January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 1, 2024
March 1, 2024
March 1, 2024
Loren LeBlanc
IMPOSSIBLE BINARIES
Feb 18 – Mar 2, 2024
Loren LeBlanc’s Window Dressing installation, Impossible Binaries, consists of a surreal arrangement of four lifesized
figurative sculptures constructed entirely by hand using a 3D printing pen and accentuated with hand-picked
dried floral ornamentation. Seeming to defy gravity, these dynamic forms are presented in various evocative
gestural poses as a means of exploring personal truths built around a future-focused curiosity and nuanced
historical interrogation of the artist’s own lived experience as a young black creative living in contemporary
America.
Loren LeBlanc is an emerging figurative multimedia sculptor currently based in Inglewood, CA. He holds a BA in Studio Art and Economics
from Cal Poly Humboldt in Northern California and a MA in Illustration from Arts University of Bournemouth in the south of England.
Employing a unique self-taught approach, he fuses handheld 3D printing pen technology with traditional clay sculpting techniques
seamlessly, creating intricate, evocative, life-sized figures.
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March 1, 2024
Counseling's Instagram Q&A Every Friday Do you have questions for counseling? Follow us on Instagram @cerritoscounseling! Every Friday Cerritos College's Counseling Department hosts Q&A Friday for students to have their questions answered in a fast and convenient way. You can also DM us throughout the week Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Be in the know when we have open appointments special events and much more. Learn more and connect with your Learning and Career Pathway (LCP) team! Tag us DM us and share your experiences with us we want to hear from you. We look forward to connecting and serving you :) -Counseling Department and LCP Team Follow us on Instagram: @cerritoscounseling
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March 1, 2024
New Talon Marks Weekly Newsletter delivered in your inbox! Subscribe today!
–
March 1, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 1, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 1, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 2, 2024
Loren LeBlanc
IMPOSSIBLE BINARIES
Feb 18 – Mar 2, 2024
Loren LeBlanc’s Window Dressing installation, Impossible Binaries, consists of a surreal arrangement of four lifesized
figurative sculptures constructed entirely by hand using a 3D printing pen and accentuated with hand-picked
dried floral ornamentation. Seeming to defy gravity, these dynamic forms are presented in various evocative
gestural poses as a means of exploring personal truths built around a future-focused curiosity and nuanced
historical interrogation of the artist’s own lived experience as a young black creative living in contemporary
America.
Loren LeBlanc is an emerging figurative multimedia sculptor currently based in Inglewood, CA. He holds a BA in Studio Art and Economics
from Cal Poly Humboldt in Northern California and a MA in Illustration from Arts University of Bournemouth in the south of England.
Employing a unique self-taught approach, he fuses handheld 3D printing pen technology with traditional clay sculpting techniques
seamlessly, creating intricate, evocative, life-sized figures.
–
March 2, 2024
Spanish: La Division de Educacion Continuada esta celebrando la Decima Conferencia Anual en Espanol "Fortaleciendo a la Mujer 2024” en las areas de salud, educacion y civismo. Será presencial y completamente gratis. Todas las mujeres de nuestra comunidad y estudiantes estan cordialmente invitadas. Aparte de la conferencia tendremos 12 mesas de recursos para usteded. Es completamente gratis. Sabado 2 de Marzo a las 8 a.m. -1 p.m. Reserve su lugar desde ahora usando nuestro QR code en el flyer o llame (562) 860-2451 ext. 2518. Espacio Limitdado!
English: The Cerritos College Continuing Education Division is celebrating our 10th Annual Women's Conference in Spanish "Fortaleciendo a La Mujer 2024” in the areas of health, education and civics. All the women of our community and students are cordially invited. We will have lots of information to share as there will also be 12 resource tables. This conference is free at no cost. Saturday March 2 at 8 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Reserve your spot using our QRcode located on the flyer, using the google form link or by calling (562)860-2451 Ext. 2518. Space is Limited. Google Link: https://forms.gle/wEmvqv68BjNjKGNP9
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March 2, 2024
The Financial Aid Office will be hosting FREE FAFSA and CA Dream Act Application Workshops on Saturdays (see flyer for dates). The workshops are open to ALL. No registration is needed; just come! Participants will be entered into the Cash4College $1,500 Scholarship Raffle.
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March 2, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 3, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 3, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 4, 2024
March 4, 2024
March 4, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 4, 2024
Weekly drop-in group--no experience necessary! Join us on Mondays at 11-11:30am in the Success Center, LC 137 to learn and practice tools for stress management, mental well-being, and achieving a balanced academic and personal life. Call Student Health Services at 562-653-7821 for more information. Starts January 22. View the flyer.
