Update on CC Mental Health and Wellness Commitments

Sent on behalf of the President and the President’s Cabinet

Dear CC Community,   

In her inauguration speech, President Richardson talked about the importance of ensuring that our campus community thrives. Prioritizing our mental health and wellness is an essential component of this. Only when our students, staff, and faculty learn, work, and live in an environment that fosters mental health and wellness can we provide our students with an outstanding liberal arts education, and the skills and habits to live healthy lives.
Less than two weeks ago, we updated our campus community, alumni, and parents on: (1) what we have done to date and (2) what we are planning to do to improve mental health and wellness on campus.
Today, we share more.
First and foremost, we are raising the level of importance of mental health and wellness for the whole campus to the same level we have put antiracism. We will engage the entire CC community including students, faculty, parents, alumni, and our local community in our mission.
Below are updates on some of the actions we are taking:
  • We are creating a task force of students, faculty, staff, parents, and alumni to help us find the right solutions. Our Healthy Minds Survey of CC students highlighted that when it comes to “informal support” for mental health, our students overwhelmingly turn to their friends (58%) and family (51%). We are currently speaking to possible candidates and are planning to announce membership of the task force in January 2023.
  • We will also work directly with student facilitators so that multiple existing and new peer-to-peer support services will be available to students in 2023.
We are leveraging outside experts to make us better:
  • Last week, we held a series of conversations with the Colorado Department of Higher Education on the work we need to do to earn a “Healthy Minds” designation, which is awarded after a comprehensive review of programs and practices to address mental health across campus.
  • Barring unforeseen circumstances, by Block 5 we will complete an external review of our mental health and wellness structures, programs, services, and practices, and explore models to provide wellness resources and promote healthy life skills and habits to our entire CC community. We will then plan to publish recommendations on Block 6.
  • In the coming months, a few key leaders from CC will visit other colleges and universities like Denison University to learn about their approaches to building resiliency and creating healthy campus environments. Denison won an Active Minds, Healthy Campus award for innovation in prioritizing and promoting the health and well-being of its students.
We also recognize that the Block Plan can create some different stressors on our students than those faced by students at semester schools. Some things we are working on:
  • We are working with faculty to develop guidance that includes absence for mental health as a part of the attendance and excused absences policy. We expect to announce changes by the end of the academic year.
  • As promised, after January 1, 2023, we will launch an anonymous reporting resource for a wide range of campus concerns. More information will be shared in December.
  • The vice president and dean of the faculty and the vice president and dean of the college have started conversations with the faculty about constraints on students’ time and ways we can make sure students can truly have a break from class, class assignments, emails, and notifications. We plan to announce some updates in Spring 2023.
We are going to invest in more and varied resources:
  • We are exploring adding additional counselors who will be available to students, staff, and faculty for free. We expect to announce some of these additions by the end of the calendar year.
  • We will soon announce enhanced partnerships with Children’s Hospital and Cottonwood Creek Wellness Center to expand resources and look at new and innovative ways to address mental health needs.
  • Colorado College has joined the Suicide Prevention Collaborative of El Paso County. This alliance of organizations and community leaders share strategies, resources, and expertise with the goal of reducing suicide deaths in El Paso County by 20% by the year 2024.
  • The vice president and dean of the faculty, senior director for Student Health & Wellbeing, and vice president for student life and dean of students plan to implement additional mental health training for all staff and faculty on an annual basis.
  • Through the task force mentioned earlier, we will examine the need for more sexual assault response team staff and more counselors. We will report more after the task force meets.
Better communications:
  • We are reviewing our key campus websites, including the Student Health Center, Counseling Center, Wellness Resource Center, and Title IX so that the most important information is clearly defined and easy to find. We are examining ways to improve and make our communication protocols more transparent, including communicating about our mental health commitment and work and using trigger warnings for sensitive communications.
  • This week, the Board of Trustees will be on campus, and we invite students to an open dialogue with them this Friday, Nov. 4, from 3:15-5:45 p.m. (main level of Worner Campus Center). Interested students can sign up here for the Board of Trustees Listening Session
  • The president and the Cabinet are committed to listening and being in dialogue with students, faculty, staff, parents, and alumni. More specific information will be shared each block. The president will meet with students every block so she can personally understand their needs.
We have heard you and want to continue to engage our community for feedback and ideas. Real and sustained change will happen only through open dialogue and engagement, a willingness and commitment to have difficult conversations, and if we think and act differently.
It also takes accountability. We are currently working on a Mental Health Commitment website where we will continue to provide our community with updates on our progress as well as provide a place where our community can continue to share new ideas or concerns.
Thank you for your courage to raise these important issues and the grace you give us to work together on solutions.
Sincerely,

