View From A Barber’s Chair – An Evening With Dr. William Cross Jr.

View From a Barber’s Chair

You’re invited to an evening with Dr. William (Bill) Cross Jr., renowned African-American psychologist and racial identity scholar.
Cross is professor emeritus of higher education and counseling psychology at the University of Denver. He has received numerous honors and awards in the field of psychology and is one of the most frequently cited names in Black racial identity literature. In his lecture, Cross will revisit his ground-breaking model on Black Identity and discuss his new understanding of the psychology of slavery.
The first 24 students who arrive in person for the event will receive a free copy of his latest book, “Black Identity Viewed from a Barbers Chair: Nigrescence & Eudaimonia.”
View from a Barber’s Chair
Thursday, Dec. 9, 7-9 p.m.
Lecture, Q & A 7-8:30 p.m.
Book Signing 8:30-9 p.m.
Cornerstone Screening Room 

You can also join the event virtually via Zoom. Please register here.

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Reminder: “Calling In the Call Out Culture with Dr. Loretta J. Ross” is tomorrow

Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 6 p.m.

Calling In the Call Out Culture with Dr. Loretta J. Ross

On Wednesday, Dec. 1, at 6 p.m. MT, remember to join activist and public intellectual, Dr. Loretta J. Ross in calling in the call out culture and in the fight against white supremacy. 

In this virtual webinar, Ross asks us to contemplate how we can intentionally and collectively shift our culture in order to build a united movement for human rights. She notes that in our well-intentioned activism we often use our radical consciousness to harm each other, while we are together hurting and healing, instead of coming together to fight a common oppressor. In this talk, Ross will discuss how calling out/calling in is not another false binary, but rather a continuum of accountability.

Ross is associate professor of the study of women and gender at Smith College, where she teaches courses on white supremacy, human rights, and calling in the call out culture.

This event is open to all Colorado College students, alumni, faculty, and staff and community members from the Colorado Springs area and beyond.

This is a virtual event. Register in advance for this webinar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

This event is part of Dismantling Hate: An Educational Series Toward Understanding and Action. This series, for the academic year 2021-22, is a campus-wide initiative that provides programming for CC students, faculty, staff, and alumni and community members from the Colorado Springs area. The purpose and goal of this educational series is to support our communities in better understanding hate — the root and outcomes — and to motivate people to take action to dismantle hate. Each educational program in the series will feature a conversation with an activist, broadly defined, who will share their work and experiences dismantling hate against marginalized communities.

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Staff and Faculty Climate Survey Begins Tomorrow

“Doing What We Do Better:” Watch for Survey Link Tomorrow

As the college prepares to embark on Project 2024, we will soon gather valuable input from you so we can do what we do at CC even better. 
CC is committed to being a great place to work. To do that, we periodically ask staff and faculty how they feel about their sense of well-being; the college’s mission, values, and direction; the shared-governance model we rely upon in making many decisions; and the stewardship and shaping of our campus culture, among other things.
An anonymous employee climate and engagement survey will be distributed during Block 4. From Dec. 1-22, you’ll have the opportunity to share your thoughts, ideas, and feedback on what you like most about CC, what you think the college could improve, and how to make the best of CC’s strengths — as individuals and as an institution — to achieve goals.
The results from previous campus climate surveys prompted major initiatives including the Excel@CC professional development program; a four-year, $1 million investment in staff compensation to bring it up to market levels; a focus on diversity, equity, and inclusion; a policy and compliance website; improved internal communications; and onboarding for new employees.
The survey will arrive in email inboxes beginning tomorrow, December 1. Watch for this message — it will come from ModernThink — and thank you for your participation in this anonymous survey.

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Thank You For Sharing Your Thoughts

This message was sent to all students today, thanking them for taking the National Assessment of Collegiate Campus Climates survey. Thanks to all of you who encouraged students to take the survey. Similar surveys will be conducted for staff in Spring 2022 and for faculty in Spring 2023.

Dear Students,


I want to take a moment to thank you. We recently administered the National Assessment of Collegiate Campus Climates, a survey asking students about the racial climate on our campus. Nearly 1,000 of you — or 41.5% of the student body — responded to the survey. Thank you for engaging in this important work.

Your valuable input will help us to better understand your experiences on campus and how you feel about the college’s commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. Our survey partners at USC’s Race and Equity Center will analyze the results and provide recommendations based on their analysis. We will share both with the CC community.

Again, thank you for your commitment to antiracism at Colorado College and for taking the time to complete this important survey. Your participation will help to make our community more inclusive and welcoming for all.