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March 4, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 4, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 4, 2024
ASCC Cabinet Meeting every Monday at 2 p.m. in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 5, 2024
March 5, 2024
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 5, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 5, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
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March 5, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 5, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
View the flyer.
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March 5, 2024
BOOK CLUB - First Gen: a Memoir
Begins March 5th and also meets on the 19th, and 25th at 11:00am, CTX/Zoom
Open to students, faculty, and staff. Receive a free book.
Contact: Lydia Alvarez at [email protected]
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March 5, 2024
Women of the World Unite
with Prof. Goretti Horgan from N. Ireland
March 5, 11:00am - 12:30pm, LA 130
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March 5, 2024
ASCC Court Meeting every Tuesday at Noon in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
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March 5, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 5, 2024
Chinese Lantern Festival on March 5
Join our Lantern Festival for a Chinese cultural experience and learn about Mandarin language courses and Taiwan study abroad programs offered at Cerritos College. Enjoy lantern making, calligraphy, painting, sweet dumplings, and more! Tuesday, March 5, 6 - 7:30 p.m. in LA 103.
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March 5, 2024
What Makes a Woman? Simone de Beauvoir
with William Mittendorf
March 5, 7:00pm, ZOOM
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 6, 2024
March 6, 2024
March 6, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 6, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 6, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 6, 2024
Women Leading Resistance Movements
with Sarra BenGhorbal
March 6, 11:00am - 12:30pm, BE 110
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March 6, 2024
Meditation is a great way to reduce stress and improve overall well-being. It involves focusing on the present moment and letting go of any distracting thoughts. You don't need any prior experience to join us - we will guide you through the practice.
So mark your calendars and join us at the Meditation Room in Student Health for some much needed relaxation.
Wednesdays 11:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. beginning February 28 through May 1. View the flyer.
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March 6, 2024
Join the True Colors: LGBTQIA+ support group beginning March 6 at 12 p.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee.
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March 6, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 6, 2024
For students who would like to learn how to set-up a basic PowerPoint presentation and to present a PowerPoint with confidence. You will learn to: Format your presentation; Insert and manipulate pictures; including Custom Transparent Overlays; Create and insert Videos; Insert QR codes; Create Smart Art Graphics and tables; and much more. You will also learn how to add slide and sound transitions. These free small-group sessions last 60 minutes. Please register for the session in advance. Call (562) 860-2451 x2184 In person at the computer lab desk Sign up early! All sessions are limited to 8 participants.
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March 6, 2024
AT&ST VIRTUAL DROP-IN (APPLIED TECHNOLOGY & SKILLED TRADES ) LCP All Technology majors welcomed! No Appointment Needed bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In Architecture Auto Collision Repair Automotive Technology Cosmetology & Esthetician Engineering Technology Industrial Technology Machine Tool Technology New Product Development Plastics & Composites Welding Woodworking Field Iron Workers Available Counselors: Rigo Castro Veronica Herrera
Zoom - bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 7, 2024
March 7, 2024
March 7, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 7, 2024
Navigating Power Dynamics in Conversations
with Katie St. John and Dr. Laura Tchulluian
March 7, 10:00 - 11:00am, ZOOM
–
March 7, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 7, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 7, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 7, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
–
March 7, 2024
Join us Student employment Spring 2024 EMPLOYER PANEL Thursday, March 7 2 p.m. - 3 p.m. in Science 101
Benefits to students: - Learn about hiring practices of companies - Find out critical skills needed on the job - Receive tips for effective resume writing and to enhance your interviewing skills - Obtain internship information, etc. - Be more confident in your job search skills Participating Employers: ChildCare Careers GST technology
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March 7, 2024
Stress Management for Women
with Halleh Nia
March 7, 2:00 - 3:00pm, LA 213
–
March 7, 2024
We invite students of the Equity Programs to join us for a screening of the action-adventurous, How to Train Your Dragon! Popcorn and other light refreshments will be provided. Seating will be available, and we will be outside. **It may be chilly; so, we encourage you to bring a chair or a blanket! ???
–
March 7, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
January 19, 2024 – March 8, 2024
ATTENTION CERRITOS COLLEGE FALCON GRADUATES: APPLY TO BE THE 2024STUDENT COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER!
The Student Speaker sits on the Commencement stage, is highlighted in the program booklet, and provides a 5-minute graduation speech during the ceremony.
