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Presidents'
Statements on Civic Engagement
BURLINGTON COLLEGE
As colleges and universities have increased their commitments
to community resources and services on the local and international
scene, the need to develop a service-learning co-curriculum or
a service-learning component across the curriculum has become
apparent.
This year, Burlington College began an initiative to encourage
all instructors to incorporate aspects of service learning into
their coursework. Building on a solid tradition of service-based
internship placements, the goal is and was to transform the concept
of "volunteerism" from something one does on a special occasion
to something that can be seamlessly integrated into an academic
experience.
The past two-years have seen BC develop several service-learning
projects and classes as well. As part of the Central America Program's
study abroad trip, for example, students helped develop a women's
gardening cooperative in San Jose, Guatemala, and worked on remodeling
classrooms at our "sister college" in San Ignacio in Belize. Our
Alternative Spring Break trip to North Philadelphia saw the transformation
of an abandoned lot into a for-profit, community-owned tree farm
and park. Students planned and built a recycling center for the
residents of Morovis, Puerto Rico, and helped rebuild a hurricane-damaged
farm-designing an irrigation system and repairing greenhouses.
And, finally, this year will mark our first Burlington College-Old
North End Service Day, where students and faculty actively engage
BC's neighbors through volunteerism.
Through our partnership with Campus Compact, Burlington College
hopes to continue serving as a model for a small-scale service
learning curriculum; the College hopes to learn from and to share
resources with other CC member institutions.
Former President Dan Case
COLLEGE OF ST. JOSEPH
The College of St. Joseph is pleased to join other
Vermont colleges and universities in adding our name to The Presidents'
Declaration on the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education. The
declaration is in direct accordance with our mission to educate
individuals for lives of continuing growth and service. CSJ encourages
its students to translate their knowledge and experience into
enthusiasm and support for the democratic process. Active civic
participation is the only way to guarantee our democratic freedom
and the continuous improvement of society. We will continue to
teach our students that they possess the power to create positive
change, both locally and globally.
President Frank G. Miglorie
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF VERMONT
The Community College of Vermont serves as citizen
in twelve teaching and learning sites throughout the state. We
know how essential it is that we are respectful and responsible
members in our communities and that we develop in and beyond the
classroom the habits of good citizenry. We are grateful that our
membership in Campus Compact will inspire us and hold us accountable
to the high standards to which we must aspire.
Former President Barbara Murphy
GODDARD COLLEGE
"When America ceases to be good, it can no longer be great".
-de Toqueville, 18th C.
To value each other and the earth; to know how and
why we are connected to each other and this planet: this is what
the world needs now, more than any time in our history. It is
education which can and must develop our ability to value people
enough to want to take action for the welfare of our planet. It
is education which enables the enlarging complex form of recognition
out of which comes empathy, respect, our sense of responsibility,
our capacity for goodness and greatness-relational knowledge developed
not only by what is taught, but how it is taught. Essential education
shows how to learn with and from each other. Our physical and
biological interdependence, intensified by communication and access,
places a greater stake on how we think about community and our
own capacity, as well as desire to make a difference. The earnest
concern which informs my distinguished colleagues' decision to
commit to The Declaration on the Civic Responsibility of Higher
Education reveals a new seriousness, idealism, even nobility,
of the character of educational leadership in American life today.
Higher education is repudiating the ivory tower in favor of the
workshop of the polis. I join a Vermont distinguished tradition
of solutions for society's most urgent needs, hopes, and possibilities-not
a retreat, as in the old notion of "academe", but a going forward
together to evoke what humanity always has needed to discover,
person by person: the conviction of every person of being needed
and capable: "I can do something to make things better, more just,
more wise, more beautiful." The necessity to make this confidence
and sense of responsibility accessible to every citizen is what
the Campus Compact is all about. It is an honor to join this effort.
Former president Barbara C. Mossberg
JOHNSON STATE COLLEGE
At Johnson State College of Vermont, we have a distinctive
mission which calls on us to "provide a community characterized
by active engagement in teaching and learning, by high standards
of academic work and human relations, and by seriousness of purpose
and
to provide our students with the skills, knowledge, and understanding
which are the basis of productive employment, civic involvement,
and lifelong learning." I note the emphasis on active engagement
and civic involvement, indications that civic responsibility in
higher education is central to the mission of Johnson State College.
Our commitment is evident in our award-winning Center for Service
Learning, which provides opportunities for personal growth and
practical skill-building to our students.
Civic responsibility is not an abstraction, but
an ideal realized in active hands-on learning. Our Dean of Students,
Ron Chesbrough, recently joined a group of students on a SERVE
trip to Mexico, where he engaged in what he described as "the
most rewarding work that I recall in terms of witnessing positive
student behavior, community engagement, and real learning, both
personal and practical." Such involvement by college leaders and
students, working together, lends reality to the rhetoric of civic
responsibility and illustrates how ideals can be put into practice.
