Fall

Life, Death, and Reincarnation in the Legislative World

Our Fall Plenary Session came after the end of the 2003-04 session of the California Legislature; thus we could review the disposition of legislation considered by the State Assembly and Senate. It is interesting to note the life of a bill: it can die in committee and never see a vote on the floor; it can be approved by the Legislature and then vetoed by the Governor; or it can be approved by the Legislature and then signed into law by the Governor. We tracked the major disposition of bills dealing with community college issues.

Housekeeping: Records and Files

All of us probably have overflowing filing cabinets in our own offices, which makes it even more difficult to deal with the overflowing filing cabinets and shelves dedicated to the records and files of your local senate. Some senates have invested in scanning equipment to digitize all documents to solve the storage problem, but not all senates have the time, money or inclination for such a project. The Academic Senate has received several requests for guidance in how to determine what is necessary to keep and what can be thrown away.

Credit Where Credit is Due: Incongruities in the Value of Lab and Lecture

What constitutes learning and credit in higher education? In most institutions of higher education, we award units for packets of time dedicated to successful learning. Attend a course for three hours of lecture per week; complete the course with a passing grade, and the successful student is awarded three units of value indicating competence and experience in a particular discipline. Unfortunately we have data that describes in no uncertain terms that learning is least effective in lecture conditions.

Occupational Programs. Everybody's Business

If you ask any faculty member, "What is the mission of California Community Colleges?" you will hear: "We provide basic skills, transfer and vocational education." We are all clear that we serve multiple missions and that our students come to us with wide and varied needs and goals. But on a daily basis at our colleges we tend to focus (understandably) on our own students, our own programs and our own departments.

Our Government In Action

Well, the votes are in and the winner is...Wait a minute! there were no candidates on the state ballot, so there were no winners--or were there? We will leave that to the political pundits and such.

Much of the political and legislative energy this last year has been focused on the November special election.

Issues and Options for Associate Degree Levels In Mathematics and English

This paper was initially disseminated in Fall 2004 and is included here for your convenient reference.

This paper addresses a central question regarding the statewide associate degree requirements for mathematic and English: Are the present associate degree minimum course requirements for English and mathematics mandated by Title 5 of the California Code of Regulations appropriate for today’s students? If not, we must come to a decision of what change or changes the Academic Senate should recommend.

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