Application Process:
1. Submit the online application by March 8 to express interest. Application link: https://forms.office.com/r/ZkC8k3kj4Q
2. Student Speaker Auditions held March 22, sign-up sent to applicants.
3. Student Speaker Finalist Auditions (top 3) held at Student Life Committee Meeting on April 4
For full eligibility requirements and details visit www.cerritos.edu/commencement.
February 6, 2024 – March 8, 2024
Application Closes March 8 at 11:59pm
Requirements listed on application!
ASCC President & Vice President Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622582
Cerritos College Student Trustee Application https://cerritos.campuslabs.com/engage/submitter/form/start/622583
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 8, 2024
March 8, 2024
March 8, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 8, 2024
Counseling's Instagram Q&A Every Friday Do you have questions for counseling? Follow us on Instagram @cerritoscounseling! Every Friday Cerritos College's Counseling Department hosts Q&A Friday for students to have their questions answered in a fast and convenient way. You can also DM us throughout the week Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Be in the know when we have open appointments special events and much more. Learn more and connect with your Learning and Career Pathway (LCP) team! Tag us DM us and share your experiences with us we want to hear from you. We look forward to connecting and serving you :) -Counseling Department and LCP Team Follow us on Instagram: @cerritoscounseling
–
March 8, 2024
New Talon Marks Weekly Newsletter delivered in your inbox! Subscribe today!
–
March 8, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 8, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 8, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 9, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 9, 2024
The Financial Aid Office will be hosting FREE FAFSA and CA Dream Act Application Workshops on Saturdays (see flyer for dates). The workshops are open to ALL. No registration is needed; just come! Participants will be entered into the Cash4College $1,500 Scholarship Raffle.
–
March 9, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 10, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 10, 2024
Blanche comes to live with her sister and her sister's husband. She loses her grip on reality as she fails to get what it is she desires.
A play written by Tennessee Williams and first performed on Broadway on December 3, 1947.
The play dramatizes the experiences of Blanche DuBois, a former Southern belle who, After the loss of her family home to creditors, travels from Laurel, Mississippi, to the New Orleans French Quarter to live with her younger married sister, Stella, and Stella's husband, Stanley Kowalski. She has no money and nowhere else to go.
Williams' most popular work, A Streetcar Named Desire is one of the most critically acclaimed plays of the twentieth century. It still ranks among his most performed plays.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 11, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 11, 2024
Weekly drop-in group--no experience necessary! Join us on Mondays at 11-11:30am in the Success Center, LC 137 to learn and practice tools for stress management, mental well-being, and achieving a balanced academic and personal life. Call Student Health Services at 562-653-7821 for more information. Starts January 22. View the flyer.
–
March 11, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 11, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 11, 2024
ASCC Cabinet Meeting every Monday at 2 p.m. in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 12, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 12, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 12, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 12, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
View the flyer.
–
March 12, 2024
ASCC Court Meeting every Tuesday at Noon in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
–
March 12, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 13, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 13, 2024
Join the drop-in "We Are Here" support group for Undocu students on Wednesdays starting March 13 at 10 a.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee, at [email protected] for more information.
–
March 13, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 13, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 13, 2024
Meditation is a great way to reduce stress and improve overall well-being. It involves focusing on the present moment and letting go of any distracting thoughts. You don't need any prior experience to join us - we will guide you through the practice.
So mark your calendars and join us at the Meditation Room in Student Health for some much needed relaxation.
Wednesdays 11:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. beginning February 28 through May 1. View the flyer.
–
March 13, 2024
Join the True Colors: LGBTQIA+ support group beginning March 6 at 12 p.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee.
–
March 13, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 14, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 14, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 14, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 14, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 14, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 15, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
–
March 15, 2024
Counseling's Instagram Q&A Every Friday Do you have questions for counseling? Follow us on Instagram @cerritoscounseling! Every Friday Cerritos College's Counseling Department hosts Q&A Friday for students to have their questions answered in a fast and convenient way. You can also DM us throughout the week Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Be in the know when we have open appointments special events and much more. Learn more and connect with your Learning and Career Pathway (LCP) team! Tag us DM us and share your experiences with us we want to hear from you. We look forward to connecting and serving you :) -Counseling Department and LCP Team Follow us on Instagram: @cerritoscounseling
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 16, 2024
Nube Cruz
CON EL NOPAL EN LA FRENTE
Mar 3 – Mar 16, 2024
Nube Cruz’s Window Dressing installation, Con El Nopal En La Frente (With the Nopal on the Forehead), is a
physical manifestation of their ongoing exploration of Nopal Futurity, an art practice that (re)mixes older
indigenous technologies and the idea of Indigenous Futurity with a cuir/queer indigena perspective. Recognizing
that Amerindigenous peoples have already been living in a post-apocalyptic world since 1492, Cruz’s work seeks to
activate the potential for contemporary liberation through the historical reconstruction, and innovative
development, of (new) Indigena cosmologies. By excavating the historical invisibility of native people’s
advancement of, and contribution to, the technologies of modern society, Cruz hopes to disrupt the standard
Western modernist narrative in order to rematriate, retrieve, and reconstruct images and obliterate the borders,
legalities, histories, objects, resources, and bodies that have otherwise been co-opted by the colonial gaze.
