WELLNESS WALK-IN CALMING HOURS – FROM THE KCC WELLNESS CENTER
Take a breather, learn a new skill, play games, and tell us your ideas! NO REGISTRATION NEEDED - JUST SHOW UP IN U113
Take a breather, learn a new skill, play games, and tell us your ideas! NO REGISTRATION NEEDED - JUST SHOW UP IN U113
This is an opportunity for Education students to read aloud to 3 and 4 year olds from KCC’s Child Development Center. Please arrive in V123 by 10am to help set up the room before the children arrive. Also, please stay after the read aloud to tidy up the space. Ms. Pauline Cassino (from the KCC library) will meet you in the room to facilitate the setup,lesson and cleanup.
This conference will introduce or reconnect us to descriptive processes (which focus on the strengths of kids, parents and teachers) , allowing us to look deeply at children’s work and words in order to strengthen our capacity to teach and learn alongside them.
Librarians from Brooklyn Public Library Adams Street location lead for an exciting and engaging storytime session, along with singing and rhymes. Each month they select a book to pair with the Education Center’s monthly nature theme.
Please join us this Friday, January 17th at 12pm at the Brooklyn Museum for a free, guided tour of the special exhibit: Elizabeth Catlett: A Black Revolutionary Artist and All That It Implies. Growing up during the Great Depression, artist Elizabeth Catlett witnessed class inequality, racial violence, and U.S. imperialism firsthand, all while pursuing an artistic education grounded in the tenets of modernism. Catlett would protest injustices for nearly a century, via both soaring artworks and on-the-ground activism. This trip is open to all KCC students. Please visit M230 to sign up or email [email protected]. Space is limited.
This family friendly program, co-curated with the BAMkids Parent Advisory Circle, immerses young people in art forms that express the importance of acts of service and collaborative work, while knowing that your best doesn’t have to look like anyone else’s. Activities include imaginative movement, creating a collaborative tape mural, celebrating friendship and family in a vintage photo booth, and sharing inspirational messages.
Our children are facing the challenges of a warming world head on. They have a right to understand the realities of the climate crisis and what it means for them – and the adults in their lives have a responsibility to provide that knowledge as best they can. Join Brooklyn Bridge Park Conservancy for a special lecture and event with Harriet Shugarman, an internationally renowned activist, policy analyst, economist and author of the book, How to Talk to Your Kids About Climate Change, Turning Angst into Action. She'll share her unique insights and some best practices for having these meaningful conversations.
The NYC Youth Agenda Coalition elevates youth voices through participatory action research and policy-making. At this event, youth will explore interactive Policy Stations to learn about our research, recommendations, and future vision, and share your experiences on issues like economic mobility, education equity, environmental justice, housing security, and mental health. Your insights will shape our advocacy as we prepare to meet with local officials this spring—we can’t do it without you!
NY Jobs CEO Council are leading a five-part Gen AI workshop series Fridays 10a-12p form March 7 - April 4 at BMCC (199 Chambers St., Room N-452). Students will: · Learn how Gen AI works and how it may be perpetuate bias · Get hands-on with tools to understand uses and limitations · Build a project and present it to a panel of industry experts · Network with industry volunteers and panelists · Receive a digital badge of completion from the NY Jobs CEO Cou
The CUNY-Initiative on Immigration and Education (CUNY-IIE) invites you to join us on for the PK-12 Immigration Literature Conference, a one-day event designed to inspire educators to incorporate immigration-themed literature into their classrooms, fostering deeper understanding of the migration experience. Edwidge Danticat will serve as the opening keynote speaker. An acclaimed author of 17 books, including the children’s book Mama’s Nightingale: A Story of Immigration and Separation, Krik? Krak!, a National Book Award finalist, The Farming of Bones, an American Book Award winner, and Brother, I'm Dying, Danticat's work delves into the Haitian experience and the complexities of migration.
This is an ongoing project that will involve several events over the course of the Spring 2025 semester. These events will provide opportunities to come together as a community by being creative together, specifically through making collage art together. Why collage art? Collage art is made when we piece together different images and materials to create something uniquely yours. It something anyone can do. Also, the process gives you time to think and reflect. Through planning, selecting, arranging, cutting, twisting, curling, and pasting, you have the chance to explore your creativity, reflect, and express yourself. After you make your individual collage, it will then become part of the Kingsborough Tapestry. *** Multiple Day Event - KCC U101A -The COVE
Email us at [email protected]