Halloween Events You Will Definitely Enjoy This Year!

Planning out the week ahead and enjoy these family-friendly events happening around the area! Click on the events for more details.

  1. Movie Drive-In and enjoy The Addams Family!

Date: Saturday, Oct 31, 2020

Time: 6:30 PM – 9:30 PM PDT

Location: Vasa Park Resort, 3560 West Lake Sammamish Parkway Southeast, Bellevue, WA 98008

Tag: Family-friendly, Classic Movie, Pay-as-you-wish Admission, Drive In Theater

Click here for trailer!
  1. Haunted Factory Tour Express at Seattle Chocolate

Date:  Saturday, Oct 31, 2020

Time: 5:00 PM – 9:00 PM

Location: 1180 Andover Park W, Tukwila, WA 98188

Tag: Family-friendly, Free, Drive-thru, ChOcOlATe

About this event: Join us on Halloween evening from 5-9pm at our flagship store for a safe & family-friendly drive-through trick or treat experience, complete with a few familiar faces and chocolate to share. Costumes encouraged! Preview and brace yourself for the journey here!

  1. Museum of Fright (normally Museum of Flight)

Date: Saturday, October 31, 2020 

Time: 11:00 AM to 4:00 PM

Location: 9404 E. Marginal Way South, Seattle, WA 98108

Tag: Family-friendly, Museum, Educational

About this event: Join us for our annual transformation into The Museum of Fright! Things may look a little different this year, but across the Museum galleries, you’ll find safe, Halloween-themed games and activities to spark imagination, innovation, and get in the Halloween spirit. Keep your 6ft. distance for this will be a frightful extravaganza! Activities included in Museum Admission.

  1. Pumpkin Days at Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium Metro Parks Tacoma

Date: now until Saturday, October 31, 2020

Time: 9:00 AM – 4:00 PM

Location: 400 N Pearl St, Tacoma, WA 98407

Tag: Family-friendly, Free, Pumpkin Carving, Scavenger Hunt, Costume (optional)

About this event: Do you love pumpkins? Our animals do! We’ll give them unscheduled enrichments all week long. Plus we’re decorating the Zoo with all the pumpkins we can find! Carve your own animals with our new templates, on display in the plaza. Pumpkins, costumes, animals & scavenger hunt. Free with admission. All ages, all day. This is not everything (!!), check out here for more information about activities here!

  1. Creature of the Night Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium Metro Parks Tacoma

Date: Saturday,October 31, 2020

Time: 3:30 PM – 5:45 PM (45 mins each session)

Location: Online

Tag: Family-friendly, Virtual, Free, RSVP-required

About this event: Can’t make it to the Pumpkin Days above? Fret not! Welcome to our VIRTUAL ANIMAL MEET-UP! SPOOKY AND WICKED-COOL. What’s a bat’s favorite treat? How about a snake? Find out in Creatures of the Night, a virtual program where you meet Zoo staff and four fantastic animals, live from the Zoo. Wear costume and bring questions!  – online, on Halloween! Free, but registration required. 

  1. Seattle Aquarium Underwater Pumpkin Carving

Date: Friday, October 30, 2020

Time: Live from Facebook at 3:00 PM

Location: Online

Tag: Family-friendly, Virtual, Free, Pumpkin Carving, Aquarium

About this event: Halloween looks a little different at the Aquarium this year, but that doesn’t mean we are skipping out on carving pumpkins underwater! Mark your calendars for next Friday, October 30, at 3:00pm for the live reveal of this year’s creations. Live on our Facebook page. Preview here!

