16,700 --> 00:27:33,733 33.6% of them told us that there was inadequate digital alternatives of face-to-face instruction, the tools to be able to engage in the intimate way from which were known was not available during that initial transition to online instruction. 124 00:27:36,433 --> 00:27:44,366 Their lack of specialized, of specialized software, the unclear use of technology, all of these things made learning difficult. 125 00:27:46,100 --> 00:27:46,966 Next slide please. 126 00:27:52,066 --> 00:27:58,966 So we asked the question, which one of these issues have been a challenge to making, to making the transition to online smooth? 127 00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:05,366 57.3% of our students said the home environment, environment makes it hard to communicate. 128 00:28:06,766 --> 00:28:16,132 56.5% said personal preference for face-to-face learning made it a challenge for them to concentrate and participate in that transition to online. 129 00:28:18,166 --> 00:28:26,532 42.8% of them told us that course activities that have been transferred well online made it a challenge for them to participate in a robust way and learn. 130 00:28:27,866 --> 00:28:28,799 Next slide please. 131 00:28:32,166 --> 00:28:39,566 So our students are talking to us, they're telling us about their challenges, but they're also celebrating us. 132 00:28:40,333 --> 00:28:54,266 They are telling us that we care. They're telling us that we show concern. They are telling us that in the way in which we transitioned them, 86.3% felt that the instructors not only showed care and concern, but then as we transitioned, 133 00:28:55,766 --> 00:29:06,432 but another 81.9% will tell us that their instructors showed care in the way they make decisions and about implementing changes or this college did 134 00:29:08,100 --> 00:29:19,933 and they will communicate it with them. What are we going to need to overcome this pandemic? What are we going to need to overcome the struggles of racial injustice? What are we going to need to overcome the economic cliff? 135 00:29:21,233 --> 00:29:21,833 Care. 136 00:29:23,300 --> 00:29:24,033 Concern. 137 00:29:25,400 --> 00:29:31,400 Support, and, most importantly, talk to one another, communicate. Next slide please. 138 00:29:34,033 --> 00:29:41,999 So our students, we asked them, what are they struggling with? What, what are they what what social services have they applied for during this time period? 139 00:29:43,866 --> 00:29:54,599 You can see that 25% of our students went on unemployment, 5% went on food stamps, 10.1% of our students sought aid, emergency aid from the college. 140 00:29:55,600 --> 00:30:03,900 We gave over $7,000 in the first few few weeks of the pandemic and that transition to students who lost jobs and whose lives were overturned by this, 141 00:30:04,933 --> 00:30:15,766 and then government emergency aid from outside. What I want you to look at is the folks who did not know, how to, did not know about these resources or did not know how to apply. 142 00:30:17,300 --> 00:30:25,500 This is important because the context in which we function, in which we serve our students, and in which our students live and in which we live, 143 00:30:26,733 --> 00:30:29,099 is represented here. Next slide please. 144 00:30:31,566 --> 00:30:37,599 We asked our students if they have received emergency aid from our college and 45.2% of them said no. 145 00:30:38,433 --> 00:30:55,233 42.5% of them said yes. 42.5% of the 73 response responses to this question said yes, and 12.3% said I don't know yet, which to me suggests that they are probably considering it. Next slide please. 146 00:30:58,466 --> 00:31:04,366 We asked questions about how their employment situation has changed, 738 people responded to that. 147 00:31:05,466 --> 00:31:19,532 And they tell us they been laid off, they tell us that nothing has changed. They tell us that their hours have been reduced, some quit their jobs and then, some of them are not working because they weren't working prior to the pandemic. Next slide please. 148 00:31:23,233 --> 00:31:35,199 And then we asked them, how has their income been impacted by the Covid 19 pandemic? 9.7% said it actually has increased in the face of a pandemic. 149 00:31:36,600 --> 00:31:43,033 49.5% tell us that the income has decreased. 150 00:31:44,366 --> 00:31:56,232 And 40.8% says it stayed the same. We're dealing with students who are struggling, struggling to make ends meet, and we already knew this, but this pandemic 151 00:31:57,166 --> 00:32:13,966 highlights the gaps, highlights the challenging structures that are not supporting our students. We need to be aware of this and we are resilient and we can help address this issue. Next slide please. 152 00:32:15,566 --> 00:32:21,966 Another, another set of information about our students, this is an important one in terms of food security and food insecurity. 153 00:32:23,233 --> 00:32:41,133 Thank goodness for the Ruben Castro charities partnership and our pantry. Shout out to Ruth, shout out to Tim, shout out to all of you who work with that great resource to our students, to our community, and to our staff, and all of those folks utilize our pantry. 154 00:32:43,466 --> 00:32:44,599 Look at this, data. 155 00:32:46,100 --> 00:33:04,300 The our students are telling us, 26.3% of them that they had to either skip a meal or cut down the side of the size of their meals, more than five times during the course of the last 30 days. This study was conducted between May 27th and the end of June. 156 00:33:05,433 --> 00:33:06,333 Next slide please. 157 00:33:08,233 --> 00:33:16,866 So our students talk to us and we're listening, well you our faculty and staff also talk to us and we're listening. Next slide please. 158 00:33:21,700 --> 00:33:38,566 We asked our faculty, how much experience they've had teaching online, and this is what they tell us. They frequenly taught online 20.9%, 23.9% have taught at least one course online, and 55.2% had no experience teaching online. 159 00:33:39,733 --> 00:33:51,799 I want to say to those folks, you are our heroes, making that leap, making that jump to online instruction in a week 160 00:33:52,966 --> 00:33:58,532 takes resilience, it takes innovation, and you're doing it. Next slide please. 161 00:34:00,700 --> 00:34:13,866 We asked questions from our faculty member about the technology issues they're having, and 64.6% of our faculty said students discomfort or unfamiliarity with required technology or sor- or software. 162 00:34:16,733 --> 00:34:28,366 Next slide please. You see the data. So I'm going to sort of skip, I'm going to skip through the next two so you could just see them quickly and then we'll go to the, to the next section, 163 00:34:33,666 --> 00:34:42,632 next our faculty telling us how do you see our students experiencing this disruption and how they were directed. Next slide please. 164 00:34:45,400 --> 00:34:52,333 And then the concerns that they have, about about about the transitions or distance education. 165 00:34:54,666 --> 00:34:55,466 Next slide please. 166 00:34:57,933 --> 00:35:10,733 We asked folks it were to teach a distance education course in the fall, what they would do, and as you can see 40.8% of them said combination of synchronous and asynchronous instruction. 167 00:35:12,333 --> 00:35:29,399 We will start our fall semester with almost all of our classes online. We've scheduled 90% of our classes online. This is our new normal. This is our reality. We can do this. Next slide please. 168 00:35:33,166 --> 00:35:41,399 The questions we ask all our faculty and staff, you know, what do you need from the, from the leadership of the college district and they told us, 169 00:35:42,133 --> 00:35:52,866 regular updates and plans for for Covid 19 responses, remote work, changes to pay time sick, sick time off, they've told us. Next slide please. 170 00:35:56,600 --> 00:36:07,000 Then we ask questions of our faculty about their own food insecurity, and yes 6.6% of our faculty and staff said they've skipped meals or had to reduce the portions of their meal. 171 00:36:08,633 --> 00:36:09,399 Next slide please. 172 00:36:12,233 --> 00:36:14,533 You see the same question asked again here. 173 00:36:17,833 --> 00:36:18,599 Let's move on. 174 00:36:19,766 --> 00:36:29,732 Let's go to the next slide. So, so then this is, this is fascinating because we know the students are struggling, but we also know that our faculty, and staff, and administrators under a lot of stress. 175 00:36:30,200 --> 00:36:45,266 This is the context in which we start off our semester and I would bet, I bet you that this is the context in which we will continue a good chunk of this academic year. Folks are nervous, folks are worried, folks are restless and they are afraid. 176 00:36:47,866 --> 00:36:48,766 Next slide please. 177 00:36:54,000 --> 00:36:55,666 There's negative impacts. 178 00:36:58,200 --> 00:36:59,100 Next slide please. 179 00:37:02,100 --> 00:37:23,666 So how are we going to dance in the storm? What do we need to address the challenges that face us? We need innovation, and we've already been doing that, right? The important thing for us as a college to dance in the storm is to care for one another an ethos of care. Next slide please. 180 00:37:25,600 --> 00:37:37,300 So what are we doing for our students? We've converted our campus to a virtual experience to us to keep us safe. We've provided laptops, we've distributed Cares Act funding. 181 00:37:38,633 --> 00:37:41,499 We've established a safe campus reopening plan. 182 00:37:42,666 --> 00:37:49,866 Implemented guide, Guided Pathways in the context of a Covid 19 environment. 183 00:37:50,666 --> 00:37:58,599 We're measuring classroom correct climate and creating a plan to create inclusive classrooms and building an anti-racism core curriculum. 184 00:37:59,533 --> 00:38:09,833 What are we doing? I'm going, I'm going to give a shout out to our Moorpark College Foundation, our Moorpark College Foundation and I see Tim Weaver on the screen. Tim is a member of our foundation 185 00:38:10,066 --> 00:38:24,966 And I want to give a shout out to them because they invest in this year in making sure that they raise funds to support our students who are hungry, our students who need basic support that is what our foundation is taking on. 186 00:38:26,700 --> 00:38:29,700 What are we doing for our faculty and staff? Next slide please. 187 00:38:31,800 --> 00:38:42,800 Remote access, flexibility where possible, frequent updates, keeping our campus personnel at a minimum for safety, the EAP project 188 00:38:43,700 --> 00:38:48,500 program that is available to faculty, we will be making that available to staff at Moorpark College 189 00:38:48,733 --> 00:39:01,399 at the expense of the college this academic year, because we believe in you, and we want to make sure that everybody gets the mental health support and care they need. Thank you Sharon. Thank you Health Center folks. 190 00:39:02,800 --> 00:39:03,633 Next slide. 191 00:39:05,866 --> 00:39:16,766 Flexibility's the other piece we need to be able to meet the challenges of this pandemic and the challenges of racial inequity and the challenges of economic inequity. 192 00:39:18,033 --> 00:39:34,799 I challenge you to realize that in this moment, we may be br- bent, but we are not broken, because we are adaptable, Moorpark College we are adaptable, students, staff, faculty, administrators, all of us we are adaptable. 193 00:39:35,866 --> 00:39:54,432 We need to engage one another more because in helping one another feel like we belong, and helping one another feel connected, we as a college, we as a community can be more productive, we can be more engaging, and we can invest in one another's self worth. 194 00:39:56,100 --> 00:40:00,066 I challenge you to be practitioners of radical inclusion. 195 00:40:01,300 --> 00:40:02,200 Next slide please. 196 00:40:04,900 --> 00:40:07,166 Empathy. Kindness. 197 00:40:08,233 --> 00:40:23,099 Moorpark College puts students first. One of the ways in which we put students first is through empaty-empathy. We model behaviors of care, we model behaviors we want to see in our students and we want to see in ourselves. 198 00:40:25,033 --> 00:40:37,066 We reject call our culture and we embrace calling culture. We acknowledge where people's behaviors are inappropriate, or insensitive, or racist, because they do happen, 199 00:40:37,533 --> 00:40:55,866 but we do not call those people out to call out their behavior and we help them do better. That is our job. That is our responsibility to one another. Help one another do better. We're not going to shame you, but we are going to call you out and help you do better. Kindness. Kindness. Empathy. 200 00:40:56,966 --> 00:41:12,566 Timing matters in online instruction or research shows us that folks who feel disconnected in any learning environment, any learning environment disengage, much more so that they do much more so that they do 201 00:41:13,666 --> 00:41:29,966 in an online environment because, the the barriers that are already present in our culture are exacerbated in the online environment. That does not mean to say, we cannot rectify that, we have the power to rectify that. We are MC, we're Moorpark College we've done this, we can do this. 202 00:41:31,100 --> 00:41:39,133 Placing oneself in another's position is the solution to racial inequity, placing oneself in in one another's 203 00:41:40,566 --> 00:41:44,932 position is the solution to unrest in inequity. 204 00:41:46,666 --> 00:41:55,499 No soft racisms. No, no, "wink wink nudge, nudge," and ignoring comments that are inappropriate or insensitive. 205 00:41:56,266 --> 00:42:14,099 What we ask you to do what we know we all do, and all can do as colleagues, is to be allies. Let's enter into one another's protests, that is the way in which will make Moorpark College anti-racist and anti-hate that is my challenge to you today, friends. Next slide please. 206 00:42:17,166 --> 00:42:20,199 Hope, we have to hope for better. 207 00:42:21,466 --> 00:42:23,032 Optimism, optimism 208 00:42:23,766 --> 00:42:37,966 and confidence in the future is all that we have in moments of distress, in the storm, in the eye of the storm, we have to move forward in the completion agenda, we have to move forward in the equity agenda, we have to move forward in the student success agenda. 209 00:42:38,766 --> 00:42:44,032 Stay focused on students. We've stay focused on our colleagues and they've helped that they lead, 210 00:42:44,966 --> 00:42:54,532 and as we're doing this work, hope is being able to envision the college we wish to have for the students who are yet to come, the ones who are not here. 211 00:42:55,133 --> 00:43:01,266 That to me is the way in which we keep the spirit and that is the way in which we make Moorpark, 212 00:43:01,900 --> 00:43:13,900 not only continue to be the most, the best college in California, the best college that we know in America, but that we also live up to the ideals of this college where we say students first. 213 00:43:15,366 --> 00:43:33,832 Budget is also a statement of our values. Next slide please. So you I've been talking so far about, you know, the challenge that we will feel in terms of the budget crisis that is about to reveal itself. This is our budget. This is our tentative budget. 214 00:43:35,066 --> 00:43:43,166 We know that because the state is in an economic dilemma, just like the rest of the country and the rest of the world that we have deferrals from, from the 215 00:43:43,700 --> 00:43:58,633 from the, from the, from the governor, but those deferrals are dependent upon some federal legislation that will help the state meet its obligations. We also know that, that has not been resolved. 216 00:44:00,066 --> 00:44:22,799 So, folks, we're giving you right now, information, if we needed to cut by 2% that would be $1.26 million from our $63 million budget. If we had to cut by 5%, that'd be $3.17 million. If we had to cut it by 10%, that would be $6.34 million. 217 00:44:24,066 --> 00:44:31,732 Our goal is to keep any cuts out of the classroom, out of our services, and out of, out of our business operations. 218 00:44:32,166 --> 00:44:42,666 That means that we need to be effective, that will, that will mean, that will probably have a hiring freeze, which means we're doing more with less, but we can do it. We know we can do it. 219 00:44:45,066 --> 00:44:59,466 My friends, these are challenging times, but what we prioritize particularly in times of challenge, what we prioritize particularly when there is risk, tells us the kind of people we are. 220 00:45:00,933 --> 00:45:01,899 Next slide please. 221 00:45:04,266 --> 00:45:05,266 Tenacity. 222 00:45:06,766 --> 00:45:10,966 Tenacity, staying in the moment, no matter how uncomfortable it is. 223 00:45:12,433 --> 00:45:15,799 We ask that we seek assistance from one another. 224 00:45:16,933 --> 00:45:18,133 Ask for help. 225 00:45:19,266 --> 00:45:37,266 But I also ask, who will you take a risk on this semester? Who will you take a risk on in the spring? As a faculty member, as an administrator, as a student, who are you going to take a risk on? Who are you going to stay with, irrespective of what the winds of time and context bring? 226 00:45:38,900 --> 00:45:39,800 Next slide please. 227 00:45:41,766 --> 00:45:42,499 So, 228 00:45:43,666 --> 00:45:54,866 we as a college, have great goals and ambitions. We have a we have a phenomenal education master plan, a strategic plan. We as a college know where we want to go. 229 00:45:56,166 --> 00:46:03,266 We are purposeful, we focus on the on the student learning experience and Guided Pathways, and we're rolling that out this semester. 230 00:46:04,033 --> 00:46:11,733 We're focused on the work that we're doing in terms of connecting, connecting students to the college environment on terms of our work with access in the institution, 231 00:46:12,300 --> 00:46:20,266 and we are clearly focused on making sure as an, as a college that we address that structural racism that exists in our own campus. 232 00:46:22,000 --> 00:46:30,266 So we will have four re-the-,social justice work groups, who are exploring and you'll be hearing from later on today. 233 00:46:31,600 --> 00:46:35,266 We want to be the change, we'd like to see the world. 234 00:46:36,500 --> 00:46:43,833 So how do we keep our eyes on the prize and avoid distraction? Well, we are intentional and purposeful. Next slide please. 235 00:46:48,033 --> 00:46:53,733 How are we intentional in the classroom? How intentional on the field? How intentional in the hallways? 236 00:46:54,266 --> 00:47:04,032 Campus climate mat- matters. Campus culture matters. How are we going to do that when we are offline and 90% of us will probably not get 237 00:47:04,033 --> 00:47:09,199 to engage one another in person, this semester? That is a challenge to us. 238 00:47:09,200 --> 00:47:18,333 Who are you going to risk for this semester? Who are you going to stand by this semester? How are we going to do it for our students so 239 00:47:18,333 --> 00:47:22,899 that they maintain their success, maintain their track? 240 00:47:22,900 --> 00:47:23,733 Next slide please. 241 00:47:26,100 --> 00:47:31,533 I want to say thank you, and this is, this is what I call my list of champions. 242 00:47:32,166 --> 00:47:39,066 And if you're not on the list, that does not mean you're not a champion, but these are folks that I want to acknowledge for the work that they've done so far this semester. 243 00:47:39,933 --> 00:47:56,533 The last semester in our transition and so far in the summer, you will see the names of many people that you know on campus, and I want to thank you because you help us be the best community college in California, particularly in the eye of the storm of the Covid 19 pandemic. 