L. Song Richardson 

President  

The President’s Cabinet:  
Pedro de Araujo   

Vice President and Dean of the College 
Professor of Economics  

Emily Chan  

Vice President and Dean of the Faculty  
Professor of Psychology

Rochelle Dickey  

Dean of Students, Vice President for Student Life 

Mike Edmonds  

Senior Vice President 

Mary Ann Graffeo  

Vice President for Advancement

Katharina Groves  

Interim Co-Vice President, Information Technology 
Director, ITS Applications and Security  

Mark Hatch  

Vice President for Enrollment

Lesley Irvine

Vice President and Director of Athletics

Robert Moore  

Senior Vice President, Chief Operating Officer, and Chief Financial Officer

Ryan Simmons  

Vice President for People and Workplace Culture 

Manya Whitaker  

Executive Vice President and Chief of Staff  

Tulio Wolford  

Interim Co-Vice President, Information Technology 
Director, ITS Technology Solution Services

Todd Woodward  

Vice President of Strategic Communications and Marketing 

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CC Authors Reception–Save the Date

CC Authors Reception–Save the Date

CC Authors Reception--Save the Date

Dear Faculty and Staff,

It’s been four years since the last CC Authors Reception, usually an annual event, and the Dean’s Office and the library want to celebrate big to make up for all the years we’ve missed! Submit your publications and creative works for recognition today.
 
The 2023 CC Authors  Reception, a wine and cheese event recognizing CC faculty and staff authors and creators, will be Wednesday, February 15, from 3:30-5:00 p.m., on the fourth floor of Tutt Library. All faculty and staff are invited.
 
Publications and creative works may include articles, books, contributions to books, CDs, DVDs, exhibition catalogs, shows, and more. If you’ve published since April 2019, even if you were not yet working at Colorado College (it has been a long four years and we want to celebrate everyone we can), submit your name and citation here: https://forms.office.com/r/SqttuESyTK
 
If you have any questions please contact Jessy Randall, jrandall@coloradocollege.edu“>jrandall@coloradocollege.edu or Dustin Fife, dfife@coloradocollege.edu. Please submit for recognition by January 6, 2023.  
 
Join the list, and even if your name is already on the list, please submit links and citations. Here are some of the authors and creators we have already heard from:
Paul Adler
Shishir Agrawal
Marlow Anderson
Ofer Ben-Amots
Andrea Bruder
Janet Burge
Tracy Coleman
Nene Diop
Marcia Dobson
Amy Dounay
Dan Ellsworth
Kristi Erdal
Dustin Fife
Traci Freeman
Rick Furtak
Natalie Gosnell
Sara Hanson
Olivia Hatton

Sarah Hautzinger
Jose´ Miguel Herbozo
Jane Hilberry
Ulyana Horodyskyj
Cayce Hughes
Scott Johnson
A. Kelley
Scott Krzych 
Jonathan Lee
Heidi Lewis
Christina Leza
Benjamin Lloyd
Phoebe Lostroh
Genevieve Love
Gussie Maccracken
Ian Miller
Amanda Minervini
Molly Moran 

Natanya Pulley
Jessy Randall
Pamela Reaves
Jared Richman
John Riker
Karen Roybal
Carrie L. Ruiz
Flavia Sancier-Barbosa
Christine Smith Siddoway
Christiane Steckenbiller
Aaron Stoller
Tina Valtierra
Manya Whitaker
Dana Wolfe

Best regards,

Dustin Fife and Jessy Randall 

Charles L. Tutt Library 

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Colorado College Faculty and Staff Appreciation – CC Hockey Event Nov. 18-19

Dear CC Staff and Faculty,

In recognition of all of your hard work and commitment to CC, we are thrilled to offer faculty and staff free tickets to the CC Hockey vs. #2 nationally-ranked St. Cloud State games on Nov. 18 (7:30 p.m.) or 19 (6 p.m.).
To request complimentary tickets for you and your family, please email Riley Dunlop, with your choice of game dates (Nov. 18 or Nov. 19) and the number of tickets you would like. Tickets will be allocated on a first come-first-serve basis until all available tickets are allocated.  The deadline to request your tickets is Nov. 7.

We hope you will join us at Ed Robson Arena to cheer on our Colorado College Tigers!

Go Tigers!

Lesley Irvine

Vice President & Director of Athletics

Emily Chan

Vice President & Dean of the Faculty

Ryan Simmons

Vice President for People & Workplace Culture

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Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest for Students

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Today at CC Digest

A Daily Digest for Colorado College

Around the Block: Broadening Our World View

You’re Invited: Keller Family Venture Grant Forum

ID: a caucasian woman in a brown 3/4 sleeve shirt at a lecturn with a photo on the screen of green grass, lecturing to the audience.
Last year, more than $82,000 in Keller Family Venture Grants were awarded to 75 CC students to pursue individual research projects. Some of these Keller Family Venture Grant students traveled globally, and others engaged in research domestically. Now, they are ready to share their stories. The campus community is invited to join the adventure and hear more about student projects on Thursday, Nov. 3.
Presentations begin at 4:30 p.m. at Richard F. Celeste Theatre in Edith Kinney Gaylord Cornerstone Arts Center.

