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Softball team ranked #18 in the nation

By R. Oliphant
Wednesday, April 6th, 2016

Sweeps Gateway Community College Tuesday

The Yavapai Community College softball team swept a doubleheader Tuesday afternoon April 5 in Phoenix over Gateway Community College. Yavapai won the first game 10-2 and took the second game  6-0. The softball team is now 27-9 in the ACCAC standings and 35-11 overall.

In the first game, Lyndsie Smith, Jocilyn Ellis, Andrea Sotelo, Sydney Forray and Mahina Chong had two hits apiece. Chong and Ellis hit home runs. Amy Robinson got the victory. Earlier in the day, Robinson was named the ACCAC DI Pitcher of the Week for her efforts last week.

In the second game, Karissa Pena went 3 for 4 with a double. Mikayla Newham, Sotelo, Dustie Durham, Chong, Lyndsie Smith each had two hits each. Smith collected a double and a home run.

SOFTBALL GET NUMBER 18 NATIONAL RATING

Categories : Yavapai Community College

Master Chorale Concert April 12th

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, April 5th, 2016

Concert at 7:30 in Building “M”, Room 137

The Verde Campus will host a Master Chorale Concert on April 12th at 7:30 p.m. The concert is free and will be held in Building “M”, Room 137.  Last year there was a big turnout so plan to arrive early.

 

EVENT APRIL 12 VERDE CAMPUS

Categories : Event, Verde campus events

Great Free Discussion Series on Verde Campus April 14

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, April 5th, 2016

Six programs on Verde Campus  — something for everyone

Osher Life Long Learning will offer six brown bag brain buzz programs during April and May on the Verde Campus in Clarkdale.  Admission is free.  The programs run from 12:30 to 1:30 and will be held in Room G-106 on the Clarkdale Campus. The complete schedule is set out below.  See you there.

 

OSHER BROWN BAG APRIL 2016

Categories : OLLI (Osher Lifelong Learning)

Will Yavapai College’s Sedona Center’s next door neighbor to be a nuclear plant? APRIL FOOLS

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, April 5th, 2016

Adjacent property purchased by Nuclear Company — April fools joke

The Sedona Redrock News reported on April 1, 2016 that a nuclear power plant may well be in the works on the land adjacent the Yavapai Community College Sedona Center. It was an April fools joke.  But some folks probably took it pretty seriously.

The paper wrote that in January, the property adjacent the College’s Sedona Center  was sold to a private firm, Burns Holdings LLC, which has owned and operated a small nuclear power plant in Springfield, Ore., since December 1989. The plant would be jointly owned by Arizona Public Service, Burns Holdings, Salt River Project and Southern California Edison. Areva would own a minor portion for the first 10 years, before divvying up its share proportionally among the other stakeholders. “We feel the Sedona site is excellent for our plans,” Burns Holdings CEO and owner C. Montgomery Burns said. “Excellent.”

Construction would likely not begin until summer 2017, after the conclusion of a National Environmental Policy Act assessment, which is set to be conducted this summer.

To read the complete story in the Redrock News, please click here.  (A great April fools joke.)

NUCLEAR PLANT

Categories : Sedona Campus

Softball team sweeps double header last Saturday

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, April 5th, 2016

Yavapai  beats Central Arizona College, 11-1 and 12-3

Yavapai Community College swept a double header softball game from Central Arizona on Saturday by 11-1 and 12-3.  Yavapai Community College is now 22-8 in conference play and 30-10 overall.

In the first game, Amy Robinson threw a  complete game striking out 3 and scattering 5 hits

Jocilyn Ellis led the team in hitting going 4 for 4 with 4 runs scored, 4 RBI’s, a double and home run. Sydney Forray was 2 for 3 with 2 runs and 5 runs batted in. Forray hit  a grand slam in the second inning. Mikayla Newham and Karissa Pena each had two hits.

In the second game, Sydney Forray had two home runs. Lynea Klemmedson also had a homer. Again, Jacilyn Ellis,  Mahina Chong and Karissa Pena each were 2 for 2.  Dustie Durham was the winning pitcher. She went innings, striking out two and surrendering 9 hits.