244 00:47:58,000 --> 00:48:03,533 Who will you stand by this semester? Look at these, folks, who are they standing by? What are they doing? 245 00:48:04,866 --> 00:48:14,266 We acknowledge them. I want to thank, I want to thank my colleagues, my partners in crime in this work. The Academic Senate President, the Classified Senate President. 246 00:48:15,266 --> 00:48:26,132 Thank you, Erik. Thank you, Linda. I want to thank and welcome our new Associated Students President David Katz. This is going to be a year where we need one another. 247 00:48:26,666 --> 00:48:37,166 I need these people, we need these people to support to support us in our work. I want to thank the deans. I want to thank the directors. I want to thank our admins. 248 00:48:38,233 --> 00:48:49,766 And I want to use this moment to really call out my executive team and thank them. The success of this college, our success, is because of these people. 249 00:48:51,033 --> 00:48:57,333 Like all of you, I am indebted to Amanuel, I'm indebted to Mary, and I'm indebted to Jennifer. 250 00:48:58,033 --> 00:49:14,433 They get up, they do their work, they don't complain, and more importantly, they start with a student first ethic, they start with a sense of compassion. Jennifer joined us February, middle of February, and within two weeks we we're online and transitioning. 251 00:49:15,700 --> 00:49:19,033 I wanted to hear from Jennifer. Here's a few words from Jennifer. 252 00:49:21,100 --> 00:49:28,733 Jennifer Clark: Hi everybody, I'm Jennifer Clark, I'm the VP of Business Services and I started at Moorpark College in February. 253 00:49:29,966 --> 00:49:34,399 Three weeks later. Omg, the pandemic hit. 254 00:49:35,633 --> 00:49:41,866 Th-this is not at all what I signed up for, this is not at all what any of us were expecting. 255 00:49:42,400 --> 00:49:52,533 You know, I was expecting to be working on, you know, on ground at a college with students, with people. That's why I'm in education. 256 00:49:53,100 --> 00:50:07,700 I love, I love what we do, and I love making those connections with people, and the pandemic hit in March, you know, we went so fast with students on campus every day, to 257 00:50:08,666 --> 00:50:33,032 an entirely online operation in a matter of days, we made it happen. And now we're coming back. Everybody is in place and ready for the students to come back on Monday morning. It has truly taken a village to make it happen. So we're here, we're open and we are Moorpark College. [Moorpark College logo and onli 258 00:50:34,566 --> 00:50:35,266 Julius: Thank you. 259 00:50:36,366 --> 00:50:48,699 So I ask you, what are you doing, why are you doing this work? Knowing your why and matters in the face of a storm, and what do you hope for in this new academic year? 260 00:50:50,100 --> 00:50:51,000 Next slide please. 261 00:50:56,033 --> 00:51:02,866 This quote from President Barack Obama helps me through this challenging time. 262 00:51:02,866 --> 00:51:11,399 On screen text: "But we always knew that hope is not blind optimism. It's not ignoring the enormity of the tasks ahead or the roadblocks that stand in our path. It's not sitting on the sidelines or shirking from a fight. Hope is that thing inside us that insists, despite all the evidence to the contrary, that something better awaits us if we have the courage to reach for it and to work for it and to fight for it." - Barack Obama 263 00:51:11,400 --> 00:51:19,066 What do we have the courage to reach for? What do we have the courage to work for? What do we have the courage to fight for? 264 00:51:20,300 --> 00:51:27,966 The moments when we're trying when we need to be able to know what, we have the courage to reach for, to work for, and to fight for. 265 00:51:29,000 --> 00:51:29,800 Next slide please. 266 00:51:32,300 --> 00:51:41,700 So I'm going to leave you with a, with a little clip I saw this past week, it says the three most important school supplies for the school year, and this is from Teacher Humor. 267 00:51:43,133 --> 00:51:47,333 Patience, flexibility, and grace. 268 00:51:48,733 --> 00:52:07,299 Thank you so much for being my partner. Thank you so much for being our community. I am going to turn you over now to my partners in crime the Academic Senate President, the Classified Senate President and to the Associated Students President. So we start off with Erik. 269 00:52:10,633 --> 00:52:17,199 Erik Reese: I assure you, there's no crime going on, first of all, but good morning to all the fellow floating heads out there. 270 00:52:18,400 --> 00:52:30,100 Welcome students, community members, classified, professionals, administrators, Chancellor, trustees, and faculty. It is an honor and a privilege to address you, on behalf of the faculty of the Academic Senate as the Academic Senate President. 271 00:52:31,200 --> 00:52:36,133 This is an exciting change to our usual format, embodying the spirit of inclusion at Moorpark College. 272 00:52:37,333 --> 00:52:48,133 Moorpark has a long tradition of doing great work, winning many accolades and awards, and so much of that great work continues, but two events are dominating the current landscape. 273 00:52:50,233 --> 00:52:53,833 And recent social injustices that have sparked national awareness and discussion. 274 00:52:56,266 --> 00:53:05,432 Covid 19 has affected every aspect of our lives. Right now, we sit in our homes participating in a virtual convocation for the first time and more parts over 50 year history. 275 00:53:06,333 --> 00:53:17,433 Last spring, the entire college, including classes, services, administrative offices, and more removed online virtually overnight through a Herculean effort of students, 276 00:53:17,700 --> 00:53:26,000 classified professionals, administrators, and faculty yes, I include us students, we moved online, you showed up to class, so you could keep going on, you're aca- 277 00:53:26,733 --> 00:53:40,199 making progress. Action was immediate, focused, and imperfect, but by working together, students continue to make progress in their academic and professional goals, despite the global pandemic. 278 00:53:42,266 --> 00:53:50,299 The move online was certainly challenging and forced us to rethink and re envision the way we approach teaching, counseling, and all the other business of the college. 279 00:53:51,000 --> 00:54:00,600 Many of the techniques and skills that we develop and continue to develop as we continue to learn, will help us better support students long after Covid is a distant memory. 280 00:54:02,900 --> 00:54:17,433 On a personal note, being safer at home has given me an appreciation for neighborhood walks and plenty of time for self reflection, of which the summer had plenty of. One day, something was a little bit different at a house that I often pass. Slide please, and this is what I saw. 281 00:54:18,566 --> 00:54:30,866 I pass this mailbox, many times Snoopy, cute little Snoopy on a on his dog house sleeping away. But one day, there was a mask and then they added a sign later which pretty much sums up our current experience. 282 00:54:32,233 --> 00:54:33,433 At first I laughed, 283 00:54:34,533 --> 00:54:39,299 but as I pass, day after day, my mind wander to the many meanings and symbolism of masks. 284 00:54:41,533 --> 00:54:44,033 But that would be a whole three hour presentation in and of itself. 285 00:54:45,133 --> 00:54:51,233 The sign, though "We wear because we care," is very consistent with Moorpark's mandatory mask policy on campus. 286 00:54:52,566 --> 00:55:04,132 But in order for mass to be effective, everybody must participate. We, the community and society, had to rethink and re envision the way we operate in almost every aspect of our lives. 287 00:55:05,166 --> 00:55:05,866 Slide please. 288 00:55:11,233 --> 00:55:19,633 The continued, senseless murder of black bodies has drawn national attention and sparked discussions around race and social justice. 289 00:55:20,200 --> 00:55:27,300 This is not the first time, but somehow this time feels different. We're now talking about race and racism. 290 00:55:27,866 --> 00:55:34,832 Racism as a system, a collection of policies and practices that disadvantages specific groups of people while providing advantages to others. 291 00:55:35,533 --> 00:55:47,833 I know I've never had such in depth and detailed uncomfortable conversations with my own family, with my close friends, with my colleagues, and other community members. It just feels different. 292 00:55:49,300 --> 00:56:03,400 We have systems, including schools and colleges that produce results for which they were designed. It is time to rethink and re envision in action and in silence are not options. Silence simply preserves the status quo. 293 00:56:05,533 --> 00:56:15,466 Martin Luther King Jr. had a lot to say on silence, but one of one thing was, "In the end, we will remember not the words of our enemies, but the silence of our friends." 294 00:56:18,266 --> 00:56:27,166 We must collaborate and be intentional in this work. At Moorpark, as you know, and you'll have from later motivated students, classified professionals, administrators, and faculty 295 00:56:27,633 --> 00:56:44,366 have had a number of town halls, formed work groups, and decided on initial action steps to start the rethinking and re envisioning process. The work is just beginning and I invite you, all of you into this effort do not remain silent. 296 00:56:49,033 --> 00:56:54,499 With our students first philosophy, we often talk about helping students in need, providing a safety net, if you will. 297 00:56:55,533 --> 00:57:01,299 It can only catch all the students if the net is intact. Namely, everybody has to be involved in this endeavor. 298 00:57:01,600 --> 00:57:12,500 If there are holes, then some students will slip through those holes and in the process is they slip through, they increase the size of the whole. So then, eventually, there's no safety net at all and the entire system has failed. 299 00:57:14,133 --> 00:57:19,233 Again to form a more perfect net, we must all work together and intentionally. 300 00:57:20,666 --> 00:57:27,966 "What can I do?" you ask, well, they'll be different of plenty of opportunity through the social justice groups on campus for all sorts of people. 301 00:57:29,466 --> 00:57:35,999 For faculty, I challenge all of us, including myself, to become teaching women and men of color advocates. 302 00:57:36,733 --> 00:57:53,033 Let us empower women and men of color using effective techniques with proven results based on data and research. Rethink and re envision how we teach women and men of color. As with masks and the safety net in order to be effective, we must all participate. 303 00:57:57,833 --> 00:58:00,033 I have one more item to touch on before I conclude. 304 00:58:01,066 --> 00:58:05,166 Many of you will surely have noticed the lack of a distinguished faculty chair award presentation. 305 00:58:07,300 --> 00:58:12,600 It was incredibly chaotic at the end of last semester and the beginning of summer the distinguished faculty chair committee, 306 00:58:13,033 --> 00:58:23,066 consisting largely of previous recipients, reconvened I think for the first time in its history in the early summer, and considered a very wide array of possibilities and options. 307 00:58:23,833 --> 00:58:33,699 In the end, because of all the uncertainty no one knew what this semester was going to look like, or if there was going to be a semester that a senior faculty chair committee recommended a postponement of the award for a year. 308 00:58:36,000 --> 00:58:52,200 We are in a new era, now, a different time from when the award was initially conceived. This tradition will most certainly continue. Perhaps it is time to rethink and re envision how we celebrate, and recognize, and honor those doing great work on our campus. 309 00:58:55,333 --> 00:59:04,033 The new academic year is upon us one unlike any other, we have encountered, but still full of opportunity, I hope. That's what I certainly believe, at least. 310 00:59:05,533 --> 00:59:13,133 It's time to tap into our values of creativity and innovation to rethink and re envision so many things. It's time to work together to repair a safety net, 311 00:59:13,500 --> 00:59:24,366 or perhaps in our own Moorpark way, construct su-some net-like structure not yet conceived, and bring us one step closer to everybody having a fantastic experience at Moorpark. 312 00:59:25,633 --> 00:59:35,399 Our goal is not equity, helping those in need in an unjust system, that is one step on the way to liberation were all the barriers have finally been removed. 313 00:59:38,300 --> 00:59:48,166 Thank you to all the classified staff, administrators, and faculty that work so hard on behalf of our students. I wish everyone a very safe, productive, and liberating 314 00:59:49,233 --> 00:59:57,766 academic year. I look forward to collaborating with all of you as we make a difference in the lives of our students as they made progress towards their big dreams. Thank you. 315 01:00:10,566 --> 01:00:13,566 [child talking in background] Linda Resendiz: Good morning, Moorpark College. It is 316 01:00:14,966 --> 01:00:25,399 wonderful to see so many of you today, even though it is through this platform. I want to welcome you to a new academic year 317 01:00:26,433 --> 01:00:35,999 and hoping for a better, a great one. These last five months have brought so much change to all of us, 318 01:00:37,000 --> 01:00:59,066 professionally and in our lives. Who would have thought that we would have finished our year, working from home, faculty teaching online, students having to learn online, but you know what we did it, you all did it, and the year ended up ending successful. 319 01:01:01,033 --> 01:01:12,833 I want to congratulate all of my fellow classified professionals, whether you were an essential worker on campus, keeping our, continuing to keep our campus beautiful, 320 01:01:13,833 --> 01:01:20,033 keeping our buildings clean and safe, having our technology running in order for us to do our job. 321 01:01:20,833 --> 01:01:33,799 For all of our of our my colleagues and faculty working remotely from home to continue the job that we do on a daily basis, thank you, thank you so much for all your hard work. 322 01:01:34,533 --> 01:01:50,233 We've had to make so many readjustments, and have to now consider this a new norm, but you know through all these challenges and changes, this pandemic has brought us, we've all managed to pull it through and we did it. 323 01:01:51,866 --> 01:01:53,966 As we embark in a new year, 324 01:01:55,600 --> 01:01:56,800 I want to, 325 01:01:58,933 --> 01:02:12,399 I want my message to, to you, especially my fellow classified professionals that our new Classified Senate board and myself are very excited to provide 326 01:02:14,466 --> 01:02:17,232 a venue for all of us to come together, 327 01:02:19,166 --> 01:02:32,666 to promote campus involvement, personal development, and collegiality, all amongst ourselves with one objective in mind, our students, because that is what we are here for and that is 328 01:02:33,833 --> 01:02:35,699 the main idea of our campus. 329 01:02:37,633 --> 01:02:38,333 As we look, 330 01:02:39,566 --> 01:02:48,932 as we look forward to the future, I would like to share a few goals that we have in order to accomplish what we have set to do. 331 01:02:51,233 --> 01:02:53,899 As classified professionals, we will continue... 332 01:02:55,200 --> 01:02:56,366 to advocate... 333 01:02:58,366 --> 01:03:13,066 on behalf of all of you in our district and across the state. We recognize that our work is very important and it is the backbone of our institution. 334 01:03:14,300 --> 01:03:26,033 I invite you to become involved in committees to voice, voice your opinions and be part of the decision making process of our campus. 335 01:03:27,266 --> 01:03:32,199 It is so important for us to be involved and voice the needs... 336 01:03:34,100 --> 01:03:43,100 of all of our co workers and students. We will continue to find ways to fundraise in order to provide... 337 01:03:45,500 --> 01:04:00,466 and assist in any way we can to the needs of the students as well as moving forward with the efforts in social justice and racial equity. 338 01:04:01,066 --> 01:04:22,532 All this for our students and for ourselves. It is an honor to be the new Classified Senate President and together with our new board, we will work hard to advocate on behalf of all of our classified professionals in order to make this a very successful year, 339 01:04:24,166 --> 01:04:25,932 and I wish everybody... 340 01:04:27,333 --> 01:04:30,799 good Health, and please, please... please, be safe. Thank you. 341 01:04:33,133 --> 01:04:40,066 And I now introduce to you, David Katz our academic, student associate president. 342 01:04:42,966 --> 01:04:55,799 David Katz: Hello everyone. My name is David Katz, and I'm proud to be here through a web, a webcam and in front of you today. I'm honored to have been voted to represent our student body as the Associated Students President for this academic here. Next slide. 343 01:04:57,300 --> 01:05:07,200 So what is the ASMC's roll on campus, and what even is ASMC? For those of you who are new to the campus, or unfamiliar with it, or have been around for a while, 344 01:05:07,633 --> 01:05:14,766 the Associated Students at Moorpark College board of directors is the elected student government for the campus, and seen by our administration 345 01:05:15,133 --> 01:05:28,899 as the official representative, representative body of over 13,000 MC students. I serve alongside 10 other excellent student leaders to advocate for student issues. Those of you who serve on the campus' shared governance committees 346 01:05:31,400 --> 01:05:43,100 might get to know some of the ASMC board members who will be attending alongside you. And with this being an election year, ASMC is driven to make sure our students get registered to vote to make their voices heard. Next slide. 347 01:05:45,433 --> 01:05:48,566 To core of ASMC's roll on campus is to foster student life. 348 01:05:49,100 --> 01:05:58,500 Planning is already underway for virtual and possibly socially distanced activities to get our students connecting in the time where it is difficult to due to the isolation taking place. 349 01:05:59,166 --> 01:06:07,266 In terms of student engagement, we are also overseeing the facilitation of student clubs. Last year we had over 50 unique organizations. 350 01:06:07,933 --> 01:06:14,666 Faculty and staff advisors for clubs, serve a very important role in making the time student leaders spend with organizations meaningful. 351 01:06:15,366 --> 01:06:24,799 So thank you to those who already serve in this capacity, and I encourage those who wish to get involved to contact ASMC Advisor Kristen Robinson for more information. Next slide. 352 01:06:27,233 --> 01:06:38,033 ASMC is also responsible for providing significant financial support to not only clubs, also academic and student service departments that develop extra curricular development opportunities for students. 353 01:06:38,666 --> 01:06:44,366 Faculty and staff will receive an email in the coming weeks with information about how to apply for funds. Next slide. 354 01:06:47,400 --> 01:06:52,866 There will be many, many times throughout the year that we may turn to you, our faculty and staff for help. 355 01:06:53,500 --> 01:07:00,133 We may turn to you to service keynote speakers during workshops. We might ask your clubs to partner with us on virtual events. 356 01:07:00,666 --> 01:07:05,599 And we will, we will certainly seek to promote student government elections in your classrooms, this spring. 357 01:07:06,433 --> 01:07:18,099 Thank you in advance, for helping us succeed in our leadership roles, these, are definitely uncertain and taxing times for students, but this year's ASMC board is definitely up for the challenge. 