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Author Archive for R. Oliphant – Page 66

COMMUNITY COLLEGE OFFERS SEVERAL FREE TUITION CLASSES IN SOME TRADES CERTIFICATE PROGRAMS FOR FALL SEMESTER AT CTEC IN PRESCOTT AND SOME IN ITS ADVANCED MANUFACTURING TECHNOLOGY PROGRAM

College offers no explanation for surprise late announcement of the  tuition free classes

In a July 29 news release, Yavapai Community College announced that it was offering several  free tuition classes at its  Career and Technical Education Center (CTEC), which is located at the Prescott airport.  The surprise announcement came at a time when the Community College had been heavily marketing fee tuition trade skills classes only on its Verde Campus at its brand new Trade  Skills Training Center.  The College’s  fall brochures had highlighted several  free tuition classes offered at  its Trade  Skills Training Center  facility on the Verde Campus with no mention or suggestion of  similar free classes being offered at CTEC.

In the news release, the College said that “this new offer is in addition to the College’s one class free option for this fall, where all students in any program receive one class free of tuition.”  Some surmise that the surprise announcement might have come because of a perceived unfair treatment of students on the West side of the County.   Or, there may be other plausible reasons for the surprise announcement such as low  initial enrollment or an unexpected influx of outside money.  As noted above, the Community College offered no explanation for the sudden addition of the tuition free fall classes at CTEC.

The newly announced free fall semester classes  include students seeking a 3D Printing and Manufacturing Certificate, Unmanned Aircraft Systems Certificate, and an Advanced Manufacturing Technology AAS Degree.

Note:  The lined-out locations in the chart below are campuses or centers  the College indicated classes were being taught at, however, they appear somewhat inconsistent with the Community College’s on-line registration data.  Please check with the College Registrar if you are interested in any of them to determine where they are being offered.

3D Printing and Manufacturing Certificate tuition free fall classes:

  • TDP 101 – Introduction to 3D Printing (3 credits) (CTEC).
  • TDP 108 OR ELT 108 – 3D Printer and Operation Maintenance (3 credits) (CTEC).
  • MET 200 – SolidWorks for Non-Engineers (3 credits) (only on-line).

Unmanned Aircraft Systems Certificate tuition free fall classes:

  • UAS 100 – Introduction to UAS (3 credits) (CTEC and on-line).
  • UAS 103 – UAS Simulations (3 credits) (CTEC and on-line).
  • UAS 115 – UAS Monitor Systems (4 credits) (CTEC and on-line).

Advanced Manufacturing Technology AAS Degree  tuition free fall classes:

  • IPT 110 – Industrial Shop Practices (3 credits) (CTEC).
  • ELT 130 – Introduction to Robotics (3 credits) (Verde, Chino, CTEC).
  • CNC 101 – CNC Machine Operator (3 credits) (Verde, Chino, CTEC).
  • CNC 201 – Computer Aided Programming for CNC Machining (3 credits) (CTEC and also on-line).

NURSING CLASSES ON VERDE CAMPUS FILL UP

Only four of the 20 nursing classes offered in fall semester have available seating as of August 4

If registration data of August 4, 2021 from Yavapai Community College is any indication, the nursing program on the Verde Campus for fall 2021 is a smash hit.   Data from the College’s web site indicate that 16 of the 20 nursing courses offered this fall are already filled to overflowing.

Of the remaining four classes with seats available, data indicates one class has one opening left, another four, while the two remaining classes are nearly half full.  New modern training equipment, a modern facility, the pandemic, and outstanding faculty are all factors that have made the nursing program on the Verde Campus an  enormous success.

One can’t help but recall the tentative decision by the Community College a few years ago to shutter most, if not all, of its nursing training on the Verde Campus and move it to Prescott Valley.  Education advocates, former nursing alums, and others were able to stop that happening.   Today, the registration data from the College shows how right Verde Valley citizens were to rise up and block the effort. Everyone in the Verde Valley can now clearly see the fruits of those past efforts to keep nursing training alive on the Verde Campus.

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE OFFERS NEW CHILD CARE PROGRAM WITH FREE TUITION PLUS WAGES

“Earn While You Learn” completes first intense summer semester with nine students on Prescott Campus | Seeking ten students for fall semester

Yavapai Community College has just completed what it describes as its first “Earn While You Learn” childcare training program at its Dell Web Family Enrichment Center on the Prescott Campus. Nine students completed the intense eight-week summer program and the College is seeking ten students for the fall 16 week semester.