SOFTBALL ROSTER

Categories : Softball team

Softball team splits double header with Eastern Arizona

By R. Oliphant
Wednesday, March 30th, 2016

Wins 9-6; loses 13-6

sydney forr

Sydney Forray

The Yavapai Community College roughrider softball team split a double header on March 29 with Eastern Arizona.   Amy Robinson got the victory in the first game striking out 4 batters while giving up 12 hits. Mikayla Newham and Sydney Forray went 3 for 5 at the plate. Forray hit her fourth home run in three games. Dustie Durham and Jocilyn Ellis each collected two hits apiece.

In losing the second game, Mayhina Chong was 3 for 3 with a double and 2 runs batted in. Sotelo, Nicole Matta and Sarah Ingegneri each collected two hits in the losing effort.

Yavapai continues ACCAC DI action on Saturday, April 2nd when they host league leading Arizona Western College Matadors. In the earlier meeting in February, the Matadors swept the Roughriders in Yuma, 3-2 and 11-3. Saturday’s doubleheader will begin at 12:00 PM.

Categories : Softball team

Lisa Sandoval joins Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee

By R. Oliphant
Wednesday, March 30th, 2016

Nomination by the Yavapai-Apache Nation Council affirmed

Yavapai County School Superintendent Tim Carter announced on March 28, 2016 the appointment of Lisa Sandoval to the Verde Valley Board Advisory Committee. This Committee advises the Yavapai Community College Governing Board on post-secondary issues important to the Verde Valley.

LISA SANDOVAL

Lisa Sandoval

Ms. Sandoval has lived in Clarkdale for many years. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree from Northern Arizona University in Elementary Education, with an emphasis in mathematics. She has worked in public education since 1993, starting as a teacher at Clarkdale-Jerome School and currently serving as the higher education manager for the Yavapai-Apache Nation since 1998.

Ms. Sandoval was nominated for the Committee position by the Yavapai-Apache Nation Council and subsequently affirmed by Yavapai County School Superintendent Tim Carter.

The story in the Verde Independent with more information regarding this appointment can be found by clicking here.

 

Categories : Advisory Committees

How Prescott stole skills training from the Verde Valley

By R. Oliphant
Wednesday, March 30th, 2016

Moving significant Career and Technical Education training from Verde Campus to Prescott occurred in 2006 leaving Valley out in the cold

Commentary

Commentary

Most residents of the Verde Valley are unaware of the enormous Career and Technical Education program in Yavapai County.  This article will explain the history and development of CTE in the County as it affects the Verde Valley.

The Valley Academy for Career and Technology Education Center (VACTE).  VACTE operates the Joint Technical Education District (JTED) for the Verde Valley.  It coordinates Career and Technical Education (CTE) training in the Valley with the three high schools located there.  The Mountain Institute is the JTED on the West side of the county. It coordinates CTE training for all high schools over there. Yavapai College provides advanced, state-of-the-art CTE training on its CTEC Campus at the Prescott airport. 

 Few are aware of the enormous disparity in CTE learning opportunities offered by the two JTEDs. If you live on the West side of the County, there are CTE learning opportunities in aviation, line-worker, and a host of other sophisticated/advanced skills programs.  If you live on the East side, you do not have access to most of those wonderful learning opportunities.  Unfortunately, almost all of the inequity has to do with the Community College and its investment in Career and Technical Education training on the West side of the County.

Consider for a moment that Mountain Institute high school students on the West side of the County have earned about 9,000 CTE college credits since it began in 2008 mainly because the JTED over there has arranged for them to take CTE courses at Yavapai College’s CTE Campus.  By comparison, high school students on the East side of the County (Verde Valley/Sedona) have never taken any courses at the College CTE campus and have no doubt earned far fewer CTE college credits at the three area high schools since the JTED over here (VACTE) began in 2000.

For non-high school students, reasonable access to CTEC in Prescott is a problem because of Mingus Mountain.  The drive and distance makes it difficult, sometimes impossible, for the unemployed, single working parents, and part-time employees to take dozens of CTEC classes only offered on the West side of Mingus. (There is neither public nor College transportation to CTEC from the Valley.)  These are persons who some argue are most in need of such training.  