358 01:07:18,733 --> 01:07:26,466 We look forward to working alongside you, all of you, to make this year a meaningful and memorable one for our students. Thank you. 359 01:07:34,633 --> 01:07:42,866 Mary Rees: Good morning. Moorpark College is the people. Our strength is the incredible people who work and attend Moorpark College. 360 01:07:43,433 --> 01:07:54,999 As we celebrate today, one of the highlights is getting to see all of you, it's absolutely wonderful, and getting to acknowledge some from our group or maybe we should say pods these days. 361 01:07:55,633 --> 01:08:05,433 I want to start by introducing four faculty who started with us in the spring. What a ride they've had, they aren't new they're veterans of Covid spring. 362 01:08:06,133 --> 01:08:16,899 They jumped in and are helping, help move online and support our students. John Everlove, Allied Health Coordinator EMT program and instructor, 363 01:08:17,600 --> 01:08:32,166 Rebecca Gresh, Sociology, Jackie Kinsey, in the Library, Katina Walia in Nursing. We're going to have the ability to bring them to you in one of the Moorpark College updates. 364 01:08:34,000 --> 01:08:50,333 In addition, I would like to present to you today, are another fabulous video. And this one is going to be starring the new additions for fall 2020 to our Moorpark campus. Our new faculty, staff, and administrators. 365 01:08:56,100 --> 01:09:06,200 Priscilla Mora: Hi everyone, my name is Priscilla Mora, and I'm the Dean with the Arts Communication Studies and Media and I'm also the Title IX Coordinator. 366 01:09:07,100 --> 01:09:24,633 I started on July 1st, which makes this my 6th week with the college, and the things I've noticed most so far are the dedication, professionalism, and kindness of everyone that I've met, and I look forward to meeting more of you soon. 367 01:09:25,966 --> 01:09:32,899 Robert Cabral: Hi, my name is Robert Cabral. So happy to be part of Moorpark College. I'm the Interim Dean of Student learning for Physical Sciences and Career Education. 368 01:09:34,033 --> 01:09:42,433 Milagros Tabije-Ebuen: Hello everyone, my name is Dr. Milagros Ebuen, but you can call me Mila for short. I'm a new full time faculty for Nursing 369 01:09:43,033 --> 01:09:55,633 and I can relate to most of our students because I'm I am a first generation college graduate, and I came from picking up vegetables and fruits on the farm. 370 01:09:56,133 --> 01:10:10,333 This is why I value education so much and my philosophy, teaching philosophy is no one is left behind. Thank you, and I can't wait to work with you all, and stay safe. 371 01:10:12,000 --> 01:10:18,600 Karen Lovati: Hello, my name is Karen Lovati. I'm a new full time faculty for the Nursing department, and I like to mountain bike and do yoga. 372 01:10:20,333 --> 01:10:37,133 Jamie Whittington-Studer: Hello everyone, my name is Jamie Whittington-Studer and I'm a new full time faculty member of the Communication Studies department. I was previously part time for about a year, and a fun fact about me is that I'm actually an alum of Moorpark College. I look forward to meeting everybody. 373 01:10:39,733 --> 01:10:51,333 Esmeralda Camarena: Hi everybody, my name is Esmeralda Camarena, and I'm the new full time EOPS and Cal Works Counselor. I started at Moorpark as a part timer in 2016, 374 01:10:51,866 --> 01:11:06,332 and as a full timer, I'm really looking forward to continuing doing the work that I love, and I look forward to meeting all of you at some point, and collaborating with the larger Moorpark College campus community. 375 01:11:08,433 --> 01:11:15,566 Kellie Porto-Garcia: Hi everyone, my name is Dr. Kelly Porto Garcia and I am a now full time counselor at Moorpark College. 376 01:11:15,933 --> 01:11:26,199 I have been able to serve all of the amazing students at Moorpark the last three years as an adjunct counselor, and I am so excited to be able to get a chance to do this full time. 377 01:11:26,933 --> 01:11:37,633 I look forward to seeing what all of our graduating students are up to next, as well as serving our new and continuing students in the coming years. Congratulations, class of 2020. 378 01:11:38,866 --> 01:11:46,499 Hovik Gasparyan: Hi everybody, my name is Hovik Gasparyan and new faculty member here at Moorpark College in the Biology department. 379 01:11:47,966 --> 01:12:00,599 I used to work at Loyola Marymount University prior to starting here, so I was a visiting assistant professor there for about three years. And prior to that I worked as a postdoctoral researcher at USC. 380 01:12:01,433 --> 01:12:11,966 So my areas of expertise are molecular biology, cell biology, genetics and so forth. And I'll be teaching a couple different classes in the fall. So I'll be doing some general 381 01:12:12,600 --> 01:12:21,466 intro biology lab and lectures, as well as a biotechnology lab that's a joint taught by myself and Subhash. 382 01:12:22,133 --> 01:12:25,966 And I'm really excited to get started and meet everybody in the department and throughout the college. 383 01:12:26,600 --> 01:12:35,900 Roza Gabrielyan: Hello, my name is Roza Gabrielyan, it's nice to meet you all. I'll be joining the English department, this fall, at Moorpark College, and I look forward to teaching our Moorpark students. 384 01:12:39,700 --> 01:12:50,500 Tammy Terzian: Hi, my name is Tammy Terzian, and I am the new Math professor. I've been working for Moorpark for four and a half years now and I'm really looking forward to what this year has in store. 385 01:12:51,900 --> 01:12:58,200 Kenny Plummer: Hi, my name is Kenny Plummer. I'm the new full time faculty member for the Kinesiology and health department here at Moorpark College. 386 01:12:58,733 --> 01:13:02,033 I'm also the head women's basketball coach have been so for the last five seasons. 387 01:13:02,533 --> 01:13:11,466 Something you should know, is that me being here, hired here at Moorpark College has come full circle, as I was also a student athlete an alum back in the early 2000s, 388 01:13:11,833 --> 01:13:16,633 and being part of one of the most successful men's basketball team. We are MC! 389 01:13:16,966 --> 01:13:28,566 Hugo Galvez: Hi, my name is Hugo Galvez, I'm 26, and I am a groundsman, and I'm looking forward to making the campus look better. 390 01:13:31,466 --> 01:13:43,266 Mara Rodriguez: Happy new school year. I'm Mara Rodriguez, the new Zoo Development Coordinator, although I'm not new to Moorpark College, I am thrilled to serve in this new role. 391 01:13:43,633 --> 01:13:54,533 I look forward to big things here at the zoo and for the college. Cheers to this year. [a bird makes noise in the background] It's going to be innovative, creative, and full of good times. 392 01:13:56,966 --> 01:13:58,866 Osbaldo Barajas Galindo: My name's Osbaldo Barajas. I'm 393 01:14:00,133 --> 01:14:06,033 working in Grounds, and hired full time on August...9... 394 01:14:07,633 --> 01:14:08,333 2019. 395 01:14:09,733 --> 01:14:10,233 And 396 01:14:11,366 --> 01:14:15,032 I play soccer. [laughs] That's it. 397 01:14:15,033 --> 01:14:22,933 Rosleen Aurora: My name is Rosleen Aurora, I recently joined Financial Aid office team at Moorpark College as a financial aid specialist. 398 01:14:23,533 --> 01:14:36,399 I have a little over 20 years experience working in the financial aid field and I'm so excited to be part of Moorpark College team and I look forward to assisting students through the education journey. Thank you. 399 01:14:38,333 --> 01:14:47,233 Andrew LaFave: Hey there everybody, my name is Drew LaFave. I'm a new research analyst, working with labor market statistics, and I'm super excited to be working at Moorpark. 400 01:14:48,300 --> 01:14:57,800 I guess something that might be interesting about me, maybe some trivia, I guess, is that I was born in Japan. So there you go. Super excited to be here. Thanks. 401 01:14:59,533 --> 01:15:12,333 Anne Wheatley: Hey everybody, my name is Anne Wheatley and I am a student success coach with the Second Year Experience program and Project CHESS and I'm really looking forward to collaborating with all of you, throughout the coming school year. 402 01:15:14,933 --> 01:15:19,299 Shandor Batoczki: Hello everybody, my name is Shandor Batockzi, I'm a new library assistant for Moorpark College, 403 01:15:19,733 --> 01:15:34,433 I have been working for the campus as a student specialist during my undergraduate years, I had worked in the library for two years, and then went over and worked as the Online Student Support for two years, before becoming a classified employee as a library assistant. 404 01:15:35,633 --> 01:15:42,766 Some of my favorite things to do, or one of my favorite things to do, is really talk, read, and watch a favorite show of mine, called Jojo's Bizarre Adventure, 405 01:15:43,433 --> 01:15:54,033 if anyone has free time during quarantine it, I highly recommend to check out the show because it's exactly what the title says, and if you're interested in just very weird 406 01:15:54,633 --> 01:16:02,433 things and shows, it will definitely catch your interest. I'm looking forward to working everybody on campus and hope to talk to you all soon. 407 01:16:02,433 --> 01:16:07,833 Philip Koscak: Hi, everyone. My name is Philip Koscak, I'm a new admin assistant for First Year Experience and the Project Trust Grant. 408 01:16:08,633 --> 01:16:12,799 but also, I'm a Moorpark alum and an artist. Hope to meet most of you soon. 409 01:16:12,933 --> 01:16:23,166 On screen text: Lisette Alivandivafa. Working at Moorpark College since August 2019. Has worked at VCCCD since January 20, 2017. Administrative Assistant- Student Services- HSS 217. I work to learn- Learning is the most important driver for me. Social/Political Activist for 50 years. 410 01:16:23,166 --> 01:16:42,250 On screen text: Also welcoming. Adriana Gonzalez Support Specialist 2. Rebecca Hernandez Office Assistant 1. Cynthia Cuevas Assistant Disabled Students. Maria Thayer Specialist International Students. Vanessa Roberts Financial Aid Specialist. Robert Mascarenas Physical Education Athletic Equipment. Emmanuel Guerrero Tutorial Specialist 2. Dean Tran Academic Data Specialist. Oscar Zamora Custodian. Stephanie Caranica Support Specialist 2. 411 01:16:42,300 --> 01:16:57,999 On screen text: And also... Rebecca Henriquez ILT 2-Nursing. Rebecca Hernandez Office Assistant 1. Ian Reves Carpenter. Erin Dilley Library Assistant. Michael Ashton Instructional Tech/Designer. AnnMarie McCarthy Senior Administrative Assistant. Gary Mui Instructional Tech 1-EATM. 412 01:16:58,133 --> 01:17:03,133 On screen text: "That's all folks!" Dina Pielaet Marketing Communications & Web Coordinator. 413 01:17:04,833 --> 01:17:20,199 Julius: We have wonderful people joining us... wonderful people joining us. Thank you to our excellent new faculty, our staff, and administrators we have presently, going to switch the agenda around a little bit. 414 01:17:21,033 --> 01:17:26,066 We have Dr. Gillespie and VCCCD Board Chair 415 01:17:26,533 --> 01:17:47,733 Bernardo Perez here to welcome you. We are lucky to have support from our district in the, in the vision, in the integrity, and in the commitment to students, that is present in our chancellor and in our board Chair. Please welcome Chair Perez and Dr. Greg Gillespie. 416 01:17:54,400 --> 01:18:07,733 Chancellor Greg Gillespie: Thank you, President Sokenu. It's a pleasure to be here with all of you today, and before I get into welcoming comments, I would like to turn it over to Chair Perez for any comments he'd like to share... 417 01:18:16,433 --> 01:18:31,699 Okay, well, I'll go ahead and continue, and it was really great to get a chance to see all of the new employees at Moorpark College this year. I know you're going to love working there, being there, and supporting the great students at Moorpark College. If I can go ahead and get the presentation 418 01:18:36,266 --> 01:18:36,766 slide. Slides please. 419 01:18:49,100 --> 01:18:51,433 Yes, if we could go to the next slide please. 420 01:18:52,833 --> 01:18:54,099 There we go. Thank you. 421 01:18:55,333 --> 01:19:04,899 The last several years have been quite a time, lots of ups and a number of downs, and through it all our college communities have persevered. 422 01:19:05,800 --> 01:19:16,033 This past year started out, like most. In some ways, better than most full classes, new programs, outreach to students across the county, 423 01:19:16,366 --> 01:19:28,032 collaboration with employers and community representatives, and what appeared to be a stable budget with hopes of more resources at the State of California budget revenues increased, 424 01:19:29,266 --> 01:19:39,799 but as with many years in the past, we as a community have faced unexpected challenges that have made lasting impressions on us. Next, please. 425 01:19:41,500 --> 01:19:51,533 There have been fires that close down schools and college campuses, destroyed homes and cost lives and livelihoods. Next, please. 426 01:19:53,533 --> 01:20:06,033 The pandemic did that too, and added a level of isolation and confusion never experienced by us before. We are proud of the efforts taken by the colleges to service Covid 427 01:20:06,733 --> 01:20:17,099 19 testing locations, this year, and for the many other ways we have supported our communities, currently, and over the years. Next, please. 428 01:20:20,700 --> 01:20:32,466 Violence in our communities and around the country, shocks and saddens us but we persevere, we cannot ignore the events in our communities, country, and world. 429 01:20:32,933 --> 01:20:41,866 But as we respond to them, we keep our focus on what we can do to help our students as a beacon of learning for our communities. 430 01:20:42,400 --> 01:20:49,866 It's important to recognize the role that education has to encourage the difficult conversations that need to occur. 431 01:20:50,533 --> 01:21:07,466 We must take concerted actions and develop plans to address social injustice, racism, and institutional barriers to student success and equity. This is not just a VCCCD priority, but a national imperative, as well. 432 01:21:08,800 --> 01:21:18,033 Next, please. We face a recession that can lead to a depression. An economic recovery will take time. 433 01:21:18,833 --> 01:21:38,299 Our national economic and personal financial landscapes are different now than they were even just four months ago, we have to adapt to these realities and make sure our mission continues, we must persevere and creatively support our students and community during these hardships. 434 01:21:39,400 --> 01:21:57,400 The challenges faced by our students this fall, have never been greater. We will be here for them, providing needed financial, academic, health, counseling, and food assistance, along with referrals to housing and other social services support. 435 01:21:58,466 --> 01:22:18,166 How we teach and how students learn changed dramatically in the course of one month, last March. Remote and online education will likely continue for many months. How we support students and guide them requires new efforts and new processes and we will continue to do so. 436 01:22:19,333 --> 01:22:31,933 Because we persevered, we did amazingly well at this sudden change. While there are still challenges we have shown ingenuity and will continuously improve our efforts going forward. 437 01:22:32,533 --> 01:22:40,699 Thanks to all the classified professionals, faculty, and administrators for adapting to new ways to engage and do our jobs. 438 01:22:42,000 --> 01:22:43,433 Next slide please. 439 01:22:44,833 --> 01:23:02,533 We are in a confusing environment as a great volumes of information flow at us without pause and is ever evolving. Information and misinformation abound. Decisions must be made and votes cast when the answers are not often completely clear. 440 01:23:03,600 --> 01:23:17,700 We as educators are called upon to assess and process more information than ever before. To think more critically than we have ever needed to in the past, and most importantly, to help our students to do so. 441 01:23:19,033 --> 01:23:28,599 Our society is at a historical crossroads. It is increasingly urgent that we, we reassess what we say and what we do, 442 01:23:29,066 --> 01:23:38,499 and ensure that either we align with the values we hold dear, or we commit to change that we will make it so. We need to step up, 443 01:23:39,266 --> 01:23:56,699 to integrate culturally relevant curriculum across disciplines in a way that actively addresses the social justice and economic imperatives of our time, and develop our college system so that it reflects the diversity of the students and communities we serve. 444 01:23:59,566 --> 01:24:09,166 We are called upon to re envision what our future could and should look like in this ever changing landscape and work tirelessly to make it a reality. 445 01:24:10,033 --> 01:24:27,066 An increase an online instruction will likely persist and other developments may emerge that we will discover as we go forward on this journey. New baselines are being set we are engaged in lifelong learning, along with our students, and that is a good thing. 446 01:24:29,433 --> 01:24:39,633 Next. To our credit, we work with each other, other even through some very hard discussions and painful adaptations to continue to serve our students. 447 01:24:40,300 --> 01:24:45,033 To our students credit, despite so many challenges financial, logistical, 448 01:24:45,633 --> 01:24:55,166 and with the emotional toll of isolation and uncertainty, the vast majority did not give up on education, their dreams or our colleges. 449 01:24:55,600 --> 01:25:06,833 We could not be prouder of the accomplishes, accomplishments made during this very peculiar year. Please give yourselves and our students a virtual hand for these accomplishments. 450 01:25:09,766 --> 01:25:18,832 Next, please. Oh, here. Yep, good. Our programs, provided the county with students who developed skills in a wide range of disciplines. 451 01:25:19,866 --> 01:25:30,366 Just a few examples are Technology and Manufacturing, Nursing, EMT Dental Hygiene, and other healthcare areas, Art, Sciences, Engineering, 452 01:25:30,933 --> 01:25:47,699 EATM, Agriculture, Business, firefighting, public safety, and on and on. You should really all be proud of the broad, diverse range of skills and programs. We provide our students as they progress towards transferring and moving to careers. 453 01:25:49,566 --> 01:26:00,999 Next, please. Because we all persevered, we served over 30,000 students during this last school year. Of those, just over 4,000 earned certificates, 454 01:26:01,866 --> 01:26:13,866 7,000 degrees, and these are both higher values in certificates and degrees then were earned the previous year. That's quite an accomplishment, given the pandemic. 455 01:26:14,766 --> 01:26:26,799 At the same time, we had nearly 7500 spring enrollments that ended as early withdrawals, much of this was a result of the pandemic's impact 456 01:26:27,666 --> 01:26:37,366 on health and finances for students in their families as well as challenges some students faced with having to rapidly change to remote learning platforms. 457 01:26:37,900 --> 01:26:49,200 It will be our ongoing challenge as we begin this year to take steps to mitigate attrition in an environment that is pretty precarious and uncertain for many of our students. 458 01:26:52,600 --> 01:26:54,633 Now we must look forward, 459 01:26:55,866 --> 01:27:08,132 and I think sunflowers represent looking forward well, because they'll turn to look at the sun until they become too heavy to turn anymore. So even though we don't have a lot of sunflowers in California, 460 01:27:08,533 --> 01:27:18,633 I think it's a good analogy to looking forward. Whatever happens, education and training are key to a better future. 