Sincerely,

L. Song Richardson
President

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Thank You For Sharing Your Thoughts

Dear Students,


I want to take a moment to thank you. We recently administered the National Assessment of Collegiate Campus Climates, a survey asking students about the racial climate on our campus. Nearly 1,000 of you — or 41.5% of the student body — responded to the survey. Thank you for engaging in this important work.

Your valuable input will help us to better understand your experiences on campus and how you feel about the college’s commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and belonging. Our survey partners at USC’s Race and Equity Center will analyze the results and provide recommendations based on their analysis. We will share both with the CC community.

Again, thank you for your commitment to antiracism at Colorado College and for taking the time to complete this important survey. Your participation will help to make our community more inclusive and welcoming for all.


Sincerely,

L. Song Richardson
President

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Need to Know Post-Break Information

Dear Students, 


Welcome to Block 4! We hope you enjoyed a restful Fall Break.

Please take a moment to review the COVID-19 risk mitigation protocols that all CC community members are expected to follow. Indoor masking remains in place on campus as COVID-19 transmission levels continue to be high in El Paso County. You can look up the community transmission level county by county here to inform your off-campus masking practices. We strongly recommend following CDC guidance to mask indoors when transmission levels are substantial or high.

As you return to campus for the final block of 2021, please remember that all students (except for those who have received a positive COVID-19 test result in the 90 days prior) are required to take a COVID-19 test at the beginning of Block 4.

If you have symptoms today such as cough, fever, sore throat, headache etc., please do NOT go to class. Stay away from others, and call the Student Health Center, (719) 389-6384, to make an appointment at your earliest convenience.

COVID-19 asymptomatic screening testing is now administered by eMed, a telehealth provider. You should have received an email from covid19@coloradocollege.edu prompting you to pick up a BinaxNow test kit.  

For this initial testing after Fall Break only, students residing in Mathias, South, and Loomis Halls should pick up their test kit at their hall’s front desk beginning TODAY, Nov. 29, during desk hours.

Students residing in other residence halls on campus or off-campus should pick up their BinaxNow test kits at the Tutt Library circulation desk beginning TODAY, Nov. 29,  at 8 a.m. You must bring and swipe your Gold Card to pick up a test kit.

As a reminder, please follow the instructions provided with each test kit and take the test by Tuesday, Nov. 30, at 5 p.m. Do not open your test kit until prompted to do so during the telehealth session with eMed.

In order to participate in the testing program, you must download the Navica app, create an account, and enter the Connect Code to connect your account to Colorado College. If you didn’t receive the email invitation to download the app (sent Nov. 16), check your junk email folder; contact us at covid19@coloradocollege.edu if needed. 

It’s important to follow these instructions because we will not receive test results until after you have connected your account to Colorado College and your test results won’t count toward the testing requirement, resulting in your key card access to campus being turned off.

Feeling Sick?

  • If you are experiencing COVID-19 symptoms, do NOT go to class. Stay home and away from others.
  • Call the Student Health Center as soon as possible to make an appointment with a health care provider: (719) 389-6384.
  • In addition to COVID-19 testing, the provider will be able to test for a range of other illnesses, such as influenza, strep, etc., to help you recover as quickly as possible. 
Think you may have been exposed to the Coronavirus?
  • Wear a mask when around others.
  • If you’re asymptomatic, make an appointment at the Student Health Center, (719) 389-6384, for testing on day 5-7 after the last known exposure. If you test sooner, the test may not accurately detect an infection because of the incubation period.
  • If symptomatic, call the Student Health Center and make an appointment with a provider.
All members of the CC community are encouraged to get a COVID-19 booster shot. We will share details soon about an on-campus COVID-19 booster clinic.

If you have questions, please contact covid19@coloradocollege.edu and check our Coronavirus Updates and Resources webpage.

We are excited for you to be back on campus and wish you a healthy and rewarding Block 4! 

Sincerely, 
 

Andrea Bruder
Chief Public Health Advisor to the President 

Mateo Muñoz
Chair, COVID-19 Policy and Implementation Committee

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TOMORROW: Block 4 First Mondays

“What is Innovation, Anyway?” with Dez Stone Menendez

The final First Mondays event of the Fall Semester is happening TOMORROW, Nov. 29, at 11:15 a.m.


Start Block 4 together at a hybrid First Mondays event. What is innovation, anyway? Director of Creativity & Innovation Dez Stone Menendez ’00 explores that question and what it means to expand innovation beyond the commercial sphere to the cultural, social, and personal. She will share the philosophy and guiding principles behind the Creativity & Innovation initiative at CC.