Community College politics explains why the CTE Campus and its sophisticated skills programs ended up on the West side of the County.  Ironically, voters in 2000 approved spending millions of dollars to develop a state-of-the-art CTE training center on the East side of the County at the Verde Campus. It was a part of a $69.5 million bond issue.  It was to be called the “Northern Arizona Regional Training Skills Center.”   The Federal Government provided the College with over a million dollars to support the Center.

Professor Paul Kessel, the chief operational officer for the Verde Campus at the time, stated that: “[T]he (center) will provide much-needed educational space and resources to further develop job training programs to benefit residents of northern Arizona.  This is an exciting and unique opportunity for northern Arizona residents to gain specific work related skills that will allow citizens to seek immediate employment or increase their level of income in a current or new position.” 

However, the hopes and dreams of developing a thriving CTE College skills program on the Verde Campus were not to be.

The Center opened with great fanfare on the Verde Campus in 2004. However, before it got its feet on the ground, it was shuttered by a “new” College administration in Prescott a little over two years after it got going. That’s Yavapai College power politics at work.

Most of the Verde Campus skills programs were either moved over the mountain to the CTE Campus or eliminated.  This resulted in VACTE losing the ability to closely coordinate and cooperatively develop a facility on the East side of the County like the one the College birthed in 2007 at the Prescott airport and just spent $6 million to upgrade.

Since 2008, the College and the JTED on the West side of the County have intimately worked together to coordinate and develop CTEC training at the College’s CTE center. Neither of the JTED’s on the West or East side of the County have revenue to purchase costly machinery or support extremely costly programs.  However, the College is a gushing river of revenue with grants, property taxes, tuition, and state aid annually flowing to it. Since 2008 the College has invested an estimated $15 to $20 million at the CTEC Campus on renovation and purchasing the costly machinery JTEDs could not afford. It has not made a similar investment in the East County JTED and it has not made a future commitment to do so.

Since moving skills training to CTEC the College has done little to encourage an intimate association with VACTE. It typically uses as an excuse that VACTE is a “different model” than the Mountain Institute JTED. However, it never explains why the difference prevents it from remedying the absence of programs over here that are offered over there.

The College has responded to recent community pressure and opened a small culinary training program in Camp Verde and returned welding and a couple other CTE courses to the Valley. But little else.

Given this history, there are two burning questions:  First, “why has the College been allowed to provide dozens of advanced CTE training opportunities that are only available to children and residents who live on the West side of Mingus Mountain?”   Second, “will East County residents continue to allow Career and Technical Education learning opportunities denied their children and many residents for a decade to continue for the next half century when the Community College has millions of dollars it could use to remedy the problem?”

Categories : Verde Campus, Vocational Education, Vocational training

Community College Softball team wins double header

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, March 29th, 2016

Beats Central Arizona College 11-1 and 12-3

The Yavapai Community College Roughrider Softball Team trounced Central Arizona College 11-1 in the opening game of a double header on March 27.  Jocilyn Ellis led the Roughriders with four hits including a double and a home run.  Sydney Forray had two hits in three tries with a grand slam in the second inning.   Mikayla Newham and Karissa Pena each had two hits. Amy Robinson claimed the victory by throwing a complete game.  She struck out 3 and scattered 5 hits in the win.

AMY ROBINSON PITCHER

Amy Robinson

In the second game, Amy Robinson,  claimed the 12-3 victory. She struck out 3 and gave up 5 hits. Sydney Forray contributed her hot hitting with two home runs. Lynea Klemmedson also homered for the Roughriders. Jocilyn Ellis,  Mahina Chong and Karissa Pena were each 2 for 2.

Amy Robinson was the ACCAC DI Pitcher of the Week for the last week in February. Robinson went 4-0 that last week including a no-hitter against Paradise Valley. She allowed just 6 runs in the 4 games  and struck out 18 batters.

Categories : Softball team
Tags : Softball team

Yavapai College Media Survey

By R. Oliphant
Tuesday, March 29th, 2016

Make your media preferances known

Yavapai College invites county residents to share their preferences for television, movies, music and more in a brief, anonymous media survey. The results will help YC’s Marketing and Communications Department make informed choices for delivering information on the College’s many academic and cultural opportunities.

Survey participants will be eligible to win three free credit hours for the 2016 summer or fall semesters.

You may take the survey by going to the following College web site (click here).

MEDIA SURVEY

Categories : Survey results
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