  1. Seattle Terrors

Date: Vary

Location: Four Seasons Hotel, 99 Union Street, Seattle WA, 98101

Tag: Group-friendly, Thrilling, Story Telling, Real Life Experience

About this event: This insightful, 60-minute or 90-minute exploration of Seattle’s wildest haunts will keep you hooked from the very first moment. Each ghost story is based on extensive historical research and authentic, verified ghost sightings. Seattle Ghosts tour starts from the Four Seasons Hotel and winds up back there after a mile and 8 spooky tales for the standard tour. The extended tour adds another 30 mins and around a half-mile of walking to 4 extra scares! We’ll cover the modern-day cult that started in Seattle, and left a tell-tale sign there, but ended with the largest mass suicide in US history, 39 people drunk applesauce and barbiturates believing it would allow them to hitch a ride aboard a comet to the promised land. Check out here!

  1. Ghostflix

Date: Vary

Time: Typical 7 PM local time zone

Location: Online

Tag: Virtual, Thrilling, Synchronous

About this event: Each week, we’ll feature a live ghost tour with one of our tour guides in two cities! In light of COVID-19, we decided to feature live video ghost tours through the streets of over 20 cities. Then, we loved the idea of allowing everyone anywhere to take a ghost tour without traveling, and decided to make this a normal part of our offering. Live events allow you to stream the ghost tour that’s happening live! You’ll be able to ask questions and interact with the guide. To do this, you must be available during the time of the event. If you can’t make it, that’s ok- just catch it on demand! Preview trailer here!

  1. Ride the Halloween Train with Northwest Railway Museum

Date: Saturday, October 31, 2020

Time: Depend on available time slots (90 minutes each)

Location: 38625 SE King Street, Snoqualmie WA 98065

Tag: Family-friendly, Historical Site, Train (Choo Choo!)

About this event: TRAIN RIDE, DEPARTING SNOQUALMIE DEPOT. Join us in costumes for a 90-minute fall decorated train excursion. Enjoy a socially-distanced, scenic train ride through the upper Snoqualmie Valley aboard historic rail equipment. Journey east to North Bend, and then travel west to the top of Snoqualmie Falls before returning to the historic Snoqualmie Depot.

  1. Haunted Hike at Northwest Trek

Date: Now until October 31, 2020

Time: All day

Location: 11610 Trek Dr E, Eatonville, WA 98328

Tag: Family-friend, Free, Outdoor, Mystery Solving

About this event: Get spooky – and solve the mystery of the forest! Something’s afoot at Northwest Trek. Weird noises. Odd footprints. Foul smells. Is it ghosts? Goblins? Bigfoot?? Walk our Wild Walk paths, do the online scavenger hunt and solve the mystery! (QR code at entrance.) Free with admission. Online tickets encouraged. 

  1. Halloween Beginner Dance Class

Date: Saturday, October 31, 2020

Time: 8:15 PM – 9:15 PM

Location: Arthur Murray Dance School of Federal Way, 32724 Pacific Hwy S, Federal Way, WA 98003

Tag: Free

About the event: Join us for a complementary Semi-Private Ballroom Dance Class the night before Halloween! Dress to impress in your best creature costume or human clothes! No experience necessary. Singles and couples are welcome! Due to Covid-19, Everyone is required to wear face masks. Disposable gloves are provided. We have a large scale air purifier on at all times in our spacious, well-ventilated ballroom. We will have a small number of guests in-studio for this socially distanced event!

  1. Scary Story Time 

Date: Thursday, October 29, 2020

Time: 4:00 PM – 4:45 PM

Location: Online

Tag: Kid-friendly (7 and above)


About this event: King County Library System (KCLS) is holding Story Time – Halloween Edition!  Enjoy some chills and thrills! We will be sharing some spooky stories that will have you on the edge of your seat! Preview a sample of a couple of the handful of stories we’ll be reading (Tailypo by GaldoneThe Green Ribbon). You know your child best with their scariness tolerance levels. We’re offering the 2pm registration program “Halloween Dress Your Pet” if you’d like a fun, silly story time as an alternative. Register at your own risk… Please feel free to dress-up in costume. You’ll have a chance to show your costume to the rest of the group.