461 01:27:19,133 --> 01:27:30,699 It is our duty and our honor to be part of this new area, era and these new efforts. Everyone in the VCCCD system contributes to carrying out this fast responsibility 462 01:27:31,133 --> 01:27:40,299 and we do best as we persevere together. There's still a lot of uncertainty and everyone is trying their best to have contingency plans in place. 463 01:27:40,866 --> 01:27:51,166 We have to ride light in the saddle, as the saying goes, but we have to ride with determination, creativity, flexibility, and commitment. 464 01:27:51,966 --> 01:27:57,866 In working with the State of California Public Health directives and the Ventura County Public Health Department, 465 01:27:58,666 --> 01:28:04,366 we know that most instruction and student services will have to be offered remotely this fall. 466 01:28:05,133 --> 01:28:13,999 Well, we would like to all get back to normal, bring students back to campus, work in our classrooms and offices, and see our colleagues face-to-face, 467 01:28:14,433 --> 01:28:31,299 we realized that the health and safety of students, staff, and faculty is a paramount importance. There are a few classes that have been approved for limited on site instruction, because there is no other way to provide the hands on experience needed to attain skills, 468 01:28:33,300 --> 01:28:37,133 learning outcomes, and specialized accreditation requirements. 469 01:28:38,166 --> 01:28:47,166 There will come a time probably when a vaccine is widely available or when low community infection rates can be verified, that things will change. 470 01:28:47,933 --> 01:29:01,133 We have plans for that transition and we will eventually get there. Classes begin on Monday, I am in all of the commitment and creativity. You have all shown in these trying times. 471 01:29:01,733 --> 01:29:13,199 The VCCCD Board of Trustees and I look forward to working with you this year, making strides to address challenges and celebrate successes that improve the vitality of our community 472 01:29:13,766 --> 01:29:27,599 and the lives of our students. As we enter yet another period of virtual communication, I wish to relaunch my past invitations for conversation with staff and faculty that I used to do through campus visits. 473 01:29:28,100 --> 01:29:35,233 I greatly miss those conversations. Please look for updates about virtual coffee breaks in the coming weeks. 474 01:29:36,133 --> 01:29:49,933 Here's to an innovative year a safe, healthy, and productive year. Welcome to fall semester 2020. So thanks everyone. Enjoy the rest of the day and have a great start to the semester next week. 475 01:29:51,000 --> 01:29:58,266 Julius: Thank you so much Dr. Gillespie for your inspiring words and motivating and empowering us to do the work. We know we've got to do ahead. 476 01:29:59,700 --> 01:30:10,000 Board Chair Bernardo Perez is next. Board Chair Perez has committed and invested in the success of our community. He's done that, through his own 477 01:30:10,433 --> 01:30:23,033 investment in our students and in our social justice efforts at the district. He is here today to welcome you and provide you a view from board chair's perspective. Chair Perez. 478 01:30:23,833 --> 01:30:33,666 Chair Bernardo Perez: Thank you, Dr. Sokenu and let me begin by complementing Dina Pielaet on those fantastic videos and any others that will follow. 479 01:30:34,933 --> 01:30:35,999 Great work Dina. 480 01:30:38,200 --> 01:30:56,733 I, any prepared remarks I had I tore up after hearing Dr. Sokenu's welcoming remarks. Fantastic messaging Dr. Sokenu, makes me especially proud as a Moorpark resident, but certainly as the trustee from this area to be so closely associated with Moorpark College. 481 01:30:58,800 --> 01:31:03,500 One message I want to impart on behalf of the Board and again from myself personally is 482 01:31:04,066 --> 01:31:21,466 our commitment to doing anything and everything that we can to help Moorpark College continue to be resilient, resourceful, adaptable, and ultimately successful on behalf of our number one mission and that is our students and, 483 01:31:22,600 --> 01:31:40,966 you know, I was unable to unmute myself after being invited to speak and I thought that was kind of symbolic, because one thing, one way that we as the Board can often be of help is to get out of the way. And so I thought there was a subliminal message there Julius, but 484 01:31:42,133 --> 01:31:46,499 just know that the Board continues to advocate 485 01:31:48,000 --> 01:31:58,733 through the league, through our area legislators, state and federal, to do what we can to impress upon them to mitigate the any budgetary impacts 486 01:31:59,800 --> 01:32:04,300 on the community college system and therefore our three colleges 487 01:32:06,066 --> 01:32:08,132 in Ventura County. 488 01:32:09,466 --> 01:32:23,966 The other message I'd like to impart is I have always believed that those in the educational arena at whatever level, have answered a special calling, because we are people oriented 489 01:32:25,033 --> 01:32:43,433 endeavor, and because we are people oriented, I am very pleased to see some of the results of the student and faculty survey, number one, beginning about how people care for each other, because I think if you care for each other, then you can go a long way to achieving 490 01:32:44,633 --> 01:32:48,266 successful support for each other and 491 01:32:49,966 --> 01:32:54,466 I thank you for the invitation again to participate today because though I am not 492 01:32:56,200 --> 01:33:04,800 in the education instruction field, I, one of the principles I have that has long guided me is that 493 01:33:05,333 --> 01:33:19,799 those with the greatest deed deserve the greatest response, and so I'm pleased to see the activities that Moorpark College has taken to help fill the educational inequity gap for our students, and also this 494 01:33:22,933 --> 01:33:34,699 Convocation is important because even though, as Dr. Gillespie mentioned, we, I, we can't visit on campus, or any visits, not a lot of people are there anymore but 495 01:33:35,366 --> 01:33:56,399 one phrase that I've heard before, and I appreciate as "I hear, and I forget. I see and I remember. I do and I understand." And so this convocation is just going to further help me, I believe, and I hope to do the best job that I can in my role as 496 01:33:57,433 --> 01:34:10,333 Trustee and currently as Board Chair in supporting Moorpark College and the other colleges in our system. Continue to do the great work that you do and thank you, and enjoy the rest of your Convocation Day. 497 01:34:14,533 --> 01:34:18,999 Amanuel Gebru: Good morning, everyone. Thank you for the warm welcome from our 498 01:34:20,066 --> 01:34:32,832 chancellor, Dr. Gillespie, and also Chair Perez and we are excited to see many of you on can- see many of you on on Zoom and engage in the conversation during Convocation. 499 01:34:33,600 --> 01:34:42,566 My job is to tell you that we have a 15 minute break, and I'm running a few minutes behind schedule. So we will probably start about 10:23, 500 01:34:43,633 --> 01:34:50,666 after your break, but seven minutes before you come back as you transition from your break we'll be playing a short video. 501 01:34:51,033 --> 01:35:01,066 The video was created by our student staff from our teaching and learning center and it's an opportunity for you to see the great work our students have done and our staff in the library so 502 01:35:01,633 --> 01:35:13,499 we will be back at about 10:23 and seven minutes before that, the video will play in regards in to our students center. So, good to see many of you and enjoy your 15 minute break. 503 01:49:29,133 --> 01:49:36,633 [soft piano music] On screen text: "So I say to you, walk with the wind, brothers and sisters, and let the spirit of peace and the power of everlasting love be your guide." -John Lewis 504 01:49:43,833 --> 01:49:54,299 Jennifer: So good morning, everybody. I'm Dr. Jennifer Clark and I just want to let you all know that we are back from break, so... 505 01:49:55,366 --> 01:50:03,299 turn on your or turn up your volume and get grab that cup of coffee or whatever it is and sit back down for the next part. 506 01:50:04,666 --> 01:50:10,966 So I have the privilege, the honor and privilege of introducing the next video, [background noise], which is 507 01:50:11,733 --> 01:50:22,833 honoring our folks that have been with us for it's our, it's our 5,10, and 15 year service awards. So, and the the time and energy and commitment 508 01:50:23,133 --> 01:50:35,999 that all of that time represents. Thank you for all of that commitment to our students, our staff, our faculty, our, our, our community. It's wonderful. Thank you. And please enjoy. 509 01:50:38,360 --> 01:50:41,633 On screen text: Moorpark College Service Awards. 5-10-15 years. 510 01:50:41,633 --> 01:50:46,566 On screen text: Classified Staff 5 years 511 01:50:46,566 --> 01:50:57,066 Deborah Brackley Teaching & Learning... Tracie Bosket Distance Education...Brian Derderian Information Technology... 512 01:50:57,066 --> 01:51:10,866 Lynda Dobson Business Services...Policarpio Flores M&O...Geoffrey Freedman M&O...Alberto Galvez M&O... 513 01:51:10,866 --> 01:51:26,666 DeAnna Grove Counseling...Ramona Luna FA...Everett Lee FM&O...Tori Hancock CDC...Kimberly Ciuffardi CDC 514 01:51:26,666 --> 01:51:31,866 Faculty 5 years 515 01:51:31,866 --> 01:51:44,699 Jolie E. Herzig DSPS (EAC)... Jeny Joy Nursing... Kyle Loughman English... Brian Swartz Environmental Studies... 516 01:51:44,700 --> 01:51:48,400 Melia Tabbakhian Biology 517 01:51:48,400 --> 01:51:53,466 Classified Staff 10 years 518 01:51:53,466 --> 01:52:06,532 Francisco Figueroa M&O... Armando Magallanes FM&O... Valerie Nicoll Counseling... Dina Pielaet MarCom/ Web 519 01:52:06,533 --> 01:52:11,366 Faculty 10 years 520 01:52:11,366 --> 01:52:18,532 Lydia Etman Art History... Hugo P. Hernandez History 521 01:52:18,533 --> 01:52:22,833 Classifed Staff 15 years 522 01:52:22,833 --> 01:52:27,666 Mary Swenson Biology 523 01:52:27,666 --> 01:52:32,332 Faculty 15 years 524 01:52:32,333 --> 01:52:50,866 Julie E. Campbell Psychology... Patricia Colman History... Kara Lybarger-Monson English... Norman W. Marten Biology... 525 01:52:50,866 --> 01:53:00,099 Cynthia K. Reed Mathematics... Rui R. Zhang Economics 526 01:53:07,133 --> 01:53:10,099 Thank You... 527 01:53:10,100 --> 01:53:13,933 For Your Service! 528 01:53:13,933 --> 01:53:20,133 You Are Awesome! 529 01:53:20,133 --> 01:53:26,599 Julius: Congratulations to all 5,10, and 15 years Service Award recipients. 530 01:53:27,900 --> 01:53:40,566 It is fantastic to see that Moorpark College has benefited and has cherished the values and the energy of those individuals whose names come across the screen. 531 01:53:41,700 --> 01:53:57,300 Thank you so much to Dina for this phenomenal videos, you know, we want to capture who we really are and these videos do a remarkable job of of that. We are Moorpark College and these videos tell that story well. 532 01:53:58,400 --> 01:54:01,166 Congratulations again to our 5,10, and 15 year 533 01:54:03,200 --> 01:54:06,500 colleagues. So listen to me, 534 01:54:07,566 --> 01:54:09,399 black lives matter. 535 01:54:10,633 --> 01:54:14,299 Listen to me, black lives matter. 536 01:54:15,500 --> 01:54:35,633 I am not saying that blue lives don't matter. I'm not saying that Latinx lives don't matter. I'm not saying that gay lives don't matter. All I'm saying is black lives matter. If you can't say that, I'm sorry, that's a problem. That's a problem for me as a black man. 537 01:54:36,866 --> 01:54:39,366 That is a problem for me as the college president. 538 01:54:40,633 --> 01:54:42,466 Black lives matter. 539 01:54:49,800 --> 01:54:54,866 Okay, so why does black lives matter? 540 01:54:56,133 --> 01:55:03,299 If we have to ask that question, there's a problem. There's a centuries old problem, 541 01:55:04,600 --> 01:55:06,033 that we have not addressed. 542 01:55:08,566 --> 01:55:21,732 Thank you Erik for speaking truth to power. Thank you, Erik, for calling us out, calling us in, asking us to join in this work. 543 01:55:22,600 --> 01:55:33,166 This is not the work of the black faculty. This is another work of the black administrators. This is another work of the latinas of the Latinx folks, this is not the work of the asians. This is everybody's work. 544 01:55:33,733 --> 01:55:39,599 This is white faculty work. This is white administrative work. This is white folks work as well. 545 01:55:40,933 --> 01:55:45,799 It is incumbent upon us how we invite people into this work. 546 01:55:46,966 --> 01:55:52,032 When I said earlier that we have to enter into one another's protests, that's what I meant. 547 01:55:53,200 --> 01:55:58,800 How do we get into one another's protest, so that we can help celebrate one another's humanity? 548 01:56:00,166 --> 01:56:12,432 This summer, we held a couple of town halls, and one of the first ones had to do with having our black students speak to us about their experience at Moorpark College. 549 01:56:15,400 --> 01:56:22,366 If you were a part of that experience, you know that some of that was not pleasant. 550 01:56:23,700 --> 01:56:32,000 If you're a part of that experience, you also know that our black students are thriving, Moorpark College or they are challenged at Moorpark College. 551 01:56:38,266 --> 01:56:39,666 Black lives matter. 552 01:56:42,133 --> 01:56:46,933 This moment is about social justice. 553 01:56:48,666 --> 01:56:53,366 Not just supporting it, but being actively engaged in it. 554 01:56:54,900 --> 01:57:01,366 Someone said a couple of days ago that we are all activists for one another's humanity. 555 01:57:02,833 --> 01:57:05,266 I ask you, I call upon you, 556 01:57:06,600 --> 01:57:10,900 to prioritize being activists for one another's humanity. 557 01:57:12,366 --> 01:57:15,432 This is not a one and done thing, this is not a one moment thing. 558 01:57:17,533 --> 01:57:20,833 This is continuous work. 559 01:57:22,100 --> 01:57:28,233 To create institutional change, to address structural racism, this is continuous work. 560 01:57:30,233 --> 01:57:37,099 Earlier this summer as I was drafting one of my essays, and one of my, and drafting one of my emails to the campus, 561 01:57:38,466 --> 01:57:40,966 I stopped myself in saying something, 562 01:57:42,466 --> 01:57:47,432 because I was concerned that I might sound too aggressive. 563 01:57:48,533 --> 01:57:51,233 I might sound too militant. 564 01:57:52,766 --> 01:57:54,499 I stopped myself. 565 01:58:02,433 --> 01:58:05,833 We have to be the change you want to see in the world. 566 01:58:07,866 --> 01:58:14,499 We know how to do this work, and if we don't, we have experts amongst us. 567 01:58:17,500 --> 01:58:24,400 And our experts come in variety of experiences, they come with a variety of cultural 568 01:58:25,933 --> 01:58:27,533 capital and wealth. 569 01:58:29,600 --> 01:58:32,300 How do we go beyond the statements? 570 01:58:33,500 --> 01:58:40,500 How do we go beyond the good intentions? How do we go beyond that and get to action? Moorpark College, 571 01:58:42,566 --> 01:58:49,999 how do you learn to put students first, if you can't say the lives of your students with disabilities matter? 572 01:58:51,066 --> 01:58:57,332 How do we learn to put our students first, if you can't see the lives of your trans students matter? 573 01:58:58,833 --> 01:59:06,033 How do you learn to put the students first, if you cannot say wholeheartedly black lives matter? 574 01:59:08,800 --> 01:59:14,233 My friends, my colleagues, I challenge you respected of what your political opinions are, 575 01:59:15,833 --> 01:59:20,433 you need to enter, we need to enter into one another's protests. 576 01:59:22,266 --> 01:59:24,399 We need to be on the good side of history. 577 01:59:27,933 --> 01:59:36,033 Let's not be distracted by our differences, but also, let's not pretend to be kind and let's not pretend, 578 01:59:38,266 --> 01:59:39,566 let's not pretend. 579 01:59:41,366 --> 01:59:50,632 We are doing this work and I ask those of you who have not been here at the summer to join this work, to join this movement. 580 01:59:51,966 --> 01:59:56,466 Moorpark College will be and is better for it. 581 01:59:57,966 --> 02:00:07,699 We need to do this work, you will be hearing from our colleagues who have responded to participate in this work. 582 02:00:08,766 --> 02:00:23,566 One of the greatest moments of my life at Moorpark College is earlier, this summer when I sat in on a work group meeting and there were 35 people in that work group who wanted to address the issue of diversifying the curriculum. 583 02:00:25,033 --> 02:00:26,366 35 people. 584 02:00:31,033 --> 02:00:45,166 That says to us, that we can enter into one another's protests, but it also says to us that there may be folks who are tepid, who are concerned about our lifes because they don't necessarily know what to do. 585 02:00:46,933 --> 02:00:48,699 We need to embrace them and bring them in. 586 02:00:51,100 --> 02:01:00,933 But it is not the work of our black faculty, or black administrators, or latinas, or Asian faculty and staff to educate everyone else that is not their job. 587 02:01:01,933 --> 02:01:03,099 That is not our job. 588 02:01:05,333 --> 02:01:18,266 Our role in this institution is to invest in the human development of all our students. And some of our students are experiencing this institution differently than others. 589 02:01:19,333 --> 02:01:23,333 Some of our students experiencing this community different than others. 590 02:01:25,000 --> 02:01:29,333 The work that we do in the classroom is activist work. 591 02:01:30,733 --> 02:01:34,899 Education is political folks, you choose a side. 592 02:01:38,000 --> 02:01:47,066 I ask of you as you listen to this presentations to know that this is our commitment this entire year to begin to do this work. 593 02:01:49,233 --> 02:01:53,733 To begin to do this work together. I ask that you please prioritize it. 594 02:01:54,800 --> 02:02:07,166 I ask that if you cannot prioritize it, get out of the way of the folks who want to prioritize it and do it. As a supervisor, as a manager, as a faculty member, help support folks who wants to do this work. 595 02:02:09,933 --> 02:02:24,999 We are investing in the future of Moorpark College. I do not want to hear 15 years from now, one of our students, saying that they felt less than in our community because of the color of his skin. 596 02:02:27,333 --> 02:02:31,766 Folks, you'll be hearing from four groups. The first two will start off 597 02:02:32,233 --> 02:02:50,066 with you sharing with you the work that they've done, their hopes and expectations and the goals for this semester, this year, and they will be inviting you to join them in the research, but be inviting you to join them in the investigation and exploration of our own humanities together. 598 02:02:51,433 --> 02:03:05,399 They will also be asking you to challenge yourself and question yourself when you serve on the hiring committee. They will also be asking you to challenge yourself and question yourself and set yourself right when you're interacting with your colleagues. 599 02:03:07,066 --> 02:03:08,132 Because folks, 600 02:03:11,166 --> 02:03:20,832 we are the change we want to see in the world. It is uncomfortable, it is challenging, and we have to lean into the discomfort. 601 02:03:22,866 --> 02:03:26,266 The first group diversifying curriculum. 