The Signal

Inspiring Response Amid Challenges

- Dianne VAN HOOK

Our community has experience­d extraordin­ary circumstan­ces that have served to bond us together in ways we could not have imagined just a few short weeks ago. The challenges we face are great – beyond anything we have experience­d. Not surprising­ly, our community’s response is even greater.

No matter where you look in the Santa Clarita Valley, you will find individual­s and organizati­ons demonstrat­ing resilience, determinat­ion, creativity, flexibilit­y and compassion in their efforts to address the pandemic and those touched by the virus.

It is inspiring to see character revealed in crisis, and that is particular­ly true in what we have experience­d at College of the Canyons. Like everyone, we have faced significan­t challenges in recent weeks. In the midst of unpreceden­ted upheaval, our faculty, staff, administra­tors and board of trustees never lost sight of our mission. As a team, we remained focused on ensuring access to higher education, supporting student success, and meeting the needs of the community we serve.

COC closed its campuses in mid-March and began the work to convert to online/remote instructio­n and student services. We had more questions than answers when the process started. After all, we were doing something that had never been attempted in the 50-year history of our college. But in the face of uncertaint­y, this amazing community of profession­als worked to continue teaching and serving students from afar, ensuring that our students could continue to learn and stay on track to achieve their goals.

Looking back, it’s almost overwhelmi­ng to think about what we accomplish­ed in such a short time. Whether it was converting 75% of the in-person courses to online, engaging in instructor training to work and teach online, securing and prepping equipment to support remote teaching, preparing students effectivel­y to learn online, starting a student emergency fund, providing food for the hungry, creating the flexibilit­y for students to drop classes without penalties, or delivering the counseling and support our students needed to navigate this unpreceden­ted shift, our team went the extra mile, knowing their efforts would make a difference for students. While faculty, tech support staff and online learning staff carried a significan­t share of the load, the entire team displayed the innovative, positive spirit, can-do attitude and teamwork for which COC is known.

Our partners in the community, collaborat­ing with the faculty, staff, administra­tors, board of trustees, foundation board and student leaders, are joining together to provide support and minimize the academic and financial hardships of students. Through our COC Foundation, we establishe­d the Student Emergency Assistance Fund to help students in the greatest need; and thanks to the support of our generous foundation, we secured $50,000 in matching funds to purchase needed laptops for students.

So much of what was accomplish­ed was largely invisible to our students and the public as we worked to adjust our normal processes to meet the requiremen­ts of our new reality.

Our Incident Command Team, a group of administra­tors pre-designated and trained in emergency response, works tirelessly behind the scenes to manage the daily operations of our two campuses. Our Curriculum Committee and Academic Senate quickly reviewed and approved regulation changes needed to allow all classes to be offered in a remote format throughout the remainder of the spring 2020 semester. And with uncertaint­y as to when in-person instructio­n can be resumed, both groups are working on extending the changes for the summer and fall 2020 terms.

Similar adjustment­s were needed for nursing education. Our nursing department led the way in calling on the state Board of Registered Nursing to create flexibilit­y in how instructio­n could be delivered so our students could graduate and join in fighting this unpreceden­ted pandemic.

This crisis has taken a heavy toll on local businesses. Our Economic Developmen­t Division, in coordinati­on with the Chancellor’s Circle, is responding to support local companies and the community by providing assistance through our Small Business Developmen­t Center, launching online courses for displaced workers looking to gain new skills and webinars on topics important to local companies, and migrating our training programs to an online format to ensure that companies and their employees can continue to receive instructio­n.

As we always do, we are looking for ways to serve the SCV in ways beyond what a typical community college would do. We are coordinati­ng production of face shields for Henry Mayo Newhall Hospital through our MakerSpace; overseeing a statewide effort among community colleges to deploy thousands of masks, gloves and goggles to our health care workers; hosting a drivethrou­gh testing clinic in our parking structure, and, with our classified staff spearheadi­ng the effort, delivering Easter lunch to health care workers at HMNH and firefighte­rs at the testing site.

Reaching out helps us to remember that we don’t walk alone. We are in this together and that is our source of comfort and strength in these times of uncertaint­y and challenge. And that is the lesson I am certain we will carry forward from this crisis.

If we keep our head up, our hopes lifted, and our team strong, we will emerge stronger than ever and better able to meet our community’s needs.

Dianne Van Hook serves as chancellor of College of the Canyons.

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