Through sculpture, photography, and performative video documentation, invoking what they call ‘indigie-archivist
research,’ their installation will begin the necessary conversation on how the possibilities and potentialities of
indigenous futures might be engaged and activated.
Nube Cruz is and artist and activist currently completing their BFA degree at UCLA. They have exhibited in numerous group exhibitions,
including We Are Made of the Earth, Our Skin Says So at A+R+T Gallery in Los Angeles, The Aesthetics of Undocumentedness at Dalton
Gallery in Altanta, and The Latinx Project at NYU in New York. The have been a Native American Arts Grantee through the San Francisco
Queer Arts Foundation and Galereria de la Raza and have served as an assistant researcher on the UCLA Indigenous Mapping Project. They
also work transnationally with indigenous activists in Mexico.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 17, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 18, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 18, 2024
Weekly drop-in group--no experience necessary! Join us on Mondays at 11-11:30am in the Success Center, LC 137 to learn and practice tools for stress management, mental well-being, and achieving a balanced academic and personal life. Call Student Health Services at 562-653-7821 for more information. Starts January 22. View the flyer.
–
March 18, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 18, 2024
The Power of Stories
with Dr. Vicki Ruiz
March 18, 11:00am - 12:15pm, PAC 107
–
March 18, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 18, 2024
ASCC Cabinet Meeting every Monday at 2 p.m. in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 19, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 19, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 19, 2024
AT&ST VIRTUAL DROP-IN (APPLIED TECHNOLOGY & SKILLED TRADES ) LCP All Technology majors welcomed! No Appointment Needed bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In Architecture Auto Collision Repair Automotive Technology Cosmetology & Esthetician Engineering Technology Industrial Technology Machine Tool Technology New Product Development Plastics & Composites Welding Woodworking Field Iron Workers Available Counselors: Rigo Castro Veronica Herrera
Zoom - bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In
–
March 19, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 19, 2024
–
March 19, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
View the flyer.
–
March 19, 2024
BOOK CLUB - First Gen: a Memoir
Begins March 5th and also meets on the 19th, and 25th at 11:00am, CTX/Zoom
Open to students, faculty, and staff. Receive a free book.
Contact: Lydia Alvarez at [email protected]
–
March 19, 2024
Women in Accounting and Finance
with Rei Kamio
March 19, 11:00am - 12:15pm, SS136/ZOOM
–
March 19, 2024
ASCC Court Meeting every Tuesday at Noon in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
–
March 19, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 19, 2024
This session will introduce students to the basic skills needed to create an Excel spreadsheet and manipulate data. You will learn how to set up a spreadsheet, enter data, use formulas, and learn about many of useful Excel functions such as AutoFill, Sort, Filter, Format Painter and more. This free small-group session lasts 60 minutes. Please register for the session in advance. Call (562) 860-2451 x2184 In person at the computer lab desk Sign up early! All sessions are limited to 8 participants.
–
March 19, 2024
The Inter-Club Council brings all registered student clubs together to promote collaboration and regular communication between the multitude of student clubs at Cerritos College. During meetings, the ICC discusses ICC events and activities, as well as promotes the activities and events of other student clubs and organizations.
–
March 19, 2024
A Feminist Standpoint: Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz
with William Mittendorf
March 19, 7:00pm, ZOOM
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 20, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 20, 2024
Join the drop-in "We Are Here" support group for Undocu students on Wednesdays starting March 13 at 10 a.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee, at [email protected] for more information.
–
March 20, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 20, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 20, 2024
A Feminist Standpoint: Epistemologies
with William Mittendorf
March 20, 11:00am - 12:15pm, SS 137
–
March 20, 2024
Meditation is a great way to reduce stress and improve overall well-being. It involves focusing on the present moment and letting go of any distracting thoughts. You don't need any prior experience to join us - we will guide you through the practice.
So mark your calendars and join us at the Meditation Room in Student Health for some much needed relaxation.
Wednesdays 11:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. beginning February 28 through May 1. View the flyer.