602 02:03:27,800 --> 02:03:35,500 Please join our speaker from that group, I believe, is Nathan. Professor Nathan Bowen. Thank you. 603 02:03:37,400 --> 02:03:38,500 Nathan Bowen: Thank you, President, 604 02:03:39,900 --> 02:03:42,433 I'm humbled to be representing 605 02:03:43,833 --> 02:03:49,533 a vast group that has identified themselves and wanting to participate in this work. 606 02:03:50,033 --> 02:04:00,833 And I also want to say that this invitation is open to all wanting to be part of this, regardless of whether you are a professor, administrator, staff, or student, 607 02:04:01,566 --> 02:04:10,199 we welcome you as as we work on this to try to help make our campus and college, one that is truly inclusive and 608 02:04:11,166 --> 02:04:23,132 and representative of various mindsets, opinions, values, and walks of life. So this slide presentation is really 609 02:04:23,533 --> 02:04:38,599 just very surface for the work that has been done so far, and we know that this is not walk in the park and can be done in five minutes. This is a change of mindset and also a labor. So let's go ahead and go to the next slide please. 610 02:04:40,333 --> 02:04:49,166 So as we've met as a work group, and we're looking to diversify the curriculum that is our main theme, for this particular 611 02:04:50,033 --> 02:04:56,033 work group that we've met together, we have seen that the students have asked for, and we've also seen that the Community 612 02:04:56,633 --> 02:05:11,133 the CCC Chancellor has demanded that we create inclusive classrooms and anti-racist curriculum. So with that, we've said about thinking about how we might realize the that that charge. Next slide please. 613 02:05:12,700 --> 02:05:19,800 So the first thing that we are looking to do to advance the theme, is to create tools for staff and faculty 614 02:05:20,466 --> 02:05:34,866 to identify confront and dismantle racism and to create a truly supportive learning environment. So one of our work groups is actually we've divided into subgroups, and one is working on creating a resource 615 02:05:35,766 --> 02:05:47,899 that may live inside Canvas, may be something that will still taking shape it may actually take many forms to create tools that will help us toward this work. 616 02:05:48,933 --> 02:05:58,833 So, our aim is to create an inclusive and supporting learning environment, as I said, that may take a variety of forms, we may have panel series, it may work its way into 617 02:05:59,466 --> 02:06:11,299 Year Of, could be that we have a really strong multicultural day group that is just getting larger and larger, we'll see how this this pans out. So I want to 618 02:06:11,800 --> 02:06:18,866 continually say that this is work is something that you can join in on at any time and we'd love to have you, and we'd love to coordinate. 619 02:06:19,800 --> 02:06:29,533 We also want to culture, continue, excuse me, to continue to foster cultural awareness in all aspects of our college. So even though we have a very specific aim, 620 02:06:30,333 --> 02:06:42,866 we have found, as we've met as that group of 35 plus that we have a lot of different ideas on how we can weave this into our campus culture. Next slide please. 621 02:06:44,500 --> 02:06:49,566 So the four specific action steps that we have right here actually reflected in subgroups that we created. 622 02:06:49,966 --> 02:07:01,566 We did a survey after our first meeting trying to take the ideas that we saw and see if they sort of naturally call rest coalesce around specific areas and this is where we're at. 623 02:07:02,266 --> 02:07:13,466 This may change in the future, but this is where we are right now. First of all, and the upper left, we have a desire to create an ethnic studies requirement for all students in some form. 624 02:07:14,066 --> 02:07:26,032 We are also working on a Social Justice ADT. Currently the faculty who are going to be spearheading that are Roland Petrello and Patty Colman, but you can join in with that, if you want to. So just let us know. 625 02:07:26,966 --> 02:07:40,066 The idea of the ethnic studies requirement, we recognize that we're going to have to be working with the CSUs and transfer institutions and that the timeline for this may be, you know, two years or more. 626 02:07:40,700 --> 02:07:48,933 We are not the only ones having this conversation. This is truly something going on at many different levels within our state and obviously our nation and in the world. 627 02:07:49,666 --> 02:07:57,166 So we, in terms of the timeline for that we're going to be trying to make sure that we can work with CSUs and to figure out 628 02:07:57,600 --> 02:08:07,200 if we do have ethnic studies requirements inside of our degrees, that they are also part of what they want, as you know, ADT degrees are 629 02:08:07,633 --> 02:08:16,299 sort of the lion's share of the way students get degrees here at the college. Over to the right, we have a subgroup that is doing social justice learning outcomes, 630 02:08:17,700 --> 02:08:37,600 for every course on campus. This is also a discussion, how we might realize this situation, but the idea here is to create a mechanism that reflects our desire to have accountability to be in the call and culture that both Julius and Erik were talking about earlier. So this one is being 631 02:08:38,700 --> 02:08:47,666 something that if you have any interest in it, as a discussion of the way that we might implement that, whether it's institutional level outcomes, looking at the college mission, 632 02:08:48,366 --> 02:08:57,366 but the idea here is to create a way that all of us have known accountability to engage with social, social justice. 633 02:08:58,500 --> 02:09:09,033 Next on the bottom left, we have culturally responsive pedagogy and an alliance resource center. We have had some fantastic ideas going on and this has had a lot of 634 02:09:09,833 --> 02:09:22,533 a lot of energy. And the idea here is to address all kinds of situations in which we might be able to help students feel welcome and to be anti-racist and to address this inside the classroom, 635 02:09:23,066 --> 02:09:33,599 to also create resources that reflect our culture in a way that allows students to have a voice. So we're talking about galleries, exchanges of 636 02:09:35,166 --> 02:09:45,699 different opinions in like town halls, student panels, all kinds of things are baking inside of here. So if you find yourself hearing any of this that sounds good, 637 02:09:46,300 --> 02:09:58,066 please let us know and join in the cause. On the lower right, we have campus activities that encourage, oh I look like I'm being redundant, campus activities that encourage student dialogue, exploration, and expression. 638 02:09:59,133 --> 02:10:00,033 So we have 639 02:10:01,433 --> 02:10:12,833 this one we have a very active subgroup, that is interested in social justice in particular. I feel like I should call out that there is a concern about incarceration 640 02:10:13,566 --> 02:10:30,666 and the way that this is impacted our, our culture nationally and addressing the injustices going with this. So we're looking to create, essentially, as many different venues and avenues in which we can be addressing these things. So let's go to the next slide please. 641 02:10:32,533 --> 02:10:47,533 So in terms of our timeline, in July, the theme one work group divided into these four subgroups and they're listed here culturally responsive pedagogy, the ethnic studies requirement, a social justice institutional level or 642 02:10:48,100 --> 02:10:54,633 program level or course level outcome subgroup. And then also social justice education for 1.4. 643 02:10:55,566 --> 02:11:14,166 In terms of what we see going on this fall and spring, it kind of depends on the little or the large different things that we're doing, or what the timeline is, so I'm deliberately being vague right here, but we plan, whatever we do to start coordinating and working with the great different 644 02:11:15,900 --> 02:11:20,400 campus committees that we already have and to be coordinated. So 645 02:11:20,733 --> 02:11:30,399 we expect that Academic Senate will be involved, Curriculum is definitely going to be involved, has been very involved. We want to give a shout out to Scarlet and Letrisha for the great work on this so far. 646 02:11:31,066 --> 02:11:39,199 EdCAP, the Library, FIG, Professional Development, all of these areas. We hope to coordinate with you as we further this these particular 647 02:11:40,033 --> 02:11:48,333 these particular sub group themes. We recognize that when we partner with the UCs and the CSUs. It's going to be a lot of conversations that we have with 648 02:11:48,733 --> 02:11:58,199 these institutions and watching closely what kinds of requirements develop on that end, because we know that our college is part of a larger network in helping students 649 02:11:58,900 --> 02:12:19,900 to move along, but we have strongly felt that we want to make sure that there is something going on here on campus that no student can leave here without knowing that black lives matter, and that we are engaged in creating a safe inclusive environment for all walks of life. Thank you. 650 02:12:39,933 --> 02:12:40,866 Perry Martin Jr.: Next slide. 651 02:12:53,700 --> 02:12:56,233 Julius: Who's speaking for group two? 652 02:12:56,233 --> 02:12:57,433 Gerald Richardson: Hi there. It's two slides back...or three slides back. 653 02:13:09,300 --> 02:13:10,500 Okay I can't see. 654 02:13:12,466 --> 02:13:21,866 But I'll be begin. [Nenagh Brown]: If we could, could we go back two slides to the beginning of the group two slide presentation. 655 02:13:23,633 --> 02:13:28,866 Nenagh: It. I think it was called diversifying and hir- thank you. Excellent. Gerald. 656 02:13:31,633 --> 02:13:42,499 Gerald: Hi everyone, so Moorpark College has a students first philosophy, and as a student, for me, that means that this institution puts my well being first, and that Moorpark is dedicated to 657 02:13:42,966 --> 02:13:54,032 amelioration and the closing of the opportunity retention and achievement gaps, and I speak unequivocally when I say that these efforts, cannot be done without the 658 02:13:55,100 --> 02:13:57,666 hiring, the retention, and the 659 02:14:00,100 --> 02:14:05,733 and the recruitment of diverse faculty and staff that represent the multicultural world that we live in. 660 02:14:06,633 --> 02:14:15,999 To this day, I'm grateful to Dr. Jeremy Kaye for connecting me with Tamarra Coleman Professor Tamarra Coleman, and because that's the first time I truly felt heard on campus. 661 02:14:16,400 --> 02:14:24,700 She when others tried to disabuse me of my racial experiences she validated them and she made me feel heard, she comforted me and she consoled me, 662 02:14:25,166 --> 02:14:33,799 and its unparalleled to any other interaction I've had with a teacher ever in education. It definitely reflected in my academic performance as well. 663 02:14:34,533 --> 02:14:48,799 Even diverse classified hiring is the utmost importance to me because I can categorically say working with Karla Montenegro learning about AB 540 and DACA students and just her experiences 664 02:14:49,700 --> 02:14:53,600 it's truly made me grow as a person and I believe that 665 02:14:54,266 --> 02:15:06,199 being exposed to different viewpoints, perspectives, ethnicities, cultures, intersectional identities, helps students like me grow, we learn, and we become compassionate contributing members to the larger society. 666 02:15:06,800 --> 02:15:12,633 So on that note, I'll pass it to a powerhouse, for this work Professor Perry Martin. Thank you. 667 02:15:14,900 --> 02:15:15,200 Perry: Thank you Gerald. 668 02:15:19,033 --> 02:15:19,699 Next slide, please. 669 02:15:29,033 --> 02:15:29,633 Next slide. 670 02:15:30,733 --> 02:15:33,366 The District Equal Employment Opportunity Advisory Committee 671 02:15:33,466 --> 02:15:43,699 access and advisory body to the Equal Employment Opportunity Officer and the district as a whole to promote understanding and support of Equal Employment Opportunity policies and procedures. 672 02:15:44,433 --> 02:15:52,099 Equal Employment Opportunity Advisory Committee shall assistant and review update and implementation of the EEO plan. 673 02:15:52,633 --> 02:16:09,599 The work of the EEO committee predates the recent phenomenon of work done all across the country as a result of social justice movement, following the murder of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and Stephon Marbury. The work done at the district level will stifle about turn over 674 02:16:10,633 --> 02:16:20,266 from administrators, from the HR Director, from the Vice Chancellor of HR, and committee composition changes as well as difficult contract negotiations. 675 02:16:21,133 --> 02:16:31,699 We hope that the bureaucracy is no longer an issue and we can give to the work at hand. Now with the desire for so many individuals to dive 676 02:16:31,700 --> 02:16:32,000 off 677 02:16:32,233 --> 02:16:37,199 of anti-racist dialogue, the apparent need for more culturally competent leadership and training, 678 02:16:37,466 --> 02:16:50,466 the benefit of having a former director taking the reins as the Vice Chancellor of HR, and the Board of Trustees holding meetings in order to gain more clarity surrounding effective hiring practices and a college is working independently 679 02:16:50,766 --> 02:17:04,166 as well as interdependently and addressing this critical theme, the EEO committee is poised to be much more effective. Transformational leadership is what's necessary to ensure you develop effective practices 680 02:17:05,300 --> 02:17:12,966 Design, to recruit, and to retain fully qualified faculty to help about a rich and more diverse staff, 681 02:17:13,133 --> 02:17:14,366 faculty, and managerial 682 02:17:14,566 --> 02:17:22,266 presence on our campus. I believe one of the most important privileges we possess is ability to serve on hiring committees. 683 02:17:22,633 --> 02:17:34,499 That said, it is critical that we get it right at every step of the process. If you agree, join us in the work that we started, share your experience, research and passion and your expertise. 684 02:17:34,933 --> 02:17:52,433 The success of implementing the goals of this theme will have a long lasting impact, a long lasting positive impact on our campus community in life and learning experience of our students. This is one way to truly embody the students first philosophy. 685 02:17:53,500 --> 02:17:54,933 I'll be followed by Nenagh. 686 02:17:57,033 --> 02:18:03,933 Nenagh: Good morning and apologies that our slides are not coordinating with us and we'll get that right, when we send this out. 687 02:18:04,666 --> 02:18:17,266 But this work group again subdivided into different subgroups and Perry is inviting anyone who is interested to please join us in our EEO Committee work group, 688 02:18:17,766 --> 02:18:25,266 and the work we want to do with that, and this slide here is encouraging you to join the faculty hiring work group, 689 02:18:25,933 --> 02:18:32,233 and it's focus is to increase diversity amongst both full time and part time faculty as well. 690 02:18:32,733 --> 02:18:44,233 We have long emphasized this, the state has long emphasized it. Last year, we had a presentation specifically on this topic by Dr. Sean Harper and many of us were actually present at that presentation. 691 02:18:44,800 --> 02:18:53,800 When I was reading through the reviews of those people that filled in the eval, at the end of the presentation. There was one that really caught my eye. 692 02:18:54,166 --> 02:19:00,566 It just said, "Now we need to follow up," and I think what we're hearing is this is the time to follow up so 693 02:19:01,233 --> 02:19:10,133 the first focus is going to be on our hiring process. How do we recruit people? How do we screen people? How do we interview people all through 694 02:19:10,866 --> 02:19:16,432 an equity and diversity lens? I'm sure other topics will be brought to this work group. 695 02:19:16,933 --> 02:19:26,833 But what is most important is that we do have every voice and every perspective on this work group. So we encourage you to consider joining this work group, 696 02:19:27,600 --> 02:19:36,566 and then as new ideas come through as Nathan was suggesting, this, this is at the stage for people to make a difference and to come and join the conversation. 697 02:19:37,200 --> 02:19:53,966 And our goal is, of course, to work on that excellence in teaching that mor- Moorpark is renowned for and to go back to Gerald's point that we're doing this on behalf of our students. So thank you. And we have a third subgroup and Linda would like to introduce that one. 698 02:20:09,733 --> 02:20:15,366 Linda: Nenagh had mentioned we subdivided our sub group into three sections. 699 02:20:16,666 --> 02:20:29,732 Perry already just mentioned the EEO Committee work. Nenagh, the faculty, and I will be leading the classified hiring, Diversity and Classified Hiring. 700 02:20:30,766 --> 02:20:50,999 I encourage, participation in this movement. We want to examine current process, processes set by the district and union in comparison with actual processes that's carried out at the college. What through this, can we 701 02:20:52,133 --> 02:20:59,733 change as far or diversify, as well as implementing a tracking system for recruitments? 702 02:21:00,800 --> 02:21:05,400 And strengthening our communication between colleges and district HR. 703 02:21:06,633 --> 02:21:27,033 It's so important that we participate and provide our input when it comes to classified hiring, because at the end it is for the benefit of who we serve, the students. If we have a well diversified 704 02:21:28,800 --> 02:21:38,166 group of fact, classify professionals, we can better serve our population on campus and do 705 02:21:39,233 --> 02:22:00,933 a better job as well. So I welcome you and encourage you to participate. We are in the beginning stages of this. So the more people we have working towards this movement, this change, the better outcome we will have and with this I pass it on to Jennifer Clark. Thank you. 706 02:22:01,733 --> 02:22:06,799 Jennifer: Thank you, Gerald. Thank you, Perry. Thank you, Nenagh. Thank you, Linda. 707 02:22:07,633 --> 02:22:18,533 Y'all want to join this group. We've got some great folks, we're going to be doing some great work. I have the privilege of closing a very trying to do this briefly for our group. 708 02:22:19,466 --> 02:22:30,099 Campus commitment. When we're looking at hiring new employees, particularly faculty, because obviously faculty have the most contact with students, 709 02:22:31,000 --> 02:22:49,900 we need to ask ourselves three questions. The first question is, what kind of community do we want to create here at Moorpark College? Our number one priority, of course, are our students and meeting their needs, all of their needs, their disparate needs. 710 02:22:51,333 --> 02:23:07,666 So, who are those students that are in our classrooms? They're not all college ready A students. We know this, we saw data that President Sokenu shared with us at the beginning of today's, 711 02:23:09,433 --> 02:23:17,833 beginning of today's convocation session. We have students that are struggling, with all kinds of different issues. 712 02:23:18,533 --> 02:23:29,066 Those students also may have learning disabilities and learning challenges, they may be from abusive homes, in addition to the food insecurities or job loss or what whatever the 713 02:23:29,500 --> 02:23:40,833 multitude of things that issues that they may be dealing with. We need to be prepared to deal with all of that baggage that comes with each and every student who comes to us. 714 02:23:41,633 --> 02:23:54,099 So we need to be able to support their development, their professionalism, professional expectations of all of those students. So we need to ask ourselves, will this candidate, be able to do that? 715 02:23:55,766 --> 02:24:02,499 So the second question is, we have to look and ask ourselves, you know this is hard, but what's missing, 716 02:24:03,166 --> 02:24:21,966 what are the gaps in our department, you know what, what pieces are we missing? So we ought we can look at our departments, of course, in the traditional way race, ethnicity, gender, religion, gender orientation are lots of ways, you know, we are accustomed to looking at 717 02:24:23,600 --> 02:24:31,500 ourselves, but we also need to consider the experiences that we've all had the collective experiences, our viewpoints, and perspectives, 718 02:24:31,766 --> 02:24:41,066 and how well and how that shapes who we are and others that we relate to, and how well students can relate to us. If they've had vastly different experiences, 719 02:24:41,500 --> 02:24:58,266 you know, I may not be able to relate to a student that has a vastly different experience than the one that I have, versus someone who has shared some of those experiences. That's really important, we heard from Gerald, first thing, we heard from a student how that connection matters. 