Want more? Don’t miss out our other activities:

NSC Art Committee Receives Annual Funding

The Art Committee at North Seattle College has recently been granted an annual $1,000 to purchase student artwork! Art Committee members met with President Warren Brown and a panel to present their request to receive $1,000 annually to buy student artwork from the Juried Student Art Exhibition. Last year, the college purchased my ceramic sculpture and so I was able to provide a testimony of my experience to share with the President:

“The college’s purchase of my ceramic sculpture ‘Big Head’ not only informed me that NSC has an exclusive art collection, but also made me feel included. As a woman of color, I felt welcomed and honored that my piece would be shared with all types of people at the college. This purchase has also gave me confidence to continue my art practice and to take more art classes at NSC.”

Every year, student artwork is exhibited in the Art Gallery during spring quarter to showcase student artwork made during the school year. This $1,000 will allow NSC to purchase student artwork for the school’s art collection from this year’s show, and future student art exhibits to come!

If you have made art in an NSC Art class in Spring 2018, Summer 2018, Fall 2018, Winter 2019, and/or Spring 2019, please consider submitting your artwork by Monday, May 6. The NSC Student Art Exhibition will be open to the public from Wednesday, May 15, 2019 until Friday, June 14, 2019. The NSC Art Gallery Hours are Monday to Thursday 11am to 7pm, and Friday from 12pm to 5pm. For more information visit: http://artgallery.northseattle.edu and nscartgroup.com.

Heidi Grace Acuña

Student Cabinet Member

Student Leadership is Now Hiring!

We are currently accepting applications for Student Leadership, North’s student government and a program offering on-campus jobs and professional skill-building. Student leaders work to improve the campus for all students, support the college values of equity and inclusion, and promote student interests.

No experience is necessary, and new students are welcome! We encourage students from all backgrounds to apply.

Student Leadership positions are paid $16/hour and offer opportunities to build skills in the following areas: teamwork, multicultural competency, leadership, professionalism, advocacy, critical thinking, self-awareness, accountability, communication, and other skills for your academic and professional success. The deadline for guaranteed consideration is April 17, 2019 by 5pm. Applicants selected for an interview will be invited to a GROUP INTERVIEW within 10-12 business days.

Positions start on Aug 19, 2019 and end June 15, 2020.
There is a mandatory new employee orientation on Monday, June 17, 2-4pm. Required work days include Aug 19-22, Aug 26-29, and Sep 20; on these days, student leaders work 7 hours a day. During the remainder of the employment term (fall, winter and spring quarters) student leaders work part-time. Positions require weekly meetings (1-4 hours per week) as well as flexible hours (1-10 hours per week).

Eligibility:
• Must be an enrolled student at North Seattle College fall, winter, and spring quarters 2019-20.

• Must commit to entire employment term (August 20, 2019 – June 15, 2020).

• Must have and maintain a minimum 3.0 quarterly GPA starting fall 2019.


Qualifications:
• Must demonstrate written and oral communication skills, incl. proficiency in speaking and writing English.

• Must demonstrate the desire to be a leader on campus.

• Members of historically disenfranchised groups are strongly encouraged to apply.

Preferred qualifications: leadership experience, interest in advocating for diversity, equity, and inclusion, writing and public speaking skills, knowledge of campus.

The online application can be completed at
tinyurl.com/nscleadership.

Afsara Sadiya

Student Cabinet Coordinator

Why Community College?

When I first made the choice to attend North Seattle College, I was excited and eager to begin my college experience. It never occurred to me that I would encounter judgement because I was starting off at a community college. While everyone in high school announced their college decisions, I could pick up on subtle looks of disapproval from students going off to universities. I would also occasionally hear the question: “Why would you go to community college?” Many people could not grasp why a straight A student like me would choose this path. Soon enough, my enthusiasm to start this new chapter turned to doubt and uncertainty. Although I had been accepted to every university I applied to, I felt that the lower tuition cost at North was a smarter choice financially, and that smaller class sizes would better suit my learning style. This is why I made the decision to get an AA degree, and then transfer to a university later on to complete my English major.

