Fitting for what was for thousands of students the first day of school, the West Seattle Chamber of Commerce‘s monthly lunch meeting was keynoted today by Dr. Jill Wakefield, who runs the city’s community-college system after more than 30 years with South Seattle Community College here in West Seattle. The heart of her presentation was the fact that almost everything you think about community colleges is probably wrong – as is everything you think about the job market today. On the former point – she called attention to the fact that 50,000 students are now in the Seattle system, “the second largest higher-education provider after the University of Washington.” And she noted that SSCC is one of four community colleges in the state to offer a 4-year degree (it’s in hospitality management); on the latter point, she talked about the specialties in which trained workers are most in demand, such as health care, and noted that while “green jobs” and training for them is growing in popularity, the actual job market has not quite caught up yet. She stressed the importance of technology and the broad adoption of it among students and teachers, saying that 9,000 students in the Seattle system are taking at least one online course now, and that by 2020, 70 percent of classes will be online or “hybrid.” Along with looking to the future, she gave a nod to SSCC’s 40-year past, outlining a bit of its history, dating back to the first classes, before the Puget Ridge campus was built, including some held in the West Seattle High School building. CHAMBER NOTES: Watch the group’s website at wschamber.com for news on next month’s lunch meeting; in the meantime, State Sen. Joe McDermott will be the next “Local Elected Official” at the brown-bag Lunch With LEO at the Chamber offices (RSVP ASAP, only 10 seats) Sept. 24; tickets are on sale for the Bordeaux, Bites and Bingo fundraiser October 2 at the SODO facilty of West Seattle-based Herban Feast.
West Seattle, Washington
25 Tuesday

| Comments Off on West Seattle Chamber hears from community colleges’ chief