ROUNDUP Los Angeles Pierce College
www.theroundupnews.com
Woodland Hills, California
A FIRST AMENDMENT PUBLICATION
Mixing it up
Volume 128 - Issue 13
Wednesday, May 23, 2018
Telescope Night pg. 4
One copy free, each additional copy $1.00
2018 Spring Dance Concert aims to give the audience a different feel CAMERON KERN Reporter @ckernroundup
T
he 2018 Spring Dance Concert, "Mixt," is just as it sounds. Pierce is bringing dance to life by mixing different styles into one cohesive show. Instructor of Theater Brian Moe is one of the choreographers featured in the show. He is advising two performances — a jazz contemporary and a modern piece. Moe said that there are many student choreographers contributing this year and that he is excited to see how their performance will be received. “Students get to create work and put it on stage, so it's always interesting to see how they and the audience reacts to it,” Moe said According to the Pierce College Dance Theater Facebook page, the concert surrounds a collection of modern dance styles and musical trends “The choreographic works will include dance styles such as hiphop, salsa, bachata, musical theater, swing, modern jazz, ballet, and other contemporary dance forms. The performance is filled with zany concepts, energetic music, dynamic choreography, and over ten different dance genres!” the Facebook page said.
Shae Hammond / Roundup
Ivy Moncada, Fanny Valdez and Christine Chiou dance during a technical rehearsal for "Mixt: 2018 Spring Dance Concert," Act One "The Harpist," in the Performing Arts Building Main Stage Theatre on May 21, 2018, at Pierce College in Woodland Hills, Calif.
During his time at Pierce, Moe said he has noticed many great things about the school and performing arts. “These students are very dedicated, and there’s a lot of
diversity. There are a lot of kids at different levels,” Moe said. “Pierce’s dance department is growing and starting to build an outreach so students can get an associate degree
Advertised: Pierce pride
College marketing efforts focus on students RANDI LOVE Editor-in-Chief @Randi̲Love29 A greater emphasis on digital marketing is a part of Pierce’s advertising campaign, for which $100,000 has been allotted each fiscal year for the past several years to show student success. In recent years, the majority of students are learning about Pierce through social media and the internet rather than radio or television, according to Public Relations Manager Doreen Clay. “If you look at the schedule covers that we put on the website, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, our videos, bus banners, interior bus banners and outside shelters, digital banner ads that are on mobile devices and videos on mobile devices, you will always see real students, not clip art,” Clay said. She said that using real students helps to represent our brand. She locates the students on campus and takes the video or photographs. Santa Monica College is the only school in its district, unlike Pierce which shares a budget with eight other schools. On the 2017 - 2018 tentative budget for SMC, advertising received 10 percent of the $13,264,918 for the Contracts and Services. “Their ad budget is 10 or 20 times what our ad budget is, so we can't compete with that,” Clay said. Pierce advertises with Spectrum Cable for mobile, digital and cable television promotions. Over time, Clay said that she has lessened cable television because digital has grown in recent years. Clay said Pierce doesn’t have an advertising agency that they can hire for millions of dollars. So she shows real students in all Pierce
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advertisements. “They're in chemistry class, they're riding horses, they're welding, they're nursing, they're doing all this really fun stuff,” Clay said. “So I can kind of demystify the college experience for you on my budget.” The budget for marketing and advertising is one thirteenth of the general fund for the college. “I know that [Doreen Clay] gets supplemented, so sometimes we have ads targeted to a specific educational program,” said Sheri Berger, the acting college president. “Sometimes there might be other pots of money that we can use to fund marketing efforts.”
“I want them to be unafraid to come here and take a chance and follow their dreams.”
-Doreen Clay
Public Relations Manager
With Generation Z coming into college, Clay said advertising has to change in order to grab their attention. The district conducted a media preferences survey of a thousand Pierce College students. “About what people are watching, looking at where they're going, what they like, what they don't like. For example, of course they're watching Netflix, but there's no advertising right now on Netflix. So I can't advertise there,” Clay said. “That's another thing you learn is there's no one place to find Gen Z, they're all over the place.” Because Pierce is one of the nine community colleges in LACCD,
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and transfer on. So Pierce is actually really great.” Tracy Bodis, an adjunct dance instructor and choreographer, said she’s very excited to showcase many
Wild art:
different entries in one show. “We’ve got several faculty entries and we’ve got students who have been in our department for several semesters as well, so it will be quite an
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ckern.roundupnews@gmail.com
Relaxing with my reflection
it does not compete for students from sister schools. The campus uses geofencing and geotagging to highlight certain areas that we can advertise toward. “We are geofencing all of our feeder high schools, so students that go to our feeder high schools will be tagged and then when they go elsewhere they will be served our digital ads,” Clay said. Geofencing is a location-based service in which an app or other software uses GPS, RFID, Wi-Fi or cellular data to trigger a preprogrammed action when a mobile device or RFID tag enters or exits a virtual boundary set up around a geographical location, known as a geofence, according to CIO magazine’s website. Clay said she uses a variety of methods to reach students and when they see the advertisements for Pierce, she wants them to see who attends the school and what it has to offer. “I want them to see other people that are just like them that are being successful,” Clay said. “I want them to be unafraid to come here and take a chance and follow their dreams.” Berger said that even though we have a high transfer rate, it’s not the only area of the school we should focus on promoting and highlighting. Getting information out about certain areas on campus may be difficult, but Berger said that’s something we need to focus on, such as career technology programs. “We are comprehensive in the education that we are providing,” Berger said. “How do we get that message out and how do we get it to the right people? If you’re a high school student wanting to transfer, how do I get you that message versus the career technical one?” rlove.roundupnews@gmail.com
eclectic dance evening,” Bodis said. Bodis has an original piece she is choreographing, which includes a live harpist. Bodis said she is thankful to the students for being so helpful in creating her vision. Theatre major Kayla Racham is one of the choreographer’s for the show. She said that this semester's event are coordinated unlike previous shows have been organized. She said the piece she is choreographing is more emotional than many of the other pieces in the show. “It’s about the hardship of two sisters going through life. I feel like this dance concert is all about expressing the vision of life,” Racham said. Bodis said she hopes the Pierce College community will come together and join for a night of dance. “They are going to get a fantastic show. I always say you get high-level dancing in a beautiful state of the art theater for very little money,” Bodis said. “Grab your best friend, come get your ticket early and enjoy an evening of arts in a great city.” The concert will be in the Performing Arts Building Mainstage on May 25 and 26 at 8 p.m., with a matinee show on Sunday, May 27 at 2 p.m. Tickets can be purchased at the will call window or online at brownpapertickets.com for $10.
Damiesha Williams/ Roundup
An egret stands in the Botanical Gardens pond on March 18, 2018, at Pierce College in Woodland Hills, Calif.
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