PLEASE NOTE NEW PROGRAM TIMES
See What's New For Fall
on
CCCSAT Channel 90!
Don't miss special live broadcasts on your campus from unique organizations like the Museum and Television and Radio, Constitution Day and the California Governor's Office, as well as a wide variety of weekly distance learning series.
Special Programming | Weekly Series
SPECIAL PROGRAMMING
Fri, Oct 14, 2005
(more info) |
9:00 AM |
12:00 PM |
Twenty-second Annual World Food Day Teleconference
Reflections on Fighting Hunger:
Roads not Taken; Goals not Met; the Journey Ahead
Presented by: U.S. National Committee for World Food Day
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Mon, Oct 17, 2005
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9:00 AM |
10:00 AM |
Constitution Day
NPR's JUSTICE TALKING
NPR's Margot Adler will host an hour-long special video-cast from the William G. McGowan Theater at the National Archives. The debate, "Free Speech in the Digital Age," will look at censorship in libraries, of textbooks, and on the Internet. The program will examine the reasons for both safeguarding and limiting speech, including protection of minors and community safety, ensuring a free marketplace of ideas, and guaranteeing democratic institutions—an excellent way to jump start classroom discussion on First Amendment freedoms. Guests include First Amendment Attorney, Floyd Abrams; Jack Valenti, Past President and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America and Stanford Law Professor, Lawrence Lessig.
Presented by: NPR
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Mon, Oct 17, 2005
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10:00 AM |
10:30 AM |
Constitutional Law: The Right to Counsel
Presented by: Palomar College
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Tue, Oct 18, 2005
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9:00 AM |
9:30 AM |
Constitution Day
CONVERSATIONS WITH SUPREME COURT JUSTICES
United States Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Stephen Breyer will talk about the Constitution with high school students at the Supreme Court. The classroom-ready video will feature the Justices taking questions from students and discussing why we have and need a Constitution; what federalism is; how implicit and explicit rights are defined; and how separation of powers ensures that no one branch of government obtains too much power. Presented by: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, National Archives and Records Administration, the New York Times Knowledge Network
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Tue, Oct 18, 2005
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9:30 AM |
10:00 AM |
Constitutional Law: First Amendment Jurisprudence and the Courts
Presented by: Palomar College
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Tue, Oct 18, 2005
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10:00 AM |
10:30 AM |
Constitutional Law: The USA Patriot Act
Presented by: Palomar College
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Wed, Oct 19, 2005
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9:00 AM |
9:30 AM |
Constitutional Law: First Amendment Jurisprudence and Religion
Presented by: Palomar College
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Wed, Oct 19, 2005
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9:30 AM |
10:00 AM |
Constitutional Law: Brown v. The Board of Education
Presented by: Palomar College
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Thu, Oct 20, 2005
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9:00 AM |
10:00 AM |
Constitution Day
NPR's JUSTICE TALKING
NPR's Margot Adler will host an hour-long special video-cast from the William G. McGowan Theater at the National Archives. The debate, "Free Speech in the Digital Age," will look at censorship in libraries, of textbooks, and on the Internet. The program will examine the reasons for both safeguarding and limiting speech, including protection of minors and community safety, ensuring a free marketplace of ideas, and guaranteeing democratic institutions—an excellent way to jump start classroom discussion on First Amendment freedoms. Guests include First Amendment Attorney, Floyd Abrams; Jack Valenti, Past President and CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America and Stanford Law Professor, Lawrence Lessig.
Presented by: NPR
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Thu, Oct 20, 2005
|
10:00 AM |
10:30 AM |
Constitution Day
CONVERSATIONS WITH SUPREME COURT JUSTICES
United States Supreme Court Justices Sandra Day O'Connor and Stephen Breyer will talk about the Constitution with high school students at the Supreme Court. The classroom-ready video will feature the Justices taking questions from students and discussing why we have and need a Constitution; what federalism is; how implicit and explicit rights are defined; and how separation of powers ensures that no one branch of government obtains too much power.
