Education
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- Written by: Andy Pino

BERKELEY, Calif. – The Regents of the University of California will be asked to approve the selection of Claude Steele, a preeminent scholar of social psychology and dean of Stanford University's Graduate School of Education, as the next executive vice chancellor and provost of the University of California, Berkeley.
UC Berkeley Chancellor Nicholas Dirks announced the appointment Monday, noting Steele's stellar academic accomplishments, and his strong record of leadership both at Stanford and at Columbia University, where Steele served as provost from 2009-2011.
“Claude is a world-class scholar, an extraordinarily gifted administrator, and a visionary leader with a deep commitment to teaching, innovation and collaboration,” Dirks said. “He is uniquely qualified to help sustain and expand our public mission and ethos, maintain our academic excellence and access and advance on our commitment to diversity in every sense of the word. We look forward to welcoming him to Berkeley.”
Leadership experience
Steele has an exemplary record of leadership at major institutions across the country, and said he looks forward to bringing that experience to UC Berkeley.
“With its public mission and vigorous commitment to broad access and academic excellence, UC Berkeley holds a special place among the world's great universities. I am thrilled and honored by this opportunity to serve this great institution and contribute to its mission,” Steele said.
Steele currently serves as the I. James Quillen Dean of Stanford's Graduate School of Education, a position he's held since 2011. As dean he led the school toward a deeper engagement in public education, including a major partnership between the school and the San Francisco Unified School District.
In his prior role as Columbia University's provost, Steele led and implemented academic policies and plans for the university, including a major initiative to enhance support for the basic sciences. While at Columbia, he was responsible for managing the work of the university's faculty, departments, research centers and institutes, as well as oversight of the university's budget and financial planning.
Steele was selected after a nationwide search that produced a number of extraordinarily qualified candidates. Interviews and candidate evaluation were conducted by a search committee that included faculty, staff, student and alumni representation.
The search committee warmly supports Steele's selection. Professor Betty Deakin, a member of the search committee and chair of Berkeley’s Academic Senate, praised Steele's academic and administrative credentials.
“Professor Steele is an experienced and savvy administrator and top-flight scholar,” Deakin said. “His commitment to public education is strong, and he is an effective advocate for diversity in all its forms. The Academic Senate looks forward to collaborating closely with him on the shared governance of the university.”
World-renowned scholar
A renowned and respected social scientist, Steele has devoted much of his academic career to groundbreaking social psychology research around issues of group stereotypes, self-identification, self-evaluation and academic achievement.
His work is widely published, and his research has been extensively used by educators and policymakers to develop practical applications and interventions that improve academic performance among underrepresented groups.
Steele's most recent book, “Whistling Vivaldi: How Stereotypes Affect Us and What We Can Do,” published in 2010, summarizes his years of research on stereotypes and their effects on intellectual and academic performance among underrepresented and minority students.
Written for a broad audience, the book has advanced public discussion and engagement around this salient societal issue.
Steele's scholarly contributions have been recognized with membership in the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the National Academy of Sciences and the American Philosophical Society.
He has served as president of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, president of the Western Psychological Association, and as a member of the board of directors of the American Psychological Society. In 2011, he was elected to the National Science Board.
Commitment to education
Steele received his Ph.D. in psychology from Ohio State University in 1971, and over the next 20 years, he taught at the University of Utah, the University of Washington and the University of Michigan.
He joined the faculty at Stanford University in 1991, where he remained until 2009 when he moved to Columbia University as provost. In 2011, Stanford recruited him back to lead the Graduate School of Education.
Steele said, “I am the recipient of a great public education, and I have spent much of my career finding ways to successfully address the challenges of preserving access, excellence and opportunity on college campuses across the country. I am deeply committed to UC Berkeley's public mission, and I look forward to working with Chancellor Dirks and the entire campus community to sustain and strengthen this mission in the years to come.”
In addition to serving as executive vice chancellor and provost, Steele will have an appointment as a professor in the Department of Psychology.
Chief academic officer
As executive vice chancellor and provost, Steele will serve as the chief academic officer for UC Berkeley's 14 schools and colleges. Working closely with the Faculty Senate and student leaders, Steele will have leadership responsibility for all academic programs, faculty recruitment and retention and undergraduate and graduate education.
“Claude will be a bold change agent for helping us improve faculty and student diversity, improve professional development for graduate students and find new funding streams,” Bahar Navab, a Graduate Assembly vice president and a member of the search committee, said. “Together with Chancellor Dirks, I think he can help push Berkeley to the next level as a public research university.”