720 02:24:59,766 --> 02:25:08,199 So what are we, what are we missing? What are we missing in our departments, in our areas to be able to effective really relate to all of those students? 721 02:25:09,333 --> 02:25:21,733 And how is our department and our areas, how are we going about addressing that, and those deficiencies? So the third question is, is our college as student ready as it possibly can be? 722 02:25:23,100 --> 02:25:34,100 So, after thinking about questions one, and two, we need to incorporate those answers to those hard questions into our recruitment strategies, 723 02:25:35,066 --> 02:25:42,699 before hand, right, before we even get to the table to hire, we need to know what those what that looks like and what those things are, what those issues are. 724 02:25:43,133 --> 02:25:54,733 So it's not all about content expertise and rigor, those are, of course, extremely important and we're not, we don't want any of, any of those things to be compromised, 725 02:25:55,866 --> 02:26:09,499 but, you know, we, we want also equally, equally is important is the person's ability to support the student fully, so along social lines, emotional lines, all again, and all of those other ways. 726 02:26:10,166 --> 02:26:23,332 So when I talked to Julius about this, you know, he, he coined this very well, he, he says, "You know, we look at it. So, you know, are we expecting students to be ready for us, 727 02:26:24,100 --> 02:26:33,433 or are we looking at ourselves as a department as an institution and how ready, we are for our students?" So that's, that's a really important, you know, 728 02:26:34,066 --> 02:26:38,666 distinction and perspective. So we all have to be fully committed to hiring people 729 02:26:39,000 --> 02:26:49,166 who will best service in this endeavor. So not just people who are nice and compliant, and will go along with the program, and will do what they're told, and follow, you know, toe the line, 730 02:26:49,666 --> 02:27:01,599 but people who are going to help us serve the students better than we do now, by helping us to ask those really difficult questions and challenge us to do so. 731 02:27:02,400 --> 02:27:11,700 So, real quickly, the last couple items I will just say leadership presence. When you're hiring someone when you're on a faculty hiring committee, staff hiring committee, 732 02:27:12,133 --> 02:27:17,866 administrator hiring committee, you know, we have to also really consider the person's potential. 733 02:27:18,733 --> 02:27:25,033 You know, what is their potential to motivate others, to inspire students, to mentor and counsel them? 734 02:27:25,466 --> 02:27:31,766 To be a faculty Chair, or or a different kind of a, we have all kinds of ways you can be a leader on campus, 735 02:27:32,166 --> 02:27:42,732 what kind of potential is that person in the potential leadership role that they could have on our campus, do they, you know, do they have the potential to inspire students and engage them and to 736 02:27:43,400 --> 02:27:47,866 encourage our students to be involved? Remember, you know, this is a this is a very, very 737 02:27:48,200 --> 02:27:59,900 long term commitment when we hire people we hire them as we saw on the service awards, you know, people are here for a lot of years. That's wonderful. We have people here more than 30 years. So this is an investment 738 02:28:00,500 --> 02:28:07,100 a long term investment in our institution future. So in terms of timetable, we talked about in our group, 739 02:28:07,700 --> 02:28:21,133 crawl, run, walk, or sorry, crawl, sorry, crawl, walk, run, that came from Perry and that really, that really stuck with me because, you know, we've been here for 50 years right? Moorpark has been here for more than 50 years, 740 02:28:21,533 --> 02:28:29,666 and, you know, we're still struggling with this issue. It's this is a very, very long term commitment and we want to get the message out that, you know, 741 02:28:31,100 --> 02:28:43,233 it is certainly not too late to join us. We've only just begun, we are just touching the tip of the iceberg here. So please join us. Do not be put off by "Oh we've had a few meetings." Please join us. 742 02:28:44,333 --> 02:28:57,866 And we certainly don't want to run or even walk before we can crawl. So there's some very, very important groundwork that we need to do. So this fall, we're going to be crawling, you know, we're going to be doing 743 02:28:58,300 --> 02:29:13,133 the work that Nenagh suggested, and basically looking at our policies and look and then comparing them looking at what actually happens, the actions, and doing a bit of a gap analysis, oh actually not a bit, a lot of a gap analysis. What, you know, 744 02:29:14,300 --> 02:29:21,533 what does that look like? In the spring, maybe we'll be up to a slow jog, maybe, 745 02:29:22,800 --> 02:29:30,033 but basically will be putting together, best practices, when we identify what our gaps are, the spring will be about 746 02:29:30,500 --> 02:29:46,333 looking at our short, medium, long term commitments also to professional development and, you know, again what best practices look like, and then going from there. So with that, I turn the mic back over to Linda. Thank you all very much. 747 02:29:58,600 --> 02:30:03,933 Linda: Okay, that was our presentation. I now we'll now be going into a break. 748 02:30:05,033 --> 02:30:05,399 And 749 02:30:06,800 --> 02:30:20,000 the first half will be a break for you to go and do whatever you need to do, and then after that, about seven minutes into the break, there will be a video starting. So we welcome you to come back and watch our next video. 750 02:30:21,100 --> 02:30:21,700 Thank you. 751 02:31:17,400 --> 02:31:32,100 Brian: Hi folks, so hopefully some of you can hear me, as you're still gonna take care of your break. So as a reminder, we're actually not doing a video, we're going to do a short break here, maybe as we're saying five or six minutes to get what you need, and then at about 752 02:31:33,333 --> 02:31:53,633 11:10 or so, we'll start a presentation from, from our dance faculty member Beth Megill who will lead us through a stretching and dance exercise and then we'll reconvene at the end of that to begin the next segment of our of our convocation day. 753 02:34:50,100 --> 02:35:00,333 Beth Megill: Want to do a quick sound check before we get started. So if anybody's there and can let me know that they hear me, I'm unmuted now. 754 02:35:00,866 --> 02:35:05,066 We'll take another moment. [Nathan]: Hear you, I hear you Beth, it's Nathan. [Beth]: Great. 755 02:35:05,566 --> 02:35:09,166 So some of you are thinking, "Oh my gosh, dance, no way!" 756 02:35:10,266 --> 02:35:34,332 you know, and then some of you are like, "Hey, but they can't see me, why not?" So, I'm just going to do a quick sound check and if I can encourage you to move even a little bit. I will have succeeded, and you can hear this music? [music playing] 757 02:35:34,333 --> 02:35:41,599 Okay, alright. I miss you John! Whoo! Hey Mary! Hi everybody! 758 02:35:41,833 --> 02:35:57,099 And kudos to everybody who has the, you know, the brave, the brave ability to be on video, because we know how hard it is to look at a bunch of black, you know, black screen squares and just the names, so it does make a difference 759 02:35:58,166 --> 02:36:04,332 on the presenter end, you know this, and and it's something that I think we can remind ourselves as 760 02:36:05,933 --> 02:36:17,933 as on the receiving end of some of this information through the screen, so, so yes I hope you'll enjoy me, enjoy dancing with me. It's just going to be an easy stretch movement session. 761 02:36:18,500 --> 02:36:27,500 Something I've started studying this summer is, it's called cultural somatics. So, somatics is the study of 762 02:36:28,000 --> 02:36:40,800 the body and the senses of the body as perceived from inside, and cultural somatics as far as I understand it so far, is the idea that we have cultural bodies 763 02:36:41,533 --> 02:37:00,433 and that culture lives in our bodies, and collectively we form a cultural soma. So as we are thinking about change, and as we're thinking about ways to, to reinvest in our, our 764 02:37:00,966 --> 02:37:14,266 online Learning, and in our online communities, and Moorpark College, you know, as the fall is beginning consider how your body is actually holding on to 765 02:37:14,800 --> 02:37:27,400 to identity, holding on to fears, and if we can open up an exercise and put the culture of hope, and change, and 766 02:37:27,900 --> 02:37:47,566 and power, and honesty, and integrity in our body and in ourselves, then we might, might feel a change that happens really spontaneously, even without a cognitive decision. So that's what I'm going to propose and let's get started. So stand up, find a little bit of space. 767 02:37:55,266 --> 02:37:58,399 Begin by just shaking out. 768 02:38:03,100 --> 02:38:14,633 I don't know if we have a gallery view option or if you want to pin me as the speaker, but it's nice to relay for giving a little bit of tactile stimulation 769 02:38:15,200 --> 02:38:28,833 this helps us remember that we are concrete beings, we are fluid and flexible beings, but we are physical beings. We are humans in a body with a story. 770 02:38:30,200 --> 02:38:33,800 So let's give ourselves a big hug and breathe into your backspace. 771 02:38:38,966 --> 02:38:45,266 And then open up and just lift the heart just stretching your arms wide lifting the heart, looking up gently. 772 02:38:46,933 --> 02:38:49,499 And one more time because opposite arm on top. 773 02:38:50,533 --> 02:38:55,999 And feel what that's like you can just create yourself a little bit like, "Oh my gosh, it's gonna be okay." 774 02:38:58,333 --> 02:39:01,633 And then a big inhale, open the heart lifting. 775 02:39:07,966 --> 02:39:13,199 Good. And then we're going to shift our weight, so any form of side to side shifting of our legs. 776 02:39:15,733 --> 02:39:31,099 The value of empowering our lower body, our lower body is our stability, our lower body's our grounding, it is our foundation to then mobilize and reach out in the world, but if we don't have a firm foundation, 777 02:39:33,133 --> 02:39:34,733 how are we going to reach out 778 02:39:36,166 --> 02:39:40,632 to others? So just pressing firmly. 779 02:39:41,966 --> 02:39:44,366 Good. And then stretch out, big breath in 780 02:39:46,600 --> 02:39:52,166 then get really small, and exhale, again, again, big breath 781 02:39:56,100 --> 02:39:56,900 and exhale. 782 02:39:58,933 --> 02:40:08,899 Mobilizing the shoulders, I'm going to get a little more volume, mobilizing the shoulders, these get really stuck when we're sitting, 783 02:40:10,066 --> 02:40:11,966 when we're looking at a computer. 784 02:40:14,100 --> 02:40:17,533 Beautiful, maybe one at a time, I 785 02:40:18,833 --> 02:40:24,833 like to have one hand on the opposite shoulder, that just reminds me what's going on in there. 786 02:40:27,433 --> 02:40:31,366 This is very much about our ability to reach out to others 787 02:40:32,533 --> 02:40:33,966 and then switching. 788 02:40:37,033 --> 02:40:50,833 So how do we reach out? How can we pierce the stace, traverse through the screen. Beautiful. Two more big breaths. Inhale, 789 02:40:54,633 --> 02:40:55,999 exhale, and fold in. 790 02:40:57,700 --> 02:41:00,733 One more time, just nice, big inhale, move the breath. 791 02:41:02,833 --> 02:41:05,533 Very nice and exhale. 792 02:41:06,566 --> 02:41:15,432 Good, now stand and balance on one leg. You don't have to hold up your like high but I just want to show you that I'm actually on one leg right? So you're standing, and balancing, and breathing. 793 02:41:18,566 --> 02:41:19,666 Just breath. 794 02:41:22,233 --> 02:41:35,533 And switching sides, take another Little balance. You don't have to look at the screen, you can look up and out. Do you have a window in your room? Look outside, can you see a tree, or plant, or your lawn? 795 02:41:36,733 --> 02:41:37,933 Something green. 796 02:41:39,233 --> 02:41:48,199 Beautiful. Now we're going to draw big circles with one arm draw big circles through the space, looking at your thumb. 797 02:41:49,766 --> 02:41:51,132 Look at your thumb. 798 02:41:52,166 --> 02:41:53,366 You notice... 799 02:41:54,433 --> 02:41:58,566 you're looking around the space. Switching sides. 800 02:42:02,100 --> 02:42:05,166 See, side to side. 801 02:42:06,733 --> 02:42:07,599 All the way up. Beautiful. Good. 802 02:42:14,400 --> 02:42:18,566 And now just little marches in place and breathe. 803 02:42:20,100 --> 02:42:22,000 Feel your feet on the floor. 804 02:42:23,266 --> 02:42:35,132 You might even have enough of a, of a bounce. If you feel comfortable and you want to jog in place just to get, get the legs to receive the energy of the Earth. 805 02:42:38,866 --> 02:42:44,666 This is my, my new favorite summer jam. It's called Mali Mali and it's just so good. 806 02:42:45,933 --> 02:42:48,233 So just kind of jump around and dance around. 807 02:42:50,233 --> 02:42:51,933 You can do jumping jacks. 808 02:42:53,033 --> 02:42:55,933 Doesn't have to be special. You can jump rope. 809 02:42:59,533 --> 02:43:01,299 Just any form of jumping. One more eight. 810 02:43:08,900 --> 02:43:09,766 Getting the energy up. 811 02:43:11,500 --> 02:43:15,966 Then we're going to ground and bend the legs. I like to reach out, as I bend my legs. 812 02:43:17,200 --> 02:43:21,333 So I'm really feeling that my legs are strong. 813 02:43:22,333 --> 02:43:23,766 They're gonna hold me up. 814 02:43:25,033 --> 02:43:26,366 They're gonna support me. Good. 815 02:43:32,933 --> 02:43:35,599 I like also to draw energy up from the earth. Feel it into the 816 02:43:37,366 --> 02:43:38,532 spirit. Whoo. 817 02:43:47,133 --> 02:43:51,366 Good job. Now we're actually going to circle the hips, watch out. Circle the hips. 818 02:43:57,366 --> 02:44:04,799 It's so important when you're sitting all the time, oh my gosh, somebody is breaking a sweat, that's how I do it, Suzanne. [Beth snaps] Let your spine move, it moves it has different vertebra. A few more jumps. 819 02:44:20,933 --> 02:44:23,999 "Oh my gosh, what is she doing to us?" 820 02:44:33,000 --> 02:44:42,966 Good work. Big breath, spread out, reach to the edges of your screen. Can you reach to the edges of the screen, if you can see yourself? Whoo! Whoo! 821 02:44:49,933 --> 02:44:50,166 Now, big side bend. Whoa...Coming up, 822 02:44:58,066 --> 02:45:02,066 opening the side long, side waist. 823 02:45:04,800 --> 02:45:05,333 Now we twist. 824 02:45:06,933 --> 02:45:08,333 Twisting our body, and other side. 825 02:45:10,666 --> 02:45:11,166 Twist... And twist... And twist. 826 02:45:20,200 --> 02:45:21,100 Dance party it out. [music gets louder] [Beth snaps again] 827 02:46:00,766 --> 02:46:02,199 Nice job. 828 02:46:03,900 --> 02:46:19,300 Shake it out and in the chat. I want you to share, what you're noticing in your body, an observation about what you're sensing. So from the inside, what are you sensing from inside? 829 02:46:28,433 --> 02:46:48,166 "Sweating." "Oh my god, I needed that." "Clearer mind." "Energy." "I feel great." "I need more air!" "Energy." "Magical." "Yes." "Beautiful." You're very welcome. "Relief." Yeah, if we hold this stuff inside you guys, it's only going to become more toxic. 830 02:46:49,266 --> 02:47:09,099 So whatever we're working through, we need to have moments of letting it out. So I did make a little video, I'm putting the link in the chat. It's a 12 minute video movement video, sort of along the same lines. Oh, good, Cindy's giving us her heart rate. Yes, yes. [Beth laughs] 831 02:47:11,666 --> 02:47:22,966 Being silly is excellent. It is excellent for everything. It helps you engage, to see things differently, to play, to forgive, 832 02:47:23,966 --> 02:47:27,832 to feel optimistic. So thank you so much Brian for inviting me to do this. 833 02:47:28,366 --> 02:47:37,966 Thank you to everyone who participated, and even those who maybe thought they were going to participate, but, you know, you can still watch the video in the privacy of your own home, maybe get your whole family to do it, 834 02:47:38,233 --> 02:47:43,666 or your roommate, or whomever, because at this point we all need to move. So take care you guys. 835 02:47:55,500 --> 02:47:57,466 Monica Garcia: So that was invigorating. 836 02:47:58,766 --> 02:48:05,632 Welcome back everyone. I hope that you all participated. Thank you so much, Beth. 837 02:48:06,166 --> 02:48:18,332 I really needed that I was having a lot of issues. I'm having a lot of issues right now with my lower back. So, that really helped a lot and I can feel it already. I can feel the benefits already. So thank you so much. 838 02:48:20,233 --> 02:48:30,533 Well, for those of you who have not met me, I am Dean Garcia, and I am my division is Humanities, ESL, English, of course, Student Life, 839 02:48:30,933 --> 02:48:46,566 and I'm also the Dean of Student Conduct as well as the I lead the Behavioral Intervention Team, our wonderful BIT team. But as the administrator for theme three, I get the privilege of introducing our theme. 840 02:48:48,366 --> 02:49:05,399 The theme three Leadership and Racial Issues Civic Engagement is very fortunate to have 25 participants and, of course we have room for many, many more. We have a lot of work to do, and we need a lot of individuals to do it. 841 02:49:09,433 --> 02:49:17,866 I'm sorry, did I? Okay, so it was very surprising to have so many initial participants, since many of us had no idea what the theme was about. 842 02:49:18,333 --> 02:49:22,699 Most expressed that was the reason why they joined this particular theme. 843 02:49:23,700 --> 02:49:44,000 This is not a problem, and, and it really allowed us to dream. It allowed us to be creative, and like with any dream, you must have a plan in order to make it a reality. Tamarra Coleman, Cherisse Meichtry, and Junior Nali will present to you our plan. Okay, Junior take it away. 844 02:49:48,233 --> 02:49:50,899 Junior Nali: So when, when we're talking 845 02:49:51,000 --> 02:49:52,700 about leadership and 846 02:49:52,700 --> 02:49:59,000 racial issues, and civic engagement, we're talking about students finding their voice. So 847 02:49:59,633 --> 02:50:08,533 when we're talking about students find their voice, we talked about how can we, the college, equip the students with the tools needed 848 02:50:08,866 --> 02:50:27,532 so they can find their voice? How can a college help the students to feel like their voices are heard? How do we help them advocate? How do we make sure that the students are able to voice what they want to the community in an efficient way, not just like 849 02:50:28,666 --> 02:50:45,699 say it for in not efficient way? So the way we're doing this, and that we plan to do, is we're planning to do workshops which I already participated in the MC L.E.A.D.S., which is a leadership program, which helped me a lot. 850 02:50:47,000 --> 02:50:57,666 and it's all about helping students advocates and making sure they have the right tools, just like we can see in the picture, in the picture here we have the Moorpark College students in 2019 851 02:50:59,066 --> 02:51:10,866 they had a peaceful rally against assaults rifles and assaults and against Islamophobia as a response to New Zealand mass shooting and next slide please. 