According to a Community College news release, students collect a paycheck for their work at the Center, obtain 12 tuition free college credits and receive hands-on classroom experience. The pay and waiver of tuition are made possible through scholarship funds.

Students who complete  the program receive  a basic early-childhood education certificate. “We wanted [students in the intense summer program] to end the summer with something tangible,” Community College  Education Professor Tara O’Neill  said. The program allows students in the program to immediately enter the childcare workforce, earn an advanced certificate by continuing for one more semesters, or pursue an education transfer degree. “We’re giving them experience in a school setting, a great foundation for parenting and confidence. We’re hoping this will help them decide what they want to do with their future.”

The program will accept ten students for the fall 2021.

Source:  Yavapai Community Collee News release.

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE PRESIDENT DR. LISA RHINE RECEIVES COMMUNITY COLLEGE TRUSTEES NATIONAL CEO LEADERSHIP AWARD FOR THE PACIFIC REGION

In letter from Community College  Governing Board nominating Dr. Rhine  she was praised for her work and accomplishments including making the Community College more accessible and affordable in her first three years as College president

Dr. Lisa Rhine

Dr. Lisa Rhine, President of Yavapai Community College, has just received national recognition for her leadership in higher education from  the Association of Community College Trustees . She was named the recipient of its Pacific Region Chief Executive Officer Award.

Annually, the Association, which is  a 52-year-old organization made-up  of trustees from over 1,200 colleges in North America,  honors a chief executive officer from each of its five regions in the United States who has exhibited exceptional leadership.

In the nomination letter from the Community College Governing Board, they wrote that: “In the midst of a pandemic, Dr. Rhine has initiated a remarkable number of key initiatives and innovative programs with an unrelenting focus on student success.”

The Community College Governing Board also  that: “In the midst of a pandemic, Dr. Rhine has initiated a remarkable number of key initiatives and innovative programs with an unrelenting focus on student success.” They also cited her work to increase the Community College’s Hispanic student population from 15% to 21.4% since taking office in 2019.  They lauded her efforts at targeting assistance toward Yavapai County’s “asset-limited, income-constrained, employed” (ALICE) population, which comprises an estimated 43% of Yavapai County.

The Governing Board was also impressed that Dr. Rhine, with the able assistance of Dr. Diane Ryan, has championed expansion of Open Educational Resources (OERs), a program that fights expensive textbook costs by developing free, public domain alternatives. So far, this effort last year  resulted in  164  courses with zero-cost textbooks. The savings in textbook costs came to  than $300,000 over two semesters.

Dr. Rhine has also led initiatives like The “Yavapai Community College  Promise,” which refunds tuition to qualified students who complete their degree programs on time. To date, the Community College has graduated more than 100 Promise students, with another 290 enrolled for 2021-22.

“I am so pleased that Dr. Rhine has won the ACCT Pacific Regional award,” said Yavapai Community College District Governing Board Chair Deb McCasland.  “I know we have an outstanding President and it’s excellent that her leadership and focus on student success is highly valued by other leaders in the Community College field.”

Source:  Yavapai Community College News Release dated July 29, 2021  by Tyler Rumsey. (Full article can be read at https://www.yc.edu/v6/news/2021/07/dr-rhine-acct.html?fbclid=IwAR39sTRGi2iiZk_HZu8fX5NK4YWOhT3rmWB8j-cD6wQ0v5P33BKTCInZ0Fk.

OLLI ANNOUNCES FALL SCHEDULE

GOVERNOR AND ARIZONA LEGISLATORS JOIN 17TH CENTURY POPE URBAN VIII AND OTHERS WHO REJECTED SCIENCE; SUPPORT NEW ANTI-SCIENCE LAW THAT BARS YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE AND OTHER STATE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS FROM PROVIDING MAXIMUM PROTECTION FOR STUDENTS AND STAFF FROM COVID-19

Centers for Disease Control, the American Academy of Pediatric, the Arizona Department of Health and Safety and the Maricopa County Department of Public Health  have all updated their guidelines to include universal indoor masking for all teachers, staff, students and visitors to schools, regardless of vaccination status

OPINION COLUMN.  Governor Doug Ducey and a majority in the Arizona Legislature passed a law in July  that will become effective September 29. According to the Governor, the new law “does not allow mask mandates, vaccine mandates, vaccine passports or discrimination in schools based on who is or isn’t vaccinated.”   The law was demanded by a group of anti-mask Republican legislators, which led to a last-minute anti-science add-on to one of the state’s budget bills. The votes from the anti-maskers were needed, it is claimed,  if several of Ducey’s  most-favored  portions of the budget bill  were to  be blessed by their  approval.

