The Advocate 3-27

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WEDNESDAY l 3.27.19 OUR 69TH YEAR CONTRA COSTA COLLEGE SAN PABLO, CALIF.

LEFT: Dr. Cheri Etheredge cares for a simulation mannequin in the Simulation Lab in the Applied Art Building. Etheredge has been teaching in Contra Costa College’s nursing department for 38 years. This semester she was awarded the district’s Teacher of the Year award.

DENIS PEREZ / THE ADVOCATE

Leadership recognized Nursing department chairperson receives district’s Teacher of the Year award By Denis Perez creative director

dperez.theadvocate@gmail.com

Throughout her 38 years teaching in the nursing department at Contra Costa College, Dr. Cheri Etheredge’s iconic efforts have given the program strong leadership, a state-of-the-art Simulation Lab and, most recently, recognition as being the home to the Teacher of the Year. Hanging on the door of the nursing offices in the Applied Arts Building, a sign congratulates “Teacher of the Year” Etheredge, who serves as the nursing department’s chairperson, for her recognition by the Contra Costa Community College District. For Etheredge, the award affirms more about the program than it says about her. “This award is an honor for

n “This award is an honor

for me, but it has to do more with the department.” — Cheri Etheredge, nursing department chairperson

me, but it has to do more with the department,” she said. The nursing program bolsters a strong nurturing community that breeds knowledgeable students and provides excellent educators. “We try to model the characteristics we want our students to have. Within the faculty, we are collaborative and supportive of each other. In a hospital, that is how it will be,” Etheredge said. Academic Senate President Beth Goehring said the Teacher of the Year award is an annual honor that rotates between pro-

fessors at CCC and its sister colleges, Diablo Valley in Pleasant Hill and Los Medanos in Pittsburg. Nominations for the award come from faculty members and began in February. By March, a list of nominees is created and sent out to college faculty through email. Etheredge was elected by a faculty vote to be the representative for CCC in 2019. On April 16, and then in September, Etheredge will be honored at awards dinners in Concord, Goehring said. Her nomination at the District Office also qualifies her as a finalist in the Contra Costa County Office of Education Teacher of the Year award program as well, Goehring said. County recognition also grants Etheredge and all the Teacher of the SEE CHERI, PAGE 3

Honored for enhancing HATEFUL GRAFFITI campus community PROMPS

OUTRAGE

By Michael Santone editor-in-chief

msantone.theadvocate@gmail.com

SQUAD IMPROVES DESPITE BIG LOSSES PAGE 7

Horror redefined through self duality PAGE 8 FACEBOOK: /accentadvocate

At the 2019 California Community College Council for Staff and Professional Development Conference (4CSD) on March 7, Contra Costa College won the Innovative Activity Award of Excellence for its annual Teaching Cafe. The award recognizes and rewards a community college for a single, innovative staff development activity or event. “We just got the award a few days ago and I went to several of the classified staff who worked on it,” speech department Chairperson Sherry Diestler said. “It validates all the hard work that everyone who participated put in — that this is recognized as an important activity for professional development and everyone on campus.” The Teaching Cafe, which was created by Diestler with help from other members of the Professional Development Committee, began in spring 2015 as an outlet for faculty, staff, management and students to share their strengths through activities and workshops. However, surprisingly no Teaching Cafes have taken place, or are planned, for this college year. “I noticed a lot of our faculty, staff and managers are considered experts and present (workshops) at other schools. And we bring in experts from other colleges too, so I thought why don’t we honor our own campus expertise,” Diestler said. “Everyone — faculty, staff, INSTAGRAM: @cccadvocate

Students rally, walk out at DVC By Luis Lopez staff writer

llopez.theadvocate@gmail.com

student-led discussions on what best works for them in the classroom. After attending many previous conferences, CCC faculty, staff and management did not attend this year’s 4CSD conference, Diestler said. But a colleague from sister college Diablo Valley was there and picked up the award. “We had no idea that we had

Hateful and racist graffiti aimed at black students was discovered in the men’s rest room in the Engineering Technology Building at Diablo Valley College on March 6. The image drawn was of a stick figure being lynched accompanied by the words, “No ni**ers working in trades.” The hate crime outraged students culminating in a campuswide walk out rally one week later. DVC’s Pan Lamb African Union P r e s i d e n t Diablo D ’ j o i n a Valley Lockett helped College organize the president rally. “We wanted to show our outrage and let it be known that we will not stand for that kind of hate, and also show our outrage with the way the school handled these incidents in the past. We believed

SEE CAFE, PAGE 3

SEE DVC, PAGE 3

JANET LIRA/ THE ADVOCATE

managers and students were really enthused to present their ideas, because everyone on campus has great things to share. The Teaching Cafe was a forum for them to do that.” Over the years, members of each department showcased their expertise in topics like culinary arts with cooking demos, venting and managing stress, tutorials in online tutoring with the Library and Learning Resource Center and TWITTER: @accentadvocate

YOUTUBE: /accentadvocate

SNAPCHAT: @cccadv0cate


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