Most people tend to look down on community college students, compared to those who traditionally attend a university after high school. There are a lot of universal stereotypes about students like us due to the majority of people having a one dimensional perspective and a lack of knowledge on the subject. These stereotypes include that employers favor applicants who attended a university, that community college students are only older students returning after a long period of time, that they are not intelligent enough to be accepted into a university, and that the lack of student life prevents students from being involved in their campus community (Chen 2018).

People tend to assume that employers are less likely to hire an applicant that has attended community college. However, employers are mainly looking to see if one earned a degree and has the required experience for the career they are pursuing. An applicant that has attended a university for all four years is no more qualified than one that has attended for two years, or has a professional certificate.

Although there may be a large number of older students at some community colleges, it is a misconception that this is the only type of student present. Older students who are local may have been the typical student years ago. However, there are currently many young students as well, such as those who are a part of the Running Start program and come from other countries, creating a mix of different identities. For example, North Seattle College had 435 Running Start students and 517 international students enrolled in Fall 2017.

In addition, one’s intelligence or skill level should not be determined solely on their decision to attend a community college, because these students have the same work ethic and desire to succeed as those who attend universities right away. In fact, a few of the successful people who attended community colleges include the founder of Disneyland Walt Disney (Metropolitan Junior College), CEO of Apple Inc. Steve Jobs (De Anza College), and Oscar-winning actor Tom Hanks (Chabot Community College). According to the statistics from the UNLV Institutional Analysis and Planning, “community college students tend to earn a higher GPA than students who begin their academic careers at a four-year university” (Chen 2018). This reveals that community college students are perfectly capable of having academic success.

Lastly, even though community colleges do not have the Greek system to join sororities and fraternities, there are other ways in which students can meet new people and gain valuable experiences including volunteering, clubs, and programs such as student leadership. Then, they can still be a member of the Greek system after transferring to a university, if this is personally an important part of the college experience.

There are many advantages of community college that are not acknowledged often. These factors lead students to choose community college over a university because they better suit certain needs and enrich the overall college experience:

  • Lower tuition cost: The most prominent reason for attending community college is the lower expenses. Community colleges have an average cost of $4,000 annually, compared to about $30,000 – $100,000 for public universities. Living at home and paying less for tuition saves a drastic amount of money even when a student transfers to a university for two of the four years, because it reduces the amount of student loans and debt that students face.
  • Flexible schedule: Community colleges offer a lot more online and evening classes than universities, which makes college convenient for working students who have other responsibilities. This allows them to learn more efficiently by fitting their course load into their own busy schedules.
  • Smaller classes: Classes have about 20 – 30 students compared to lecture halls with hundreds of students in universities, which allows each student to receive more attention and assistance from their professors. This also allows the professors to learn about the needs of each student and be more aware of their specific learning styles (Mitchell 2015).
  • Professional certificates: Community colleges offer short-term and professional certificates. This is useful for those who are pursuing a future in fields such as technology and electronics and do not require a four-year degree for their desired career, allowing them to obtain a job sooner.
  • Transfer agreements: For most students, enrolling in a community college means that they are planning to transfer to a university. Almost all community colleges have transfer articulation agreements that guide students in what courses need to be completed for transferring to a specific university. By having universities in mind early on, meeting with advisors, and paying attention to the requirements, the process of transferring is not as difficult as one may think.

The benefits listed above demonstrate the many positives of attending a community college for a duration of one’s higher education experience. Instead of making quick assumptions about community college students and their abilities, people must look more closely at the rewards that come from it. Being a community college student does not make someone less than a traditional student in any way. This simply means that they are taking on a different approach that is more appropriate for their unique goals. By doing the right research and learning about the benefits, one may find that starting at a community college is ultimately a better choice in terms of the atmosphere, financial ease, and heightened attention.