Dr. Cadey Harrel, a family physician in Tucson and the Arizona leader for the Committee to Protect Health Care, said at a press conference Wednesday that:

“The decision to prohibit these schools from requiring masks be worn is quite reckless, dangerous and shortsighted. The decision is not informed by science or evidence.”

The Governor and the legislators who supported the new law join an historic group of ignorant politicians and religious leaders who clearly rejected science.  For example, recall that in the 17th century Galileo had the audacity to  support the science-based theory of Copernican heliocentrism, which claimed the Earth rotated daily and revolved  around the sun.

 Galileo’s support of this  scientific theory was met with furious opposition from within the Catholic Church and was investigated by the Roman Inquisition in 1615. (The Inquisition was a permanent institution in the Catholic Church charged with the eradication of heresies.) It concluded that Galileo’s science-based view on heliocentrism was foolish, absurd, and heretical because it contradicted Holy Scripture. Church teachings were  ignorantly based on the theory that the Earth, not the sun, was at the center of the universe.

Galileo later defended his scientific views in a 1632 writing, which was viewed by Pope Urban VIII and others as an attack on him and the Church.   He was tried in 1633 by the Inquisition, found “vehemently suspect of heresy”, and forced to recant his science and plead  guilty in exchange for a lighter sentence. He was placed  under house arrest indefinitely by Pope Urban VIII.

So, in the 21st century, as in the 17th century, are we rejecting science? Twenty-first century science says mandatory in-door face mask mandates can help  protect students, staff, and community college visitors against the surging, easily spread  COVID-19.  Ignorance, in the guise of Arizona’s anti-science law on mandatory mask prohibitions, rejects the science.

While those who dare violate Arizona’s  law in order to better protect others will not be burned at the stake of suffer an inquisition,  they may have to defend in court a senseless cease and desist order (brought by the Governor) that demands they not follow the best scientific guidelines available to protect staff, students and visitors from possible death at the hands of COVID-19.  

 It sure looks like 17th century ignorance is winning in its 21st century battle with  science  in  Arizona. The new Arizona law reads as follows:

 15-1650.05. COVID-19 vaccine; face covering; testing; mandate prohibition; exceptions [Effective September 29, 2021]

  1. Except as otherwise provided in this section, the Arizona board of regents, a public university or a community college may not require that a student obtain a COVID-19 vaccination or show proof of receiving a COVID-19 vaccination or place any conditions on attendance or participation in classes or academic activities, including mandatory testing or face covering usage, if the person chooses not to obtain a COVID-19 vaccination or disclose whether the person has been vaccinated against COVID-19, unless the vaccination or other mandateis required by the laws of this state.
  2. A health care institution may require a student who participates in a clinical setting at the health care institution to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination and be subject to regular health screenings and testing as determined by the health care institution. For the purposes of this subsection, “health care institution” includes a hospital, a nursing care institution, a residential care institution, an intermediate care facility for individuals with intellectual disabilities and a group home or other medical facility licensed pursuant to title 36.
  3. A public university may require testing only if a significant COVID-19 outbreak occurs in a shared student housing setting that poses a risk to the students or staff. The university must receive approval from the department of health services before implementing the testing requirement.
  4. This section does not apply to students who are engaged in research or testing that involves a live COVID-19 virus.

VERDE VALLEY/SEDONA ENROLLMENT GUIDE COULD USE IMPROVEMENT ABOUT INFORMATION FOR TRADE SKILLS COURSES

Marketing piece arriving in many mailboxes last week of July  leaves questions about dates fall Trade Skill Classes begin, whether a course is completed in  8 or 16 weeks, which courses are on-line, and whether  identical courses taught on Verde Campus with free tuition are also free at CTEC; no on-line edition has appeared yet

Yavapai Community College has been expanding its advertising and marketing efforts with a focus on  the Verde Valley since Dr. Lisa Rhine became president.  That is very good news.

However, some of its marketing, the Blog suggests, could use improvement.  For example, the 20 page Yavapai Community College “Fall 2021 Verde Valley/Sedona Enrollment Guide,”  which as a marketing tool is a great idea, appears to lack the kind of important details about the Trades Skills courses offered at the newly constructed Trades Skills Center that should be expected. The “Guide” began arriving in many Verde Valley mailboxes the last week of July. 

The “Guide” devotes the first four opening pages to full-page efforts aimed at encouraging interest in Skills Center enrollment on the Verde Campus.  But it falls far short of providing detailed information regarding starting dates. Only by digging through the Community College’s Registration website will a person discover that some of the trades courses begin in August while others begin in October. And there are other problems.

