Laserfiche WebLink
In collaboration, the efforts of these staff members have produced notable successes, especially with WIA- <br />mandated goals. The program has achieved full enrollment very early in the cycle for both 2011-2012 and <br />2012-2013. Thus far, a total of forty participants have completed the first phase of the training successfully, <br />and were awarded certificates from Rancho Santiago Community College District testifying to their mastery of <br />digital media preproduction skills. Our out -of -school participants are working to complete high school <br />requirements under staff supervision. In pursuit of WIA employment development goals, participants have been <br />able to take part in the RSCCD Young Entrepreneurs Program, which exposes youth to mechanisms and <br />methods of increasing the marketability of their products and skills. <br />The program is organized and running efficiently. Staff is skilled in providing the mentoring, support and <br />monitoring required by the grant. Participants receive a well-balanced digital media training curriculum taught <br />by qualified instructors, and RSCCD certificates at its conclusion. They experience the workplace and its <br />requirements while working for the library and are paid an hourly wage. They are supported by staff and outside <br />resources in pursuit of educational goals and needed personal counseling. The youth are brought into contact <br />with potential employers and taught to present themselves effectively in the job market. We are poised and <br />prepared to move smoothly into a third year of successful service to at risk youth in the community. <br />Experience/ Oualifications: Rancho Santiago Communitv College District (RSCCD): <br />RSCCD has had a long and extensive history of serving Santa Ana youth. The Santa Ana College campus of <br />RSCCD was the second junior college in the county and was founded in 1915 as a department within Santa Ana <br />High School. As such, the campus has focused on serving the youth of Santa Ana from its very inception. A list <br />of recent programming efforts illustrates this continued commitment towards the city's youth. <br />Since 1995, RSCCD has initiated numerous programs to address the needs of Santa Ana youth. These efforts <br />have included a 1997 HUD-COPC grant, 1998-2006 Learn & Serve America program, and an AmeriCorps <br />Foster Youth Project between 1998 and 2005. Ongoing youth orientated initiatives include GEAR UP (1999- <br />present), Student Support Services (1995-present), and Talent Search (1995-present). Through numerous <br />programs, RSCCD provides tutoring; mentoring; counseling advisement; PSAT/SAT/ACT preparation; job <br />shadowing and work experience for 9th-12th graders at SAUSD high schools; the Early Decision program to <br />provide counseling, registration, and fall enrollment for incoming seniors; and a summer Math Bridge programs <br />for 8th graders to be able to enter and succeed in Algebra I in 9th grade. This support of youth extends to the <br />District's commitment to help minority youth graduate from college. Santa Ana College has the 5a' highest <br />number of Hispanic graduates in California and is ranked 12`h nationally amongst junior colleges. <br />RSCCD, through its Corporate Training Institute, has been working with WIA since October 2009 when it <br />began co-authoring a Department of Labor grant in partnership with the Santa Ana W/O/R/K Center. Work on <br />this grant began in July 2010, titled the Job Technology Project, and it focused on providing 100 displaced <br />workers with job skills assessments, basic skills training in reading, math and analytical thinking, as well as <br />computer literacy classes and green training in solar energy, water treatment and water distribution. <br />Unemployed individuals who participate in the Water Technology courses took the State exam for certification <br />and the grant fiords provided job development and placement services. <br />The Corporate Training Institute is also a partner on the Orange County WIB's California Gang Reduction, <br />Intervention & Prevention (GRIP) grant. The program focuses on assisting youth that are at risk of gang <br />involvement and gang -involved youth in obtaining employment readiness skills. Eligible youth receive a full <br />array of workforce development services that include job exploration activities, paid training and subsidized <br />EXHIBIT A <br />