No RSVP is required. For more information on the Keller Family Venture Grant Program, please contact Lisa Schwartz, manager of Student Opportunities, by email or calling (719) 389-6685. To learn more about Keller Family Venture Grants and to see examples of student projects, please visit the Venture Grants webpage.

The Human Element: An Evening with James Balog

ID: a banner showing a person in fire fighting gear with a camera, walking away from a wild fire. Words describing the event The Human Element
Photographer and explorer James Balog has focused his lens on the complex relationship between humans and nature. His work challenges us to contemplate our place in, and responsibility to, the natural world. Come listen and see as and shares what he’s learned through documenting our world and its changing climate. Learn more about Balog here.
Date: Tuesday, November 1 
Time: 4:00-6:30 p.m.  (drinks and hours d’oeurves at 4:00 p.m., presentation at 4:30 p.m., book signing at 5:45 p.m.)
Location: Celeste Theater, Cornerstone Arts Center
The Human Element: An Evening With James Balog
Link To Register!
This event is free and open to the public. Presented in partnership with Downtown Colorado Springs, the El Pomar Foundation, and the Nature Conservancy.

English Professor Jared Richman Awarded Gale-ASECS Fellowship

ID: caucasian man with short dark hair and a beard, in profile, wearing gray slacks, a black sweater with a collared shirt, sitting on a desk teaching.
By Julia Fennell ’21

Jared Richman, associate professor and associate chair of the English Department, has been awarded the Gale-ASECS Non-Residential Fellowship. Richman’s project, entitled, “Voicing Disability in Eighteenth-Century Print Culture,” seeks to understand how eighteenth-century British literature represented and politicized speech and communication disorders, according to the press release.
In this project, Richman focuses on the “complex triangularization between orality, textuality, and disability and how the expansion of the commercial book trade in England shaped lexical standardization and cultural attitudes towards elocutionary performance during an age of colonialism, human enslavement, and imperial domination,” he says.
In addition to fellowship funding, Richman was awarded access to Gale’s Eighteenth-Century Collections Online and the Gale Digital Scholar Lab, which can help fellows advance their work using digital humanities methods. Richman plans to use both databases and new digital research tools with his students, he says.

How to Help a Friend Who is Struggling Emotionally


According to the National Alliance on Mental Health, 75-percent of all mental health conditions begin by age 24, and up to 44% of college students reported having symptoms of depression and anxiety. Unfortunately, as many as 75% of students who struggle with depression and anxiety are reluctant to seek help.

Have you noticed a friend might be struggling emotionally? Learn the warning signs, such as out-of-control risk taking behaviors, isolation, behavior changes, concerning posts on social media, and substance abuse. If you see one or more signs that concern you, have the hard conversation. Start the conversation with something like, “I’ve noticed you’re [sleeping more, eating less, etc.], I’m here if you need to talk,” or, “Tell me more about what’s happening. Maybe if I understand better, we can find a solution together,” or, “I’ve noticed you’ve been down lately. What’s going on?” Help your friend(s) reach out to the CC Wellness Resource Center, and look at the resources available for help. Let your friend know they are not alone, that there are options. But remember, helping someone you care about who is going through something difficult can be exhausting. Make sure you take care of yourself too.

Simon Cataldo ’08 Wins Democratic Primary for Massachusetts State Representative

ID: caucasian man with short dark hair, wearing a blue collared button-down shirt, smiling at the camera, blurred outdoors in the background
Last month, Simon Cataldo ’08 won the contested Democratic primary for Massachusetts’ 14th Middlesex District state representative seat.

“It’s uncanny how much of my coursework studying environmental science and chemistry at Colorado College relates to what’s happening in the Massachusetts legislature today,” says Cataldo, who majored in environmental science. “My friends at CC have helped me at every step of my professional journey after graduation and running for office has been no different.”

Cataldo will face Republican Rodney Cleaves in the general election on Nov. 8.

Photo of the Week

ID: 3 college students walking with a pet rat on a pathway, laughing and talking, surrounded by grass, trees, and a soccer goal net to the right.

Seniors Gila Goodwin, Rhetta Power, and Mika Alexander with their pet rat, Patty, enjoying the nice weather on Thursday, Oct. 15, before snow moved in this week.
Photo by Katya Nicolayevsky ’24
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