852 02:51:15,766 --> 02:51:29,266 Yeah and we recognize that change is not gonna come out of nowhere. So change is going to be gradual and being ready for this. We have small, medium, and long term goals. 853 02:51:29,733 --> 02:51:39,499 So to get things ready, we have a semester long goal, which is going to be having leadership and advocacy workshops, which are going to start it going 854 02:51:40,266 --> 02:51:46,632 and it is is more for a small group of people, for the moment, and it's achievable in a semester. 855 02:51:47,266 --> 02:51:57,666 The biggest the bigger part of the medium term goal, is after we have the students knowing how to advocate, and after we have a base for identifying in 856 02:51:58,500 --> 02:52:08,566 going against racial issues we're going to create opportunities for story sharing. So we're going to have opportunities for students to voice their opinions and voice their stories to the community. 857 02:52:09,266 --> 02:52:16,499 And after that, our long term and what we want to achieve is to update the missions, visions, and values of the community. 858 02:52:16,966 --> 02:52:23,432 And that's going to change the whole way the college system, is going to work. So we're going to have a gradual transition to them. 859 02:52:23,900 --> 02:52:29,500 And while all that is happening, we're going to make sure that students have their voices heard through voting. 860 02:52:29,900 --> 02:52:35,300 We see that a lot of young people, they're not going to having their voices heard through voting, because they don't believe this is a thing, 861 02:52:35,633 --> 02:52:46,399 so we're going to keep working on the power of vote, while all of that happens. So to explain a little bit more about our goals and how they're going to be achieved, we have Professor Coleman, 862 02:52:46,866 --> 02:52:55,432 who was the professor who made an appearance on the MC Leads program, which I was happy to be in that class, and she's gonna take over from here. 863 02:52:58,000 --> 02:52:59,500 Tamarra Coleman: Thank you. Am I audible? 864 02:53:00,833 --> 02:53:01,299 Yes. 865 02:53:01,300 --> 02:53:01,833 Junior: Yes, yes. 866 02:53:02,333 --> 02:53:07,199 Tamarra: I love Junior that you're so ambitious and you said the whole system is going to change. I love that. [Tamarra and Junior laugh] [Junior]: Thank you. [Tamarra]: I'm not preppin' 867 02:53:10,066 --> 02:53:11,266 for that, but I love that. 868 02:53:13,733 --> 02:53:17,699 I just want to talk about the first arrow here to leadership and advocacy 869 02:53:18,133 --> 02:53:31,866 workshops. I feel like I'm coming full circle here, remembering in 2018 at the Strategic Planning Retreat. I was standing in front of a lot of you advocating for civic engagement 870 02:53:32,366 --> 02:53:43,466 in the curriculum and thinking about the role of higher ed and civic engagement. And of course, we were in a moment that was much more, I'll use the word benign, in terms of the political climate, 871 02:53:44,000 --> 02:53:53,033 and folks are just sort of thinking about it as "Okay this is interesting, this is, you know, could be useful stuff," but I feel like now in this 872 02:53:53,633 --> 02:54:06,633 very political, racialized moment, all of a sudden civic engagement as a top priority for everyone, but I want to be clear, as I'm talking about this and I put two links in the chat. One is to an article by the 873 02:54:08,933 --> 02:54:15,666 college's Association of Colleges and universities where they talk about higher education on the role of higher education in 874 02:54:16,333 --> 02:54:29,166 civic education, right? Why it should be a part of the institution in and of itself and all aspects of the institution. There's another link that I put in the chat that talks that gives you the profile, the job profile of a community 875 02:54:29,700 --> 02:54:43,200 organizer. We often think about the Community Organizer as as an activist and those particular skills to make change, but we don't think about the transferable skills that are a part of community organizing that can also transfer to 876 02:54:44,800 --> 02:54:54,266 private sector jobs and other jobs beyond just community organizing, so those are links that you can look at. But the workshops that we're thinking about, it's a series of three workshops that 877 02:54:56,100 --> 02:55:08,733 sort of work on top of each other in some ways. The first one is a advocacy workshop which would be suitable for any person just wanting to use their voice, right, they want to make change on a small issue. 878 02:55:09,933 --> 02:55:15,066 So it's really about what are the steps that are needed in advocating. 879 02:55:15,766 --> 02:55:25,166 Learning how to figure out what your objectives and your goal is. Learning how to figure out who the decision maker is and targeting that decision maker so that you're actually getting the change that you want. 880 02:55:25,500 --> 02:55:37,600 Learning how to navigate the legislative process because that is a process and also thinking about other processes as well. But that part of the, the role of a advocate, if you're going to be effective, is understanding 881 02:55:38,200 --> 02:55:46,000 each of those steps. The second one in the series would be an actual community organizing training, which is much more in depth, 882 02:55:47,133 --> 02:55:54,399 and and that is really for the person who wants to move beyond what they're doing as an individual and sees that the change they want 883 02:55:54,700 --> 02:56:09,433 will involve a larger community. So how do you get the community and the people and the stakeholders involved? The third workshop is for for one of those folks who feels like "I did all of this other stuff, but I really want to 884 02:56:13,133 --> 02:56:27,499 build my ability as an individual to connect to people," and it's the the public narrative. How do I frame my story and connect my story to a larger audience in an effort to make change? And this is the one of the things that 885 02:56:28,366 --> 02:56:41,032 former President Barack Obama was so good at, is framing his story as our story. Right? And what does that look like, and how does that actually affect change, and get people engaged in the work? So 886 02:56:41,466 --> 02:56:47,166 again, the series is, yes in this moment about racial justice, but I don't want to lose sight of 887 02:56:47,900 --> 02:56:58,300 of how civic engagement is something that is useful beyond a single issue or a single area and that this is something that shouldn't just be something we're thinking about right now 888 02:56:59,266 --> 02:57:03,566 due to what's happening on the national stage, but this is something that needs to be a part of our institution. 889 02:57:05,200 --> 02:57:07,966 I think next up we have Cherisse Meichtry. 890 02:57:10,933 --> 02:57:19,133 Cherisse Meichtry: Thank you, Tammy. So one of the many ways we can make our voices heard is through voting. Sometimes it may not seem like your vote matters 891 02:57:19,233 --> 02:57:19,933 but it does 892 02:57:20,466 --> 02:57:21,732 Your vote is powerful 893 02:57:21,733 --> 02:57:38,799 and has the potential to influence and decide the future. As you saw our action priorities slide, the power of the vote ran alongside all of our goals as something we see as an ongoing effort, promoting civic engagement simultaneously with our workshops, events, and other activities. 894 02:57:40,033 --> 02:57:49,533 Many people are preparing for the upcoming presidential election in November. However, in addition to emphasizing the importance of voting in general, 895 02:57:49,966 --> 02:57:59,632 we need to stress that voting should be consistent, and it doesn't only happen every four years, it starts here on our campus with student government, the voice of our students. 896 02:58:00,133 --> 02:58:12,666 The senate's, the voice of our classified employees and faculty, voting within our unions to represent our voices as a whole, and lastly, local, state, and congressional elections that directly impact each one of us. 897 02:58:13,900 --> 02:58:25,600 Student turnout has continued to increase in the last several years. This year millennials and Gen Z will be the largest share of eligible voters, but due to their lower voting rates, 898 02:58:26,233 --> 02:58:43,533 have not been the largest share and previous elections. Majority of our students fit into this age range. As a college, we should continue to encourage conversations, getting involved, and educate on the power of the vote to make sure that all of our voices are heard. Next slide please. 899 02:58:46,933 --> 02:59:03,066 Mission, vision and values. Who are we as Moorpark College? What is our purpose and where are we going? The mission, vision and value statements help provide a framework for strategy and decision making and helps us accomplish what we've set out to do. 900 02:59:04,333 --> 02:59:11,533 President Sokenu asked all of us to get involved, but not just to talk, to create action items for change. 901 02:59:12,233 --> 02:59:19,066 Our larger long term goal is to update our mission, vision and values statements to reflect the work that we are doing as a whole 902 02:59:19,600 --> 02:59:24,600 and our institutional growth and commitment to anti-racism and social justice. 903 02:59:25,400 --> 02:59:34,233 We currently have four groups working together to help create that change, and within those groups, we're working on individual endeavors, but we need you. 904 02:59:34,966 --> 02:59:53,966 All of you. We need your buy in, your commitment, your ability to adapt and grow, and ideological shift, your team effort to work together and continue the culture that Moorpark College is known for. So please join us, so we can be the change. Thank you. 905 03:00:15,133 --> 03:00:18,233 Johnny Conley: I think Luke and I are supposed to be doing theme four, I don't know if... 906 03:00:23,500 --> 03:00:24,500 Okay, here we go. 907 03:00:24,966 --> 03:00:25,466 We're all set, 908 03:00:25,466 --> 03:00:25,632 Luke, you on? 909 03:00:26,666 --> 03:00:27,299 Luke Barrella: Yeah, all good. 910 03:00:28,033 --> 03:00:28,433 Johnny: Great. Lookin' good. Lookin' good over there. 911 03:00:31,800 --> 03:00:32,400 Luke: Thank you. 912 03:00:33,133 --> 03:00:34,766 Johnny: Good afternoon, or good eve- good morning. Wait, what time is it...yeah. 913 03:00:36,200 --> 03:00:40,833 Good morning, my name is Johnny Conley I serve as the Equity Director. Luke do you want to introduce yourself? 914 03:00:46,333 --> 03:00:47,366 Do you want to introduce yourself, Luke? 915 03:00:49,100 --> 03:00:59,333 Luke: Sorry, sorry about that. Okay. Hi, everyone. My name is Luke Barrella, and I am the current president of the RSI Society of persons with disabilities, and in addition to that, I currently serve as a secretary for engineering club. 916 03:01:00,300 --> 03:01:16,233 Johnny: Great. Thank you. Before we get started with our presentation. I'd like to do a couple of shout outs and thank us to our fellow co-leaders, Khushnur, as well as Jodi, and over 30 plus of our team members that met over the summer, the last week. Next slide. 917 03:01:19,300 --> 03:01:25,466 So as we're looking at student services, a whole and a lot of it is connected with the last three presentations, looking at what 918 03:01:26,133 --> 03:01:38,433 Julius has had stated in regards to his charge for the campus, is looking at our purpose. So here you'll see that we have three, four areas that we're going to talk about for our agenda is our purpose, commitment, cultural competence, and community. Next slide. 919 03:01:40,466 --> 03:01:46,499 So as we look at our purpose and student services as a whole, we're looking to really look at a cultural competent and inclusive 920 03:01:47,066 --> 03:01:54,999 students services for all of our students, especially our DI groups and making sure that we have a wraparound services that are that are actually identifying some of the needs 921 03:01:55,366 --> 03:02:03,299 that we want. A lot of the data that we've had and more in particular, or more recently, was the student panels that we had this summer, 922 03:02:03,866 --> 03:02:07,832 talking about sense of belonging. Being a co-advisor for the BSU, 923 03:02:08,400 --> 03:02:19,100 the veterans, as well as our men charter, a lot of our students are voicing about not having a sense of belonging, as they are in the classroom, or walking around campus, or even been in some of our service areas. 924 03:02:20,000 --> 03:02:26,100 So that is really the backbone of our presentation, and what the work that we want to do as a whole 925 03:02:26,800 --> 03:02:36,866 for student services. And a lot of this is going to be connected to our C Equity Plan that we are on record for three years, as well as our ED Master Plan when we'll be looking at the equity gaps. Next slide. 926 03:02:38,833 --> 03:02:42,833 So our commitment, so the 30 plus folks that met you know the last couple of 927 03:02:43,300 --> 03:02:53,300 times this summer, we're really looking at a mission, a vision, and a pledge, as grounded in social justice and keeping us accountable in that we're advocating for all of our students, 928 03:02:53,833 --> 03:03:02,433 especially our DI groups and looking to where we can have a program plan in every student services area where it's grounded in social justice. 929 03:03:03,833 --> 03:03:19,266 We also are looking at assessing our student services practices and identifying a model by working with Oleg and his team on creating a pre and post evaluation and creating three subcommittees in some of these areas that will talk about today. Next slide. 930 03:03:21,400 --> 03:03:35,900 So, here with our cultural competency, we're really looking at where we are today, you know, and going back 5,10, years from now, on what are our services. And DI group, thank you Julius is just the personally impacted group. Sorry for the... 931 03:03:38,333 --> 03:03:47,966 for some clarity. So we're looking at a commitment for all of our students services coming down in Counseling, FYE, EOP and S, ACCESS, Veterans, Foster Youth, 932 03:03:48,433 --> 03:03:55,499 every single student services department and area and looking at how we are working with our DI groups in particular, 933 03:03:55,933 --> 03:04:04,733 and seeing how they feel when they come into our services. Do we have any biases, potentially, as we're looking at course overload units? 934 03:04:05,033 --> 03:04:12,599 The way they're being served through Financial Aid and looking at the petition SAP appeals and learning more about how our students are 935 03:04:13,633 --> 03:04:22,599 pretty much feeling in our, in our areas. Our self evaluation or self reflection, we've had a lot of talks over the summer, 936 03:04:23,300 --> 03:04:32,033 as well as another local group that met over the summer in regards to looking at articles, and really looking at ourselves in the mirror, and being truly honest 937 03:04:32,366 --> 03:04:44,766 about ourselves, and taking an inventory of our biases we all have them, and looking at scholarly articles and books, and having a real dialogue throughout the course of this next year that we are approaching on next week. 938 03:04:45,800 --> 03:04:53,066 And then lastly is, you know, we've had Frank Harris on our campus a couple of times, and he's had landed his services to come onto campus and 939 03:04:53,466 --> 03:05:02,799 to help our institution potentially implement a student services action toolkit. What that looks like? We don't know yet. We're definitely in the beginning stages of that. 940 03:05:03,300 --> 03:05:15,833 But we are partnering with him to come on for the fall semester to start putting some things in place that we can implement in student services, as well as looking at the other areas and the other three groups and see how Frank can actually help all of us. Next slide. Luke? 941 03:05:19,400 --> 03:05:33,133 Luke: Okay. So, hello everyone, again, my name is Luke Barrella. First, I definitely want to say I'm actually honored to be here today. And now, before I talk about community and our ideas that we want to implement in the next year, I want to give a little bit of background about 942 03:05:33,133 --> 03:05:35,399 who I am as a student and why I work so hard. 943 03:05:35,600 --> 03:05:46,800 So first I'm half Japanese and half Italian, and second, I've been disabled. I have been diagnosed with Asperger's syndrome, since the age of three years old, and in addition to that, I also identify as bisexual. 944 03:05:47,666 --> 03:05:54,666 And for me to kind of touch on like my experiences as a student, I kind of want to talk and bring to the table 945 03:05:56,066 --> 03:06:03,399 my experiences of disabled student, and this is for me, it's just like growing up and not necessarily just on Moorpark College's campus but, 946 03:06:03,766 --> 03:06:15,766 you know, I've always had, like felt this stigmatism as a student with a disability, and for me, you know, the reason why this is important to me is because, you know, 947 03:06:16,533 --> 03:06:23,433 I've always felt the need to like work harder and prove myself just because of my disability, and over the past few days, I've 948 03:06:23,900 --> 03:06:33,866 watched different videos, I watched the Black Student Panel and hearing their stories, hearing how their stories identify with mine and 949 03:06:34,533 --> 03:06:43,066 being able to be here is truly an honor, and why it's really extremely important to me that I'd be here to talk about this today. 950 03:06:44,000 --> 03:06:49,100 You know, I mean, I think that the need for cultural competence as well as a self reflection for all for student services 951 03:06:49,733 --> 03:07:07,133 really atones to what we are doing as a campus, and for me, it really, I want to thank Director Conley and director and Director Dic-Dickens, as well as Dr. Khushnur about giving me an opportunity to use my voice and to talk with all 300 of you today. 952 03:07:08,533 --> 03:07:09,933 So now moving on to community. 953 03:07:10,933 --> 03:07:18,499 Over the past few weeks, we have been discussing a lot about what we can do to help amplify the student voice, and the biggest thing 954 03:07:19,100 --> 03:07:28,733 that we have really discussed and have wanted to implement into our, into our academic calendar this upcoming year, is uh, student town halls. 955 03:07:29,233 --> 03:07:36,933 And for me this is very important because, for me, I am one students out of 15,000. 956 03:07:37,666 --> 03:07:54,732 And what we need to do is we need to hear the perspectives of not only the four of us, the four of us student leads here today, but, as well as the perspective of other students, you know, this, the perspective of other students who may have had different experiences that I don't know about. 957 03:07:55,833 --> 03:07:58,533 In addition to that, it can also serve as a feedback service for us, 958 03:07:59,666 --> 03:08:10,866 to help us know if we're going in the right direction. Now the second bullet point is students basis, and for me, students basis, I can identify with personally because... 