–
March 20, 2024
Join the True Colors: LGBTQIA+ support group beginning March 6 at 12 p.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee.
–
March 20, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 20, 2024
AT&ST VIRTUAL DROP-IN (APPLIED TECHNOLOGY & SKILLED TRADES ) LCP All Technology majors welcomed! No Appointment Needed bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In Architecture Auto Collision Repair Automotive Technology Cosmetology & Esthetician Engineering Technology Industrial Technology Machine Tool Technology New Product Development Plastics & Composites Welding Woodworking Field Iron Workers Available Counselors: Rigo Castro Veronica Herrera
Zoom - bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In
–
March 20, 2024
Meetings are held on Wednesdays in the Cheryl A. Epple Board Room of the Administration Building beginning at 7:00 p.m., unless otherwise noted.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 21, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 21, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 21, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 21, 2024
Powerlands (a documentary film)
with Director Ivey-Camille
March 21, 11:00am - 12:30pm, Teleconference Center (LC-155)
–
March 21, 2024
Journal writing nurtures your mental wellbeing while expressing yourself. Get your creativity on by crafting your personalized journal. The workshop also provides tips for starting a journaling practice and offers a refresher about how journaling can benefit your mental wellbeing. Workshop occurs January 18th, February 15th, March 21st & April 18th. Participation is strongly encouraged but personal disclosure is not required. No experience is necessary. View the flyer.
–
March 21, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 21, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
–
March 21, 2024
Who is Generation Z?
with Dr. Corey Seemiller, Professor of Leadership Studies in Education and Organizations, Wright State University
March 21, 2:00 - 3:00pm, ZOOM
–
March 21, 2024
This presentation is an overview of the Canvas course management system and the tools your instructors most commonly use to deliver class content to you. You will learn how to access and navigate Canvas and use the “Online Readiness Modules”. These modules are especially helpful to first time and online students. You will also learn to use the Canvas calendar to keep track of important events and assignments. This free small-group session lasts 30 minutes. Please register for the session in advance. Call (562) 860-2451 x2184 In person at the computer lab desk Sign up early! All sessions are limited to 8 participants.
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March 21, 2024
This speech contest is open to all Cerritos College students. Participants will be given prompts related to the theme of Women’s History Month. Students will be given 30 minutes to research and outline a brief extemporaneous speech in response to their prompt. Students will then deliver their speeches in a preliminary round. The top preliminary speakers will present their speech a second time in a final round to compete for prize money worth up to $200 for first place!
Visit www.cerritos.edu/whm for more Women's History Month info and events.
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March 21, 2024
Cerritos College Dance Department Spring Concert. -- March 21-23 | 6:00 pm
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 22, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 22, 2024
Counseling's Instagram Q&A Every Friday Do you have questions for counseling? Follow us on Instagram @cerritoscounseling! Every Friday Cerritos College's Counseling Department hosts Q&A Friday for students to have their questions answered in a fast and convenient way. You can also DM us throughout the week Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Be in the know when we have open appointments special events and much more. Learn more and connect with your Learning and Career Pathway (LCP) team! Tag us DM us and share your experiences with us we want to hear from you. We look forward to connecting and serving you :) -Counseling Department and LCP Team Follow us on Instagram: @cerritoscounseling
–
March 22, 2024
New Talon Marks Weekly Newsletter delivered in your inbox! Subscribe today!
–
March 22, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 22, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 22, 2024
Cerritos College Dance Department Spring Concert. -- March 21-23 | 6:00 pm
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 23, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 23, 2024
The Financial Aid Office will be hosting FREE FAFSA and CA Dream Act Application Workshops on Saturdays (see flyer for dates). The workshops are open to ALL. No registration is needed; just come! Participants will be entered into the Cash4College $1,500 Scholarship Raffle.
–
March 23, 2024
Come get your taxes prepared and filed for free on Saturday, March 23, 2024, at our annual VITA Event! VIew the flyer.
–
March 23, 2024
Cerritos College Dance Department Spring Concert. -- March 21-23 | 6:00 pm
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 24, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 25, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 25, 2024
Weekly drop-in group--no experience necessary! Join us on Mondays at 11-11:30am in the Success Center, LC 137 to learn and practice tools for stress management, mental well-being, and achieving a balanced academic and personal life. Call Student Health Services at 562-653-7821 for more information. Starts January 22. View the flyer.
–
March 25, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 25, 2024
BOOK CLUB - First Gen: a Memoir
Begins March 5th and also meets on the 19th, and 25th at 11:00am, CTX/Zoom
Open to students, faculty, and staff. Receive a free book.
