Join COCC Community Education on the second Tuesday of each month (October – June) for presentations on topics that will expand your mind, ignite your creativity, and broaden your horizons. This series will highlight COCC faculty and Central Oregon experts, and will explore topics ranging from international culture to current events to emerging technologies and more. Leave these 2-hour sessions with unique takeaways, useful life hacks, fascinating insights, and a desire to know more, do more, and see more.
Check this website for updates about topics and guest speakers.
Session One
October 2024 to January 2025 (meets second Tuesday of each month)
2-4 p.m.
Bend Chandler Lab 301
REGISTER SESSION ONE or call 541-383-7270.
Your registration is good for all dates in Session One, October 2024 through January
2025, and includes one guest pass for a presentation of your choice. Beverages and
light snacks will be provided.
Session 2
February 2025 to June 2025
Information coming soon
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October 8 - Cultural Appropriation
Presenter: Christy Walker
This Tuesdays at 2 topic is presented as an interactive workshop in which students work together to gain an understanding of what cultural appropriation is and how it affects our communities.
The differences between assimilation, appreciation, and appropriation will be explored, and the upcoming modern celebration of Halloween will serve as a poignant talking point. Students will receive a short, 2-question survey before October 8, to be completed before the presentation.
Presenter:
Christy Walker (she, her, ella) is the Dean of Equity and Belonging at COCC. The Office of Diversity and Inclusion and Equity and Well-Being serves the College by:
- Promoting the implementation of the College's Principles of Community
- Providing Education opportunities for students and employees
- Planning cultural events and activities
- Developing strong recruitment and retention programs for students and employees that have been historically underrepresented
- Advocating for student groups that have been underrepresented and under served
- Providing advice and support to enhance student success
- Connecting students to resources that assist them in meeting their educational goals
- Leading the campus community in the achievement of the goals and outcomes of the Diversity Plan
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November 12 - Everyday Sustainability
Presenter: Noelle Copley
As the coordinator of sustainability across all 4 of COCC’s campuses, Noelle Copley is a leader in local initiatives – and an encyclopedia of tips and tricks on how to incorporate sustainability into everyday life.
Presenter:
Noelle Copley, COCC’s sustainability coordinator, manages sustainability efforts across the college’s four campuses. Among other initiatives, she has helped bring Bee Campus USA and Arbor Day Foundation Tree Campus designations to COCC; greatly expanded recycling programs; introduced a residence hall move-out donation program to reduce waste; created a staff sustainability training; and is overseeing a greenhouse gas inventory as part of COCC’s recently signed “carbon commitment,” a national climate pledge for higher education institutions. Copley was named a 2023 recipient of the Environmental Center’s Sustainability Award.
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December 10 - Wolves in Central Oregon
Presenter: Aaron Bott
It is likely that grey wolves eventually made their way across the Bering land bridge into North America upwards of 18,000 years ago. Known for their ability to disperse long distances from their birth sites, wolves are now back in Central Oregon. Aaron Bott, regional wolf biologist for Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, will present the status of wolves in Central Oregon, his work with wolf populations in Oregon and the American West, and his decades of work with Canus lupus.
Presenter
Aaron Bott is the regional wolf biologist for Central Oregon, employed by the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. Bott is a doctoral candidate at Utah State University, studying wolves across the American West - predicting spatial and behavioral patterns on an anthropocentric landscape to promote human-carnivore coexistence. Bott and his wife live in Prineville and have four children, a 4-year-old and 2-year-old triplets. He joked in an interview with the Nugget News that “having three, 2-year-olds is much scarier than wolves.”
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January 14 - Commute Options in Central Oregon
Presenter: Kim Curley
Kim Curley, the Community Engagement Coordinator for Commute Options of Central Oregon, will present on the concept of mobility, connectivity, accessibility, and transportation equity in Central Oregon and beyond. Curley will cover the “why” and “how” of transportation and looks forward to opening up the discussion to all participants.
Presenter
As the Community Engagement Coordinator for Commute Options, Kim promotes choices other than driving alone in an 18-county area of rural Oregon. Kim started the Get There Rewards incentive program in 2003, helping businesses provide employees rewards for using Transportation Options. Kim serves as Board President for the Transportation Options Group of Oregon (TOGO) and is a board member of Oregon Transit Association (OTA).