Presented by: Annenberg Public Policy Center of the University of Pennsylvania, National Archives and Records Administration, the New York Times Knowledge Network
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Thu, Oct 27, 2005
(more info)
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12:30 PM |
2:00 PM |
California Governor and First Lady's Conference on Women and Families
Women as Architects of Change : Lessons on Leadership, Activism and Family
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Wed, Nov 9, 2005
(more info) |
11:00 AM |
1:00 PM |
Sixth National Satellite Videoconference for Community Colleges
"Developing and Enhancing the International Business Curriculum at the Community College"
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Thu, Nov 10, 2005
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3:00 PM |
4:30 PM |
The Women of National Public Radio
This seminar brings together many of NPR’s exemplary female voices to discuss how the network has become a haven for women producers, anchors, and reporters. Panelists will reflect on the impact of NPR’s commitment to women.
Presented by: Museum of Television& Radio |
Wed, Nov 16, 2005
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3:00 PM |
4:30 PM |
From the Goldbergs to 2005: The Evolution of the Family Sitcom
Long before multitasking became a buzzword, Gertrude Berg (1899–1966) was a creative force of nature. She created, wrote, produced, and starred in the radio and television series The Goldbergs, the story of a middle–class Jewish family living in the Bronx whose universal humor, Berg explained, "comes from life itself." The panel will examine Ms. Berg’s trailblazing achievements and the enduring genre she created (represented over the years by such family comedies as The Cosby Show, Roseanne, and Everybody Loves Raymond), as well as the influence The Goldbergs and the show’s folksy matriarch, Molly Goldberg, had—and continues to have—on popular culture.
Presented by: Museum of Television& Radio |
Thu, Dec 8, 2005
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5:30 PM |
7:00 PM |
It's Not Always Pretty: Women Writing Women for Television
If Sigmund Freud were around today to ask what women want, he would need to look no further than his television dial. Female writers and producers have long employed the small screen to explode stereotypes, ask difficult questions, and delineate women’s experiences and perspectives in authentically female voices. The Museum will gather some of the most prominent women in the medium to discuss role models, gender issues, and the myriad challenges and satisfactions of women writing women.
Presented by: Museum of Television& Radio |
WEEKLY PROGRAMMING
| Mondays |
8:00 AM |
9:00 AM |
American Passages - A Literary Survey
American Passages: A Literary Survey is a 16-part American literature course placing literary movements and authors within the context of history and culture. The course takes an expanded view of American literary movements, bringing in a diversity of voices and tracing the continuity among them.
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| Mondays |
12:00 PM |
1:00 PM |
English Composition - Writing for an Audience
This video series introduces basic principles and strategies for communicating in writing to a variety of audiences and improving general composition skills. Throughout the series, students will meet a wide array of professionals whose work involves writing — not only authors, journalists, and teachers, but also musicians, judges, nurses, engineers, scientists, and athletes — who will discuss how they write with their specific audiences in mind.
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| Tuesdays |
12:00 PM |
1:00 PM |
For All Practical Purposes - Introduction to Contemporary Mathematics
This series goes beyond mathematics as a series of dry, problem-solving exercises to its utility in the areas of management science, statistics, social science, geometry, and computer science. See how mathematics influences everything from the success of savvy entrepreneurs to the fairness of voting practices.
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| Wednesdays |
4:00 PM |
5:00 PM |
The World of Chemistry
Join with experts to observe chemistry in action and learn the laws and principles of this dynamic field. Computer technology and special effects place students in a front-row seat to observe many processes, even those that are too dangerous or impractical to experience directly. Working industrial and research chemists of all backgrounds serve as role models.
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| Fridays |
7:00 AM |
8:00 AM |
Destinos - An Introduction to Spanish
Destinos teaches speaking, listening, and comprehension skills in Spanish. This telenovela, or Spanish soap opera, immerses students in everyday situations with native speakers and introduces the cultures, accents, and dialects of Mexico, Spain, Argentina, and Puerto Rico.
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| Fridays |
8:00 AM |
9:00 AM |
French in Action
This series uses active participation to increase fluency in French, while introducing French culture. Pierre Capretz’s proven language-immersion method is presented within a humorous teleplay with native speakers of all ages and backgrounds. The storyline of an American student and a young Frenchwoman's adventures in Paris and the French countryside is reinforced by Dr. Capretz’s on-camera instruction.
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| Fridays |
11:00 AM |
12:00 PM |
Fokus Deutsch
Follow the story of Professor Bob Di Donato and Marion, his assistant, as they create a German course using a “German studies” approach. They weave together minidramas set in Germany, interviews with native speakers, and documentary footage on history and culture, all of which help increase fluency in and comprehension of the language. The narratives, presented in natural, authentic German, cover topics such as school, employment, travel, and personal relationships.
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