Contact: Lydia Alvarez at [email protected]
–
March 25, 2024
The Feel of the Road: Anxiety, Empathy, and Community in Thelma & Louise and “Woman Hollering Creek”
with Dr. Diane Luu
March 25, 11am, LA 103
–
March 25, 2024
Women Leaders in Education Tell Their Stories
with Dr. Shin Liu, Dr. Mercedes Gutierrez, Marrisa Perez, and Donna Miller
March 25, 12:30 - 2:00pm, LA 103
–
March 25, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 25, 2024
ASCC Cabinet Meeting every Monday at 2 p.m. in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
–
March 25, 2024
Tribute to Women Writers
with Ja’net Danielo
March 25, 3:00 - 5:00pm, ZOOM
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 26, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 26, 2024
Stop by the Community Resource Fair and learn about:
Types of agencies expected to attend:
See flyer for more detailed information. Everyone is welcome!
–
March 26, 2024
Hop into spring with the Talon-Ted Stitchers of Cerritos! Join us for an Easter fundraising event where we'll showcase our handmade crochet and knitting items, perfect for adding a touch of charm to your holiday celebrations. From adorable flower pens to colorful bags and spring-themed decorations, our talented members have crafted a delightful selection of items with love and care. By purchasing our handmade creations, you're supporting our club and helping fund materials for future projects. Don't miss this egg-cellent opportunity to shop for a cause and add some handmade flair to your Easter festivities!
Club: Talon-Ted Stitchers of Cerritos
–
March 26, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 26, 2024
AT&ST VIRTUAL DROP-IN (APPLIED TECHNOLOGY & SKILLED TRADES ) LCP All Technology majors welcomed! No Appointment Needed bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In Architecture Auto Collision Repair Automotive Technology Cosmetology & Esthetician Engineering Technology Industrial Technology Machine Tool Technology New Product Development Plastics & Composites Welding Woodworking Field Iron Workers Available Counselors: Rigo Castro Veronica Herrera
Zoom - bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In
–
March 26, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 26, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
View the flyer.
–
March 26, 2024
Curl Time Part 2: Hair Love
with Chelena Fisher
March 26, 11:00am - 12:15pm, MP 211
–
March 26, 2024
ASCC Court Meeting every Tuesday at Noon in the Auto Partners Building room 12 or Zoom
–
March 26, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 26, 2024
This presentation is an overview of the Canvas course management system and the tools your instructors most commonly use to deliver class content to you. You will learn how to access and navigate Canvas and use the “Online Readiness Modules”. These modules are especially helpful to first time and online students. You will also learn to use the Canvas calendar to keep track of important events and assignments. This free small-group session lasts 30 minutes. Please register for the session in advance. Call (562) 860-2451 x2184 In person at the computer lab desk Sign up early! All sessions are limited to 8 participants.
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March 26, 2024
The Inter-Club Council brings all registered student clubs together to promote collaboration and regular communication between the multitude of student clubs at Cerritos College. During meetings, the ICC discusses ICC events and activities, as well as promotes the activities and events of other student clubs and organizations.
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March 26, 2024
Mental Health First Aid for Women
with Halleh Nia
March 26, 3:00 - 4:00pm, ZOOM
–
March 26, 2024
Ruth Asawa: Global Artist
with Lisa Boutin-Vitela
March 26, 4:00 - 4:50pm, FA 133/ZOOM
–
March 26, 2024
Elizabeth Palmer Peabody: Radical Pedagogy and Consciousness Raising
with Ted Stoltz
March 26, 7:00pm, ZOOM
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 27, 2024
Talon Marks Newspaper hits stands today! Pick up a copy of the print in all buildings and outdoor kiosks!
March 27, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
–
March 27, 2024
LOCATION: Falcon Stadium (at Alondra Blvd & Gridley Rd.)
PARKING & ENTRANCE: in Lot 1
**WALK UP SERVICES ONLY-NO DRIVE THRU**
–
March 27, 2024
Join the drop-in "We Are Here" support group for Undocu students on Wednesdays starting March 13 at 10 a.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee, at [email protected] for more information.
–
March 27, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
–
March 27, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 27, 2024
Psychology Club intends to sell Spring themed items and goods in order to raise funds for out club endeavors.
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March 27, 2024
Sandra Day O’Connor: The First (a documentary film)
March 27, 11:00am - 1:00pm, LC 155
–
March 27, 2024
Meditation is a great way to reduce stress and improve overall well-being. It involves focusing on the present moment and letting go of any distracting thoughts. You don't need any prior experience to join us - we will guide you through the practice.