The UC Board of Regents will vote on the appointment and terms of employment, including compensation, at its next meeting in January.
If approved, Steele is expected to assume the position on March 31. Steele will succeed retiring Executive Vice Chancellor and Provost George Breslauer, who has served in that role since 2006.
Andy Pino writes for the UC Berkeley News Center.
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- Written by: Editor
UKIAH, Calif. – The Mendocino College Foundation Inc. will conduct a budget workshop on Thursday, Jan. 16.
The workshop will take place from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. in the board room in MacMillan Hall on the Mendocino College Ukiah campus, 1000 Hensley Creek Road.
The agenda will include a 2013-14 mid-year budget review.
This meeting is open to the public.
For more information call the foundation offices at 707-467-1018.
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- Written by: Kasandra Colwell

Here at Carlé, we have now entered the second semester or fourth grading period of the year.
With the new grading period comes many fresh new faces who have enrolled at Carlé High School.
The new students are Alex Chavez, Erik Fielden, Chris Nuzzo, Tiffani Santoni, David Truax, Paul Yanez, and Kedwin Russel-McAteer. Welcome to Carlé, we hope you really like it here!
Now to honor the students who have been here already and earned the highest level available at Carlé, gold level. During the third grading period, seventeen students earned gold level.
Those students are Kelly Alvarez, Jade Beatty, Jacob Davis, Kevin Fisher, Savanna Golden, Jeremy Hunter, Troy Lamburth, Jasmine McGee, Kobi Minard, Malinda Mitchell, DeAndre Morris, Isiah Piazza, Daniel Salvante, Chealsea Scholesser, Chenoa Schmidt, Blake Von Rekowski and Amaree Whiley.
Carlé is a very interesting school to be at because every year some students graduate, leaving jobs around the school that the younger students can take on.
A great example is Kobi Minard, who helps Alan every day with setting up and filming the morning bulletin, which is a very important job at Carle. Kobi is getting very close to graduation, so new students to run the bulletin need to be recruited.
The Carlé Chronicle will need a new writer soon since I also am close to graduation. If anyone is interested in writing the Chronicle, talk to Alan about it. Until I graduate I will be helping Barbara in the office fifth period daily so she can have a much-needed break. This job will soon be up for grabs as well.
Chris Stutz has become Carlé’s new movie maker. He films around campus and makes mini movies we play on the bulletin.
On the ninth, Jacob Davis presented his portfolio, congratulations on your great presentation and we wish you the best.
Hazmat classes taught by science teacher and certified hazmat trainer Angie Siegel started on the ninth and the class will last until the twenty-first. The students in hazmat will be meeting in the library all day every day and will return to their regular classes after the state certification.
From the eighth to the tenth teacher Alan Siegel was in Sacramento. Siegel was selected by State Superintendent Tom Torlakson to be a member of the state Distinguished Schools selection committee.
It is now time for another design contest at Carlé, and that contest will be the mouse pad contest! Students can make a design in PhotoShop to print on either a small mouse pad or a large one. Start thinking about what you want to design because the deadline to print the mouse pads will be one week after progress reports.
Now that we are halfway through the year here at Carlé High School, the Carlé Chronicle wants to remind students to check their progress to their goals.
Make sure you are halfway to where you want to be by the end of this year. If you are not halfway, maybe take on some extra credit work!
Remember, anything is possible with hard work and determination!
Kasandra Colwell is a student at Carlé Continuation High School in Lower Lake, Calif.
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- Written by: Editor
UKIAH, Calif. – A Sustainable Tech open house and forum will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 14, from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. in Room 6340 at Mendocino College to kick off the spring semester.
Classes begin on Monday, Jan. 21.
The forum will feature spring semester instructors introducing their courses and discussing local industry trends and opportunities.
The forum also will include Keith Rutledge speaking about a local Property Accessed Clean Energy (PACE) program, which may be launched this year in Mendocino County.
Past, current, and future students, as well as the general public, are encouraged to attend.
Spring semester will feature the Sustainable Tech Program’s fullest offering of courses since launching in 2011, with hands-on technical training courses offered Monday through Saturday.
With the addition of a new instructor from the building performance sector the program will offer a new efficient heating and cooling course which when combined with fundamentals of construction, building to code, building science and home performance, and residential electrical, provides a strong foundation for students looking to enter the construction, HVAC or building performance trades.
Spring semester also will feature continued work on the tiny mobile house, off-site work supporting local non-profits, and online course options such as sustainability overview and intro to green business.
Register at www.mendocino.edu or contact program coordinator Orion Walker at 707-468-3224 or
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