The “Guide” lists and describes the four courses one must complete to obtain a Residential Trades/Construction certificate.  However, only when one searches the Community College’s Registration website is it discovered which of the four is actually being offered this fall.  (Turns out only one of four listed is offered this fall.)

The “Guide” also lists the four courses required to obtain a Residential Plumbing Certificate.  However, only one course is offered in the fall, according to the Community College’s Registration web site.

The Residential Electrical Certificate requires completion of five courses.  However, only two of them are being offered in the fall.  Something you cannot discover reading the “Guide.”

The HVAC Technician Certificate is the most unusual in terms of  the fall offerings, start dates, and options.  None of which are clearly noted in the “Guide.”  A certificate requires completion of eight courses, only four of which are offered in the fall.  Two of the courses start in October and a third in August.  A fourth course is offered on-line, in an eight week format and another is offered in a  16 week format.  Students in the Verde Valley may take the course on-line or in the 16 week live format.  Students in Prescott can take the course on-line or in an eight-week live format.  None of the flexibility is indicated in the “Guide.”

It is noted that the Community College does not offer flexible hours or dates for the Basic Carpentry course.  It is an eight-credit course required in three of the four Trades Certificates.  For efficiency, it is assumed, the Community College  will teach this course to students in the three Certificate courses  at the same time, in the same room, with the same instructor. You must dig a lot to find this out on the College’s Registration web site.

It is also noted that the “Guide” has yet to appear on-line. 

The charts below were prepared by the Blog staff to indicate the dates, times and options available to students taking the courses in the four Trade Certificate programs offered on the Verde Campus at the Trades Center.

RODNEY JENKINS RECEIVES PRESCOTT VALLEY CHAMBER AWARD; POLICE DEPARTMENT GAINS SPECIAL ACCREDITATION; NEW MURAL AT WINE CENTER

YAVAPAI COMMUNITY COLLEGE LISTS NINE PUBLIC CULTURAL EVENTS FOR EARLY FALL

Prescott Valley Concerts on the Green appears to be new favorite location; no events scheduled so far on the east side of the County

So far, it appears that seven of the nine public cultural events in the early fall are at outdoor locations while two of them are online.  Its newest venue, the Green Amphitheater in Prescott Valley, appears to be one of its favorites.  The Community College has already held several successful summer cultural programs for the public at that location in its “Concert on the Green” series. (Sunday May 9, three separate Mother’s Day concerts; at 2, 4, 6;  May 23   ABBAFab – “the World’s Number One ABBA Tribute Band; Sunday June 6,  Frankie Valli & The Four Seasons tribute group;  Sunday, June 27,  The Brian Chartrand Quartrand Quartet; Saturday, July 3 , Prescott Pops Symphony: An American Celebration.) 

The Arizona Poets gathering, which in the past has used the Performing Arts Center for most of its programs, has scheduled all its events this year for the Prescott Rodeo grounds.  

The outdoor venues will be particular useful as COVID-19 appears at the moment to be on the upswing in Arizona because of the failure on the part of large numbers of citizens to take the vaccine. The upswing appears to be particularly strong in the  Prescott/Prescott Valley area of Yavapai County.

No early fall public cultural events were scheduled so far on the east side of the County. None were held during the summer on that side of Yavapai County.

 

VERDE VALLEY CAMPUS OPEN HOUSE SET FOR AUGUST 7 FROM 10 A.M. TO NOON

Opportunity for  prospective students to learn how tuition for an entire  fall semester is free  if  enrolled  in trades classes at the Verde Valley Skilled Trades Center

Yavapai Community College will have an in-Person Open House at the  Verde Valley Campus in Clarkdale on Saturday, August 7, 2021,  from 10 a.m. to noon.

Tours will be conducted of the  new Skilled Trades Center facility where potential students can  learn more about the certificates that will be offered starting fall 2021. The Community College will also have staff available who can explain how a student enrolled at the Skilled Trades Center can attend the first semester tuition free.

Trades Center programs that are tuition free for one semester include: Construction, Electrical, HVAC  and Plumbing.

Visitors during the open house can also tour the  new Brewing facility. During the tour, prospective students can learn more about the Brewing Technology Certificate that will be offered beginning fall 2021.

Other areas on the Campus that are new and open to the public during the open house are the following: Greenhouse used in the Horticulture Program; Nursing Labs; Phlebotomy Lab; Fabrication Lab that houses CNC and Pre-Engineering; lab space for EMT program.

Yavapai Community College is located at 601 West Black Hills Dr., Clarkdale, AZ 86324.