Report: the January 21, 2016, meeting of the Academic Senate Rep Council
During public comments, Brittany brought up the unfortunate “free speech” episode of January 20 (i.e., the day before). Brittany and others described what actually occurred. An effort is being made to organize some sort of response, a public forum, which will help students understand what occurred and the challenges presented by such events (“hate” speech). As you know, thanks especially to Brittany and Anissa, the Director of Student Life, the forum was held yesterday [Tuesday]. It went well and was well attended.
Our own Summer S provided a brief “basic skills” report. She mentioned three initiatives, including the state’s providing $60 million for basic skills. Those who apply for this money are limited to $1.5 million per project. These applications are rated based on six “evidence-based practices.” She mentioned a second grant, involving a partnership between CCs and the California State University system. She said something about increasing BSI allocations by $30 million—that’s over and above the $60 mil. It sounded pretty positive.
Kathy Schmeidler, Senate Prez, reported briefly on the work of the district’s Strategic Planning task force, which met last week (relative to Jan 21). Senate leadership will be away for the next meeting and must thus miss it. Anyone interested in taking leaders’ places?
Craig Hayward yammered about strategic planning, but I don’t think I heard a thing he said.
VP Bob Urell yammered a while. Enrollments are up slightly, but not enough to alter the big picture, which is that we are flat for this year. “We need to do more” to increase enrollments, he said. He referred to Davit K’s budget report. We should take a look at this budget “update,” available here:
http://inside.ivc.edu/committees/SPOBDC/_layouts/PowerPoint.aspx?PowerPointView=ReadingView&PresentationId=/committees/SPOBDC/Lists/201617%20Planning/Attachments/5/Spring%202016%20Professional%20Development%20Budget%20Presentation.pptx&Source=http%3A%2F%2Finside%2Eivc%2Eedu%2Fcommittees%2FSPOBDC%2FSitePages%2FHome%2Easpx&DefaultItemOpen=1
Kathy S |
Bob mentioned that the CEC building(s) have been “completely redone.” Oh good.
Diana H (curriculum maven, officer) complained that the college needs to do more advertising to compete with other local colleges. Craig hears us and says “we’re working on it.”
Steve R carped that the budget once included money for advertising—budgets per area in The Arts—but that has long since disappeared, which is not good. Grumble, grumble, hiss, spew.
Kathy commiserated and asked that she be reminded to pursue the need for advertising at “Instructional Council.” Traci F, Dean of the Unsocial Sciences assured that a discussion is in the works, or so it has been reported to her.
Bret, chair of Ac. Affairs, announced that our first DAL will occur on Monday (the 25th) [DAL = Distinguished Academic Lecture.] Someone named Michelle Evans. A former X-15 pilot. [The X-15 was an experimental rocket plane that made various historical flights starting in the 50s and thereafter.] Bret mentioned a subsequent DAL concerning some kind of self-help stuff. I didn’t catch the details.
I think Diana (?) reported on a visit to the CTE (Career Technical Education) Academy in beauteous Sacramento. She learned a lot about how to make a [CTE] program “fly,” she said. She reported that courses that only involve “minor revisions” should pass through the curriculum bureaucracy “right away.” But that’s not the reality: there’s a bottleneck at the State Chancellor’s Office. Any change, even a minor one, to a certificate or degree requires various global changes, and so, instead of breaking logjams, new logjams are being created. There’s much frustration about this. Example: our business people are currently gnashing their teeth over some perverse bureaucratic problem of this kind, and they’re plenty peeved.
Diana H |
Kathy announced that the college is looking for faculty to serve on the Early College Task Force. IS ANYONE INTERESTED? Can be anybody. We need full-timers especially.
You’ll recall that worries over flat enrollments inspired a proposal to create some sort of quasi-complete “Weekend College” (complete for a handful of programs—perhaps in Business)—for nontraditional students who cannot attend during the week. The senate approved preliminary efforts to pursue this. It sounds as though we’ll be launching some sort of less-than-complete program in the Fall, and if that looks promising, we’ll go all-in for the comprehensive Weekend College (in the Spring, 2017). Little has been accomplished thus far, said Tracy F, but we’ll be going forward. We need to think about how to MARKET the Weekend College, said Tracy.
We were asked if there are any faculty who are willing to become a, or the, “faculty chair” over our Emeritus offerings.
We talked about the recent failure of some safety system somewhere (BSTIC?), but I didn’t pay attention, having fallen into near unconscious disgruntlement and irreversable abject curmudgeonliness. I was a veritable toxic substance.
Cheryl D alerted us to some pilot program involving an assessment tool for SLOs called CLA+. Evidently, CLA+ is a nonprofit company. The task force (which one?), said Craig J (we were told) were satisfied about the quality of this assessment tool. Senators seemed generally skeptical. Evidently, we have reason to worry that we’re not doing enough to review our success in SLOmanship and so that’s why institutions are looking at the likes of this CLA+.
Sounds like a bunch of hooey to me. But what do I know. Apparently, the item will come back in future for discussion in the Senate.
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