So mark your calendars and join us at the Meditation Room in Student Health for some much needed relaxation.
Wednesdays 11:30 a.m. - 12 p.m. beginning February 28 through May 1. View the flyer.
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March 27, 2024
Join the True Colors: LGBTQIA+ support group beginning March 6 at 12 p.m. in the Santa Barbara Building. Contact Alex Cedas, MFT Trainee.
–
March 27, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
–
March 27, 2024
Isabel Allende Tells Her Story
with Barbara Van Dine
March 27, 4:00 - 5:00pm, ZOOM
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March 27, 2024
AT&ST VIRTUAL DROP-IN (APPLIED TECHNOLOGY & SKILLED TRADES ) LCP All Technology majors welcomed! No Appointment Needed bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In Architecture Auto Collision Repair Automotive Technology Cosmetology & Esthetician Engineering Technology Industrial Technology Machine Tool Technology New Product Development Plastics & Composites Welding Woodworking Field Iron Workers Available Counselors: Rigo Castro Veronica Herrera
Zoom - bit.ly/ATSTDrop-In
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 28, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
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March 28, 2024
Join us for a 30 minute exploration of the many ways you can find balance. We will use the body, breath, and attentional focus to create more ease and calm. You will learn tools to use at school, work and at home. Scan QR code on flyer to obtain Zoom information. Tuesdays, Wednesdays & Thursdays at 10:30 a.m. to 11 a.m.
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March 28, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 28, 2024
Coffee Chat: Women (Scientists) Tell All
with Nikki Iwas
March 28, 12:30 - 1:00pm, Library Shade Structure
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March 28, 2024
Economic Policy: The Stories that Change the U.S.
with Katya De Los Rios and Kelly Velasquez
March 28, 12:30 - 1:30pm, ZOOM
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March 28, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 28, 2024
Tuesdays from 11 a.m. – 1 p.m. and Thursdays from 1 p.m. – 3 p.m. until the end of the semester. They will not be available during spring break - March 11 to 17.
Students: Visit https://tinyurl.com/SC-dogs to schedule a 15-minute appointment.
Employees: Make an appointment to visit a therapy dog through the Success Center reception desk by either:
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March 28, 2024
Women's History Month Event: A look at the life of Harriet Tubman not only as a woman but as a human being full of compassion, selfless sacrifice, determination, and a champion of freedom. She relentlessly “risked her own life and freedom to liberate others from slavery.”
Visit www.cerritos.edu/whm for more Women's History Month info and events.
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March 28, 2024
A beginners lesson for students who would like to become more familiar with the Word tabs and the common tool functions. You will also learn to use essential functions such as Capturing a Screen Shot, How to shrink a page, Use the Snipping Tool, Use Text to Speech and Smart Lookup. This free small-group session lasts 30 minutes. Please register for the session in advance. Call (562) 860-2451 x2184 In person at the computer lab desk Sign up early! All sessions are limited to 8 participants.
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March 28, 2024
Religion and Gender Activism
with Mariam Youssef
March 28, 4:00 - 5:30pm, BE 111
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 29, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
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March 29, 2024
Counseling's Instagram Q&A Every Friday Do you have questions for counseling? Follow us on Instagram @cerritoscounseling! Every Friday Cerritos College's Counseling Department hosts Q&A Friday for students to have their questions answered in a fast and convenient way. You can also DM us throughout the week Monday-Friday 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Be in the know when we have open appointments special events and much more. Learn more and connect with your Learning and Career Pathway (LCP) team! Tag us DM us and share your experiences with us we want to hear from you. We look forward to connecting and serving you :) -Counseling Department and LCP Team Follow us on Instagram: @cerritoscounseling
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March 29, 2024
New Talon Marks Weekly Newsletter delivered in your inbox! Subscribe today!