959 03:08:11,900 --> 03:08:20,000 Oh, okay. Sorry, I thought, I lost my connection for a second, but students or students basis identifies with me personally, excuse me. 960 03:08:20,933 --> 03:08:28,066 Because over the past year, when I was serving as a treasurer for a Circle K International we would oftentimes have to book classrooms in advance, 961 03:08:28,433 --> 03:08:37,233 and sometimes, you know, I know clubs sometimes they can't have their meetings because they can't book classrooms, and so the idea of a student space 962 03:08:37,666 --> 03:08:45,232 where students can actively meet students, you know, different clubs like Black Student Union, Muslim Student Union, Spectrum Club, 963 03:08:46,100 --> 03:08:52,800 Latinx, and other every other club on campus can like meet up and have like a safe space, to like meet with other people outside of like club time. 964 03:08:53,400 --> 03:09:04,833 And, in addition to that, it allows students to, [clears throat], sorry my voice a little bit today, but it allows students to feel more of a part of a campus, to feel more 965 03:09:05,766 --> 03:09:15,666 at home, and in addition to that, being able to utilize that space and decorate a space will allow students to really have more of a presence on campus and feel more welcome. 966 03:09:16,333 --> 03:09:24,133 And finally, the student services box is something that I kind of came up with, because I recognize that oftentimes students may not be able to attend the town halls, 967 03:09:24,566 --> 03:09:35,366 and so the idea of the students are responses to provide an outlet for students to write letters, and to use their voice throughout the entire year instead of having to attend one student town hall. 968 03:09:36,066 --> 03:09:51,432 And so in that sense, you know, I really hope that these ideas are pushed forward and I overall thank you guys too for allowing me to speak today. And so with that, I'd like to hand it back to Director Conley. 969 03:09:52,900 --> 03:09:54,800 Johnny: Thank you Luke, thank you for sharing 970 03:09:54,800 --> 03:09:58,500 your story and being vulnerable for all of us to hear your story, 971 03:09:59,533 --> 03:10:12,233 and thank you so much. Very much appreciated and definitely has shed a lot of light, you know, obviously, with 300 plus folks that are on this, this webinar right now. Great job. Thank you so much, Luke and we're definitely happy for you to be part of the work group. 972 03:10:13,266 --> 03:10:13,832 Next slide. 973 03:10:15,066 --> 03:10:20,099 So as we wrap up with the timeline. We have a timeline to keep our group accountable. 974 03:10:20,533 --> 03:10:27,966 So what we are looking at for this coming fall is to host two student town hall meetings that are really focused on some of the needs that our students are 975 03:10:28,500 --> 03:10:36,066 talking about, you know, we're going to go back and refer to the summer webinars from our student athletes, as well as the other student from the BSU and the men. 976 03:10:36,633 --> 03:10:44,099 In our discussions we learned a lot about our undocumented students that kind of experience a lot of racism and discrimination when they had Undocumented 977 03:10:44,966 --> 03:10:53,566 Week in October. So we want to definitely you know address those as well. Begin the collaboration with Dr. Frank Harris to develop our student services tool kit. 978 03:10:54,600 --> 03:11:04,933 And then as a student services division, looking at a article, articles as well as books, for us to begin reading and begin to have that dialogue and having those real 979 03:11:05,733 --> 03:11:12,233 real uncomfortable and I say uncomfortable, which is a good thing, I think we all need to be uncomfortable at times, I think we've been too comfortable, 980 03:11:12,633 --> 03:11:22,133 and this is the time to be uncomfortable and look at calling each other out in a respectful, professional way, but also, in a sense, it's a teachable moment, just like we teach our students. 981 03:11:23,366 --> 03:11:32,099 And then launching like Luke had mentioned, our student services suggestion box as well as learn working with the IR team to develop our assessment tools for bias practices. 982 03:11:35,066 --> 03:11:41,932 And in spring, we will continue to host two additional town halls. Look at continuing reading, 983 03:11:42,200 --> 03:11:48,433 look at a mid-year progress report, you know, I'm huge on progress reports, I think the group is, just kind of look at where we are at and assessing 984 03:11:48,766 --> 03:11:55,832 the work that we did for the last four months, and seeing where we are, where we need to go, and what adjustments we may need to take place. 985 03:11:56,433 --> 03:12:01,899 In addition to continue to assess our student services suggestion box, so we can enhance that for our students input. 986 03:12:02,433 --> 03:12:09,399 And for summer, continue with the, the town hall meetings, and evaluate, and submit an annual report to our executive team as well as our deans 987 03:12:10,033 --> 03:12:19,199 as a work group. And then looking at a summer student services retreat. I think that gives us an opportunity to have two semesters underneath their belt, 988 03:12:19,833 --> 03:12:27,633 and the coordination of our Vice President of Students Support to kind of look at how we can prepare for fall 21 depending on for remote or not by then, 989 03:12:27,933 --> 03:12:37,833 but be able to kind of go back and do an evaluation on how we did some successes some opportunities and like a swat report, essentially, and be able to implement that for fall 21. 990 03:12:38,766 --> 03:12:43,699 And then moving into fall 21 hosting two another additional town halls. 991 03:12:44,066 --> 03:12:51,199 Creating a student services ally training, based on what we learned from the last year, so we can kind of duplicate our services to other folks. 992 03:12:51,533 --> 03:13:01,866 And reevaluate our assessment tools and continue our reading and discussion. I want to close, and Luke, if you have anything else to share. Go ahead. But as I close 993 03:13:02,433 --> 03:13:09,499 we're requesting more people. I mean, we don't need the choir. Julius and other folks had mentioned it's always a choir, you know, being black 994 03:13:10,033 --> 03:13:21,266 and always have to kind of, you know, also have to kind of educate a lot of folks on these matters, being part of the tMOCAs group, we need everybody to join in outside of just a choir, 995 03:13:21,600 --> 03:13:34,533 and really, truly look in the mirror and be honest with ourselves, and look how our students are in pain, how they are in the classroom, some of the discrimination and biases, as they are trying to get on the campus and they're getting off the 118, 996 03:13:35,633 --> 03:13:42,699 and getting off on Collins after going to the grocery store in the community. This is what our students are dealing with, in addition to food insecurities. 997 03:13:43,566 --> 03:13:58,132 And really doing a self reflection on our biases, and having a year commitment, you know, we, we are looking to partner with the other three groups. So we're aligned with all of our plans that we have our campus and master plan in particular, 998 03:13:59,200 --> 03:14:05,733 and able to have, call our colleagues out when we see something not right, 999 03:14:06,433 --> 03:14:20,899 and be okay with that and not get ridiculed or looked at a different way. And I think if we do it in a professional teachable moment I think that will speak volumes, where we can start changing the culture at Moorpark, knowing that we've been open for business for over 50 years. 1000 03:14:22,733 --> 03:14:34,099 Outside of that, we look forward to you all joining our group. We will be looking at of selecting folks to participate in our subcommittees in those three areas that we just reached to and talked about, 1001 03:14:34,800 --> 03:14:43,933 and being change agents, like Marra just had mentioned, yeah we're looking to be change agents on having things that we're doing in social, students services that are grounded in social justice. 1002 03:14:45,333 --> 03:14:48,866 Luke, did you have any last few words or anything you want to close as a student? 1003 03:14:49,233 --> 03:14:49,666 Luke: Yeah. 1004 03:14:50,666 --> 03:14:52,032 I mean, I just want to say 1005 03:14:52,733 --> 03:15:03,633 again, thank you for letting me speak today, and in addition to that, I just want to point out that, after hearing like all the different voices on the student body, I hope you guys realize that, 1006 03:15:04,666 --> 03:15:10,032 you know when you make a wish on star, you guys are, sorry my voice is so weird today. 1007 03:15:11,333 --> 03:15:27,533 You guys are our star, and I hope that you guys know that we I at least, appreciate everything that you guys are doing as a student, and I hope that in the future that everyone else will also appreciate our efforts as well. Thank you. 1008 03:15:29,600 --> 03:15:30,133 Johnny: Thank you all. 1009 03:15:32,333 --> 03:15:37,133 Julius: Thank you everyone. You can see that we have phenomenal energy 1010 03:15:37,633 --> 03:15:57,433 in our students, in our classified professionals, in our faculty, and in our managers, there is commitment to doing this work, and that commitment also has behind it a focused organized attempt in making sure that we live up the dream of this college. 1011 03:15:58,966 --> 03:16:11,699 We are looking to engage, and inform, and to bring about transformational change and that needs transformational leadership. Leadership is all of us. 1012 03:16:12,633 --> 03:16:24,299 What you can see, and what you can hear, and what's been presented to you by these four groups, is that each one of you, each one of us has the key to addressing hate and racism. 1013 03:16:25,033 --> 03:16:34,966 Each one of us has the key to helping the experience of our DACA students, of our trans students, of our black students, of our athletes, of our female students. 1014 03:16:35,366 --> 03:16:47,266 Each one of you, and especially each one of you has the responsibility to affirm the experience of every single student who comes across your desk, comes into your classroom 1015 03:16:47,866 --> 03:16:56,766 and the way in which we do that work is by joining a group, joining a group and attempting to address the issues addressed. 1016 03:16:58,333 --> 03:17:04,033 Transformational leadership, transformational change, and action. 1017 03:17:05,600 --> 03:17:14,933 We need to get beyond the hierarchies, faculty, staff, administrators, students and work together, these groups testify to that. 1018 03:17:17,133 --> 03:17:24,033 Thank you to the work group members, we will continue to engage in these work groups over the course of the fall semester, 1019 03:17:24,333 --> 03:17:37,599 and our and our charge is that towards the end of the fall semester we'll present to you, what we found. The groups will continue to meet and our next update group for the for the four themes is August 31, 1020 03:17:38,166 --> 03:17:45,366 and at that point in time, we will continue to share the information with the campus community so you can follow our progress. 1021 03:17:48,033 --> 03:17:58,366 It is important that we be the change you would like to see in the world and that means, we start and ourselves and we start at Moorpark College. 1022 03:17:59,833 --> 03:18:23,399 We are a place of kindness. We are a place of motivation. We're a place where dreams come true. And we are a place, we are a place where some folks feel left out. Some folks feel marginalized. Some folks are yearning to articulate and speak, are yearning and articulating to participate. 1023 03:18:25,233 --> 03:18:35,999 I ask of you, because I know your hearts that you'll participate whichever way you can, or you'll mentor and support somebody who's participating in this work. 1024 03:18:37,266 --> 03:18:39,432 Change cannot happen without you. 1025 03:18:41,533 --> 03:18:51,533 We come close to the end of our time together in this convocation, and we want to celebrate those individuals who have been with the college 20 plus years. 1026 03:18:52,333 --> 03:19:08,233 Think of the number of convocations those folks have been to, think of the numbers of committee meetings those folks have participated in, letters of reference they've written. Think of the numbers of students who they have comforted, they have challenged. 1027 03:19:09,333 --> 03:19:21,999 Think of the number of administrators that they have groomed. Think of the number of students who have not, who could have not become 20 year veterans and 20 plus year veterans of our institution. 1028 03:19:23,033 --> 03:19:27,399 That is Moorpark College. We are Moorpark College. 1029 03:19:28,400 --> 03:19:38,166 I want to thank each one of you before the video for the 20 plus years folks comes on. I want to particularly thank those folks who've worked here for 20 plus years. We stand on your shoulders. 1030 03:19:38,500 --> 03:19:47,300 Those of us who are here now, either in leadership positions or who are beginning our first semester at Moorpark College, we stand on your shoulders. 1031 03:19:47,900 --> 03:19:59,466 We are ready to take on the legacy that you leave us and we are ready to take that legacy and make the very best of it so that we can serve our students and our community better. 1032 03:20:00,500 --> 03:20:07,066 I thank you so much for joining this morning. We are Moorpark College. We will look at the la- the folks who are 1033 03:20:07,733 --> 03:20:22,699 we're celebrating 20 plus years, and from there we will transition into the Academic Senate meeting and just for Academic Senate members. So please run the video, in celebration of our 20 plus years colleagues and friends. 1034 03:20:26,360 --> 03:20:30,199 On screen text: Moorpark College 20 Years & Over Services Awards 20 plus years 1035 03:20:30,200 --> 03:20:33,900 20 Years Classified 1036 03:20:33,900 --> 03:20:37,120 Maria Urenda Financial Aid 1037 03:20:37,160 --> 03:20:50,866 “It has been a pleasure working for this District and Moorpark College for the past 20 years as a Financial Aid Specialist and recently in the capacity of Chief Steward for SEIU 99 representing the wonderful Classified Professionals of VCCCD. I have been blessed to have made close friendships and to have developed great working relationships throughout this time. I am grateful and look forward to continued years of service.” 1038 03:20:50,866 --> 03:20:54,300 Kim Watters Institutional Effectiveness 1039 03:20:54,360 --> 03:21:07,833 “When I was hired 20 + years ago and introduced by Dr. Eva Conrad at Convocation, she comically noted that the Righetti Dynasty was in full force as both of my parents, Steve & LaDonna also worked at Moorpark College. Moorpark College isn’t just a place to go to for work, it’s a home away from home, a second family. I miss you all and look forward to visiting with my family again! As always, be good humans. From the Broadway musical Hamilton, ‘Talk less. Smile more.’” 1040 03:21:07,833 --> 03:21:11,166 Allam Elhussini Fiscal 1041 03:21:11,166 --> 03:21:25,032 “As the saying goes ‘Choose a job you love and you will never have to work a day in your life’. It has been a pleasure working with everyone here for the past 20 years. I am looking forward to more.” 1042 03:21:25,033 --> 03:21:28,566 Bonnie Lara Access 1043 03:21:28,566 --> 03:21:42,200 “A gentle word, a smile, and patience work miracles for those we assist. Doing something you truly believe in makes all the difference in the world. Loving what you do makes the passing of time seem like the blink of one’s eye. Working with good people, and community in the work environment are also key. Remember you must work hard for what you want. It won’t come to you without patience and a willingness to accept that change happens slowly. Stay the course and fight for what you believe will make you and others love working for VCCCD and Moorpark College.” 1044 03:21:42,230 --> 03:21:59,933 Rocio Avina Cervantes Institutional Effectiveness... Mary Anne Beck Physical Sciences & CTE... Scott Colvin M&O... 1045 03:21:59,933 --> 03:22:11,866 Ivan Small Information Technology... Obalid Younan Access 1046 03:22:11,866 --> 03:22:16,099 20 Years Faculty 1047 03:22:16,100 --> 03:22:19,433 Katherine J. Courtney Biology 1048 03:22:19,433 --> 03:22:30,299 “I’ve been lucky to share beautiful and important things that I love with my students.” 1049 03:22:30,300 --> 03:22:33,790 Phillip D. Abramoff Mathematics 1050 03:22:33,830 --> 03:22:42,799 “Believe not so much in positive thinking. Believe more in positive doing.” 1051 03:22:42,800 --> 03:22:45,900 Pamela Kennedy-Luna Mathematics 1052 03:22:45,900 --> 03:22:54,933 “Thank you for 20 remarkable years at Moorpark College. Time flies when you’re doing something you truly love.” 1053 03:22:54,933 --> 03:22:58,466 Jeffrey S. Baker English 1054 03:22:58,466 --> 03:23:08,230 “I’m so grateful for the past 20 years at Moorpark College. Thank you all so much for your support over the last two decades!” 1055 03:23:08,260 --> 03:23:11,033 Giselle Ramirez Counseling 1056 03:23:11,033 --> 03:23:24,066 “Seems like just yesterday I stepped foot on the Moorpark College campus….here we are 20 years later! I have had the privilege to work with some amazing people. I have found a career I am so passionate about. Many have seen me grow from a teenager who knew nothing about college to a student assistant, financial aid tech, EOPS counselor, and facilitator. This is my home, my second family…there’s nowhere else I’d rather be. Here’s to (at least) 20 more!" 1057 03:23:24,066 --> 03:23:27,330 Jill A. McCall Communication Studies 1058 03:23:27,350 --> 03:23:36,533 “Do what you love. Be who you really are. Have honest, hilarious, powerful friendships. Live with purpose. Check, check, check, and check. Thank you Moorpark!" 1059 03:23:36,533 --> 03:23:40,899 25 Years Faculty 1060 03:23:40,900 --> 03:23:43,700 Letrisha Mai Counseling 1061 03:23:43,700 --> 03:23:50,766 Letrisha Mai: Hello everyone. Well, I can't believe it's been 25 years since I first started at the college. First I want to acknowledge and 1062 03:23:50,766 --> 03:23:58,732 thank Dr. Darlene Pacheco for having hiring me back in 1995 when I was a recent graduate from Cal State Northridge. 1063 03:23:58,730 --> 03:24:04,733 To the Counseling Department and entire Moorpark College community, it has been a wonderful experience and a great honor to be 1064 03:24:04,733 --> 03:24:11,766 working alongside with you for the past 25 and I hope to have many more years working closely with you. 1065 03:24:11,766 --> 03:24:20,132 You are part of my ever growing extended family. I thank you for always being kind and patient with me. Congratulations to our new 1066 03:24:20,133 --> 03:24:21,299 employees, 1067 03:24:21,300 --> 03:24:29,666 faculty, classified, and management. I hope Moorpark College will become your second family and home as it has been of mine. 1068 03:24:29,666 --> 03:24:35,532 Stay well, and best of luck for the fall semester. Take care everyone. 1069 03:24:35,533 --> 03:24:40,999 30 years!!! 1070 03:24:41,000 --> 03:24:45,200 John Baker Biology 1071 03:24:45,230 --> 03:24:49,040 “30 years?” un-%#@*&*^=$- real! 1072 03:24:49,060 --> 03:24:52,266 What was it like again? 1073 03:24:52,266 --> 03:24:55,100 Oh yeah. The Dude recalls… 1074 03:24:55,130 --> 03:25:00,300 …our staff was less diverse, but our zoo was amazing! And our anthropology classes were always packed. 1075 03:25:00,300 --> 03:25:04,860 …you were automatically granted tenure in your third year 1076 03:25:04,900 --> 03:25:09,832 Our union was strong.” [On screen text]: Larry Miller, Moorpark College Biology Professor. Larry Miller, 2000-2001 Distinguished Faculty Chair. Larry Miller, AFT President. 1077 03:25:09,833 --> 03:25:14,499 “…faculty were looked up to 1078 03:25:14,500 --> 03:25:17,766 We encouraged… 1079 03:25:17,766 --> 03:25:21,899 We encouraged our students to vote. 1080 03:25:21,900 --> 03:25:26,166 We must continue to encourage our students to vote. 1081 03:25:26,166 --> 03:25:30,740 To vote as if their lives depended on it. Because they do! 1082 03:25:30,760 --> 03:25:37,633 Thanks!” 1083 03:25:37,633 --> 03:25:42,499 We thank you all 1084 03:25:42,500 --> 03:25:47,300 For your service 1085 03:25:47,300 --> 03:25:52,933 You ROCK!