Now that I have almost completed my AA degree, I have no feelings of doubt or regret at all. I am thankful for every educational experience I gained at North, the good and the challenging. These two years have allowed me to learn academic and personal skills that I will take with me to university and beyond, to use for the rest of my life.

Afsara Sadiya

Student Cabinet Coordinator

Sources:

https://www.communitycollegereview.com/blog/the-top-7-community-college-myths https://www.usnews.com/education/community-colleges/slideshows/10-reasons-to-attend-a-community-college?slide=7

Introducing a New Course: SLN 101

If you’re looking for an interesting new class that encourages participation in your local community, register for SLN 101. This class, Service Learning and Leadership 101, will give you the opportunity to create and implement your own community service project. Throughout the quarter, you are given the chance to report back to a group of students who are also conducting their own service projects. This class is primarily an off-campus class with in-person meetings once a week. It will be held either in the Spring or Summer of 2019. Consider enrolling!

Simone Sawyer

Student Cabinet Member

Healthcare Technology Management Changes Curriculum

The Healthcare Technology Management Program is a 2-year curriculum that trains students to repair the equipment in hospitals such as MRI and X-Ray machines, as well as bedside equipment for patients. This year, the college is making changes from previous curriculum. The new curriculum now has 1 less credit. In addition to that, the course AMA117 (Introduction to Medical Vocabulary) increased its credit number from 3 credits to 5 credits. The course AMA 119 (Survey of Human Anatomy and Physiology) is being dropped out of system, and Fall’18 is last time it is running. It is being transported over to HTM Curriculum. Also, there is a reduction of 15 credits for the curriculum. 2 classes were removed from the curriculum: EET 137 (Introduction to Robotics) & EET 138 (Robotic Applications). 1 class was also added: BUS 118. This is because the HTM curriculum has changed. The program revision was approved by CAS in January 2019, and the appropriate paperwork was forwarded to the Vice President for Instruction’s office.

Kristy Go,

Student Cabinet Member

Welcome to Fall Quarter

This is your PTK Chapter President Veronica. I hope you have had a great start to your quarter. PTK had an awesome first meeting – here are some of the highlights:

  • We have been hearing a lot from active chapter members who are eager to volunteer and enrich the community.  If this sounds like you, there are many opportunities available (like doing Reading Time with middle school students at local schools) and upcoming (we’re working on a collaboration with English faculty that would bring enthusiastic English speakers into ESL classrooms to help ESL students to help them gain invaluable conversational skills).  For more information on how you can help please contact our chapter advisor Michaelann.Allen@seattlecolleges.edu).
  • Its scholarship season and we are here to help you be the most competitive applicant! To give you the resources you need to succeed we are hosting five scholarship info/help sessions between October and November. Bring writing materials, questions, and personal statements/applications-in-progress and get help from former scholarship recipients and faculty!  Feel free to attend as many or as few of these sessions as you want; the material covered will be dependent on audience needs.

Scholarship Workshops

  • Tuesday October 9th 2:30: 3:30 in CC1439A Baxter Events Center
  • Saturday October 13th 1: 2:00 in HS 1637A Student Learning Center Conference Room
  • Wednesday October 17th 2:30: 3:30 in HS 1637A Student Learning Center Conference Room
  • Tuesday October 30th 2:30: 3:30 in CC1439 Baxter Events Center
  • Wednesday November 7th 2:30: 3:30 in HS 1637A Student Learning Center Conference Room

Get Involved!

  • Chapter meetings this quarter are on Tuesdays 2:30-3:30 in CC1439A Baxter Events Center! Anyone can attend and get involved!
  • Chapter President Veronica attended Phi Theta Kappa’s Honors Institute 2018, and she will share the knowledge and material covered in a series of announcements this quarter. Keep an eye on our Canvas announcements!