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March 29, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
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March 29, 2024
You are not alone in a crisis. Mental Health Services provides crisis walk-in appointments daily, Monday through Friday at 11am and 1pm. Contact Mental Health Services to discuss circumstances that may need same day attention: -extreme anxiety or panic -extreme sadness -death of a friend or loved one -thoughts of self-harm or harming someone else -experiencing a traumatic event -having odd or intrusive thoughts Call us at 562-653-7821 or walk in to Student Health Services. View the flyer.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 30, 2024
Teresa Flores
AN INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
Mar 17 – Mar 30, 2024
Teresa Flores is a multidisciplinary artist who explores connections between her Chicana identity and the notion of
the California Dream. Through drawing, painting, video, and social practice Flores explores the ways generations of
colonialism and assimilation in California have affected families like her own, who can trace their ancestor’s
migration along the Pacific coast for generations. In exploring food and movement, collective art making and
nurturing, Flores seeks innovative avenues of expression and pathways to healing. Her Window Dressing
installation, An Intergenerational Transmission, consists of both window signage and a video presentation. The
window signage is constructed from readymade LED neon wiring, wood, nails and hot glue. The sign, which spells
out the words We Can Make Our Own, references the idea of collective autonomy and the economics of the Los
Angeles artist tradition of the neon sign. The piece is based on a smaller 2017 LED neon sign and fully embraces the
makeshift Chicanx practice of rasquachismo by not trying to hide imperfections in the construction process of the
sign. Tortilla Burning is a durational video from 2007 that focuses on a single tortilla burning on a stove over a
twenty minute period. The burning tortilla is a reflection on colonialism and assimilation in California. The video
was created in remembrance of the time the artist’s grandmother spent in the child foster care system in Southern
California in the early 1930s, where she was forced to cook and clean for her Mexican-American foster families
while being abused and isolated for her indigeneity. Together, the two artworks celebrate humanity’s will to
survive in the face of ferocious and shifting capitalist and imperialist world hegemony. They investigate our
capacities to create when in survival mode and make visible the marks and burns of struggle and imperfection.
East-LA based multimedia artist Teresa Flores is an inaugural Artist-in-Residence for the Dolores Huerta Foundation. Her drawings, paintings,
videos, and social practice projects have been featured in Alta Journal, The New Yorker, and NPR and have been presented at the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art, Spike Art Quarterly in Berlin, and Galería de la Raza in San Francisco. Flores has also exhibited with
Dominique Gallery, Espacio 1839, and has been a featured artist in the annual Venice Family Clinic Art Walk and Auction. Flores studied
drawing and painting at Fresno State, original home of the feminist art movement, before receiving her Public Practice MFA from Otis
College of Art and Design, where she earned the recognition of Outstanding Alumni.
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March 30, 2024
The Financial Aid Office will be hosting FREE FAFSA and CA Dream Act Application Workshops on Saturdays (see flyer for dates). The workshops are open to ALL. No registration is needed; just come! Participants will be entered into the Cash4College $1,500 Scholarship Raffle.
March 5, 2024 – May 2, 2024
That Cal Grant Priority Deadline has been extended to May 2. Falcons, you have more time to submit your financial aid applications. Let's get started now.
March 22, 2024 – April 5, 2024
In collaboration with 7 Leaves Cafe, this fundraising event is used to support the graduating class of Cerritos College Nursing Students.
The fundraising event will be using 7 Leaves’ Fundraising Goodness Card where each card can be purchased for $5 each. Each card has different options for the customer to choose from: BOGO Free x 3, free add-on for any one drink, free upsize to any one drink, and one free macaron with any drink purchase, subject to availability.
SNACC is selling these cards to nursing students, family or friends, or anyone interested in supporting our nursing students. Each card is used for in-store purchase only and cannot be combined with any other offer with a limit one per transaction as the original card must be used. As part of SNACC's mission to serve our community and students, these funds will go towards our goals of hosting health fairs, mental health days, and raising funds for our upcoming pinning ceremony to celebrate the hard work and dedication of Cerritos College’s future registered nurses.
Contact a Please find a SNACC member
Club: Student Nurses Association of Cerritos College
March 31, 2024
Nancy Buchanan
WHAT DOES HE OWE US?
Mar 31 – Apr 13, 2024
During the 2020 presidential race, Nancy Buchanan collected mailers that were sent to her friends solicitating
donations for the then-president’s re-election campaign. For her Window Dressing installation, What Does He Owe
Us?, she stitched together these printed forms and envelopes and then painted over them to create large-scale
murals depicting iconic symbols associated with the greed and boorishness of the Trump presidency: a gilded
coronation carriage and an oozing hamburger.
Nancy Buchanan is a conceptual artist working in many forms; her performance works began in 1972, when she was a member of the
infamous F Space Gallery in Santa Ana, CA; her earliest videotapes were recorded on open-reel Portapacks; and she also produces
installations, drawings, and mixed-media work. She assisted activist Michael Zinzun with his cable access program Message to the
Grassroots from 1988-1998 and traveled to Namibia to document that country’s independence from South Africa. Buchanan’s work has been
included in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los
Angeles, the Centre Pompidou, and the Getty Research Institute (where her papers and video works are archived). Buchanan is the recipient
of four National Endowment for the Arts Individual Artist grants, a COLA grant, and a Rockefeller Fellowship in New Media. Her work was
included in the 58th Carnegie International.