This First Mondays event will take place in Kathryn Mohrman Theatre and via Zoom. If you’re attending virtually, please register in advance. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

The First Mondays Event Series is a campus-wide forum that aims to engage all members of the CC community, including students, staff, administrators, and faculty. The series creates opportunities for the whole community to gather, encouraging everyone to be part of the intellectual life of the college, and facilitating discourse among students, faculty, and staff, across courses, disciplines, and divisions. Classes are dismissed early on the first Monday of each block so that all may attend the First Mondays event.

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Download Navica App NOW for Post-Fall Break Testing

Students are required to take a COVID-19 test following Fall Break. 


As announced in Block 3, our COVID-19 asymptomatic screening testing program will be administered by eMed, a telehealth provider.  

On Nov. 16, all students received an email from noreply@navica.abbott (sent to your CC email account). Follow the instructions in that email to download the Navica app, create an account, and enter the Connect Code to connect your account to Colorado College. Once you have connected your account, you are ready to participate in testing. 

Create your account and connect to Colorado College by TODAY, Nov. 22. If you haven’t received the email invitation, check your junk email folder, and contact covid19@coloradocollege.edu. 

Watch this short video and view detailed instructions from this previous message and via FAQs here.

Thank you for your continued participation in our COVID-19 testing program.

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Save the Date for: “Calling In the Call Out Culture with Loretta J. Ross”

Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 6 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 1 at 6 p.m.

Calling In the Call Out Culture with Dr. Loretta J. Ross

Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021, 6 p.m. MT 
This is a virtual event. Register in advance for this webinar. After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Join activist and public intellectual, Dr. Loretta J. Ross in calling in the call out culture and in the fight against white supremacy. How can we dismantle hate if the methods we use replicate it?  Dr. Ross asks us to contemplate how we can instead intentionally and collectively shift our culture in order to build a united movement for human rights. She notes that in our well-intentioned activism we often use our radical consciousness to harm each other, while we are together hurting and healing, instead of coming together to fight a common oppressor. In this talk, Dr. Ross will discuss how Calling Out/Calling In is not another false binary but rather a continuum of accountability.

Dr. Ross is associate professor of the study of women and gender at Smith College, where she teaches courses on white supremacy, human rights, and calling in the call out culture.

She was the national coordinator of the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective (2005-2012) and co-created the theory of reproductive justice. Ross was the national co-director of the March for Women’s Lives (April 25, 2004) in Washington, D.C., the largest protest march in U.S. history at that time. She founded the National Center for Human Rights Education in Atlanta, Georgia, launched the Women of Color Program for the National Organization for Women, and was the national program director of the National Black Women’s Health Project. One of the first African American women to direct a rape crisis center, Ross was the third executive director of the D.C. Rape Crisis Center.

This event is open to all Colorado College students, alumni, faculty, and staff and community members from the Colorado Springs area and beyond.

This event is part of Dismantling Hate: An Educational Series Toward Understanding and Action. This series, for the academic year 2021-22, is a campus-wide initiative that provides programming for CC students, faculty, staff, and alumni and community members from the Colorado Springs area. The purpose and goal of this educational series is to support our communities in better understanding hate — the root and outcomes — and to motivate people to take action to dismantle hate. Each educational program in the series will feature a conversation with an activist, broadly defined, who will share their work and experiences dismantling hate against marginalized communities.

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Gratitude for our CC Community

Dear CC Community,

Most of the colorful leaves from our long and beautiful autumn have fallen, making the magnificent views of Pikes Peak, or Tava, as the Ute people call it, more visible over Cutler Hall. There are gifts in each season.

Fall scene on campus
As I become accustomed to the rhythm of the block, I continue to be amazed by the capacity of our community to accomplish so much in so little time. An important part of that ebb and flow is the block break, which gives us time to reflect on what we’ve learned from our accomplishments, our failures, and our connections with others.

This is the season for gratitude, but I have felt it and witnessed it so much throughout my first few months at CC. I am grateful that we are living, working, teaching, and learning in person this year. The connection, energy, and support of this community are palpable. I am grateful for all who make that possible – our students, staff, faculty, families, alumni, and community – and all who support our efforts to do so as safely as we can.

As we embark on Fall Break, I hope we reflect on the gifts of learning, the people who brighten our days, and this place that brings us together. I wish everyone a wonderful and rejuvenating week. 

Sincerely,

L. Song Richardson

President

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