Former President Robert Hahn
MARLBORO COLLEGE
Institutions of higher education have an absolute
ethical commitment to the betterment of the communities in which
they reside. Vermont's colleges and universities better meet that
commitment when they work in concert and with the support of the
Vermont Campus Compact. On our own campus, we have seen a revitalized
level of effort and engagement this year, with students working
in social service agencies, read aloud programs, and in a range
of ways helpful to the local community. Signing the president's
declaration is a symbolic reaffirmation of our institution's commitment
to the public good and to the critical task of engendering good
citizenship among our students.
Former President Paul LeBlanc
MIDDLEBURY COLLEGE
That the signing of this Presidential Declaration
on the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education is occurring while
Middlebury College is immersed in its Bicentennial Celebration
is of particular note. As "The Town's College," Middlebury was
created by the Town's forefathers to become an integral part of
the fabric of this community. Over the decades and now centuries,
the leaders of the College and the Town have worked diligently
to evolve and grow together. It was the citizenship and active
involvement of a few, who, in combination with "the actions and
teachings" of those on the Hill, have helped shape what is now
an international community. We are both proud and humbled to stand
with our Vermont colleagues as we reaffirm our commitment to become
even more fully engaged with our community partners as we also
help educate our students for active citizenship in the world
they now inherit.
Former President John M. McCardell,
Jr
NEW ENGLAND CULINARY INSTITUTE
I am proud to be among the signatories of the "Presidents'
Declaration on the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education" for
the Vermont Campus Compact. All post secondary institutions in
a democracy, regardless of their other educational missions, have
a special responsibility to prepare their students to become thoughtful,
active participants in the country's social, economic, and political
process. The Declaration we are signing today is a public acknowledgment
of that responsibility and our promise to fulfill it.
Chief Executive Officer Francis
Voigt
NORWICH UNIVERSITY
It is with pleasure that I represent Norwich University
by signing the Vermont Campus Compact. Colleges and universities
have always embodied the very best of our nation's democratic
principles. At Norwich University we have always believed that
active citizenship is the cornerstone of our republic. Our founder
created Norwich because he believed in the importance of citizen-soldiers
to the vitality of democracy. Today, we continue to embrace that
vision and encourage our students--military, civilian and adult--
toward a life of service to country and community. And we commit
as a University community to teaching the importance of lifelong,
active participation in the American democratic experience.
President Richard W. Schneider
SAINT MICHAEL'S COLLEGE
Saint Michael's College wholeheartedly endorses
the goals and ideals of this declaration. Indeed this institution
is founded on the idea of civic responsibility and service to
others. We work continuously to make this a reality, not just
an avowed position. Over 70 percent of our students engage regularly
in volunteer service. Our curriculum, especially our Peace and
Justice program, is designed to reinforce service work through
the intellectual life of the classroom. This college also has
a vibrant student government association which models citizenship
in a participatory democracy so that students can take this practice
into their adult lives. Our student-run Fire and Rescue Squads
answer some 2000 emergency calls a year from five neighboring
towns. In so many ways Saint Michael's College lives its belief
in the ideals of the Presidents' Fourth of July Declaration on
the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education. We are committed
to these ideals.
President Marc VanderHeyden
SCHOOL FOR INTERNATIONAL TRAINING
Speaking at Bennington, Vermont in 1928, Calvin
Coolidge said, "If the spirit of liberty should vanish in other
parts of the union, and support of our institutions should languish,
it could all be replenished from the generous store held by the
people of this brave little state of Vermont."
The "generous store," if it is to fulfill the vision
put forth by Mr. Coolidge, must include our colleges and universities-those
in Vermont and also throughout the greater American community.
For where but in these institutions do indomitable independence,
respect for the individual and for the common good, freedom of
expression, frank open-mindedness and civic responsibility reside?
Where but among the young, the curious and idealistic do the spirit
of liberty and democracy thrive? It is an honor to join my colleagues-the
presidents of the Vermont colleges and universities-in signing
the Presidents' Declaration today, and in helping to nurture the
good citizens of tomorrow.
President James A. Cramer
SOUTHERN VERMONT COLLEGE
The higher education community has struggled for
decades to balance institutional missions of preparing individuals
to be lifelong learners and citizen leaders with the widely accepted
notion that the college experience is only a means to a well-paying
end. The Declaration on the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education
clarifies and supports the fact that in addition to fostering
an environment where students develop critical thinking and communication
skills, colleges and universities across the nation have an obligation
to instill a sense of responsibility to community awareness and
engagement in their students.
I applaud my colleagues and am encouraged by their
recognition of this important cause.
President Barbara P. Sirvis
STERLING COLLEGE
"Education is thinking about experience," the philosopher
John Dewey claimed. If this deceptively simple definition of education
is true-and we here at Sterling College believe it is true-then
the community of higher learning must attempt not only to help
shape the thinking of our students, it first must shape the experiences
students are asked to use as a basis for developing their thinking.
What better foundation on which to build this process
of action and reflection than through the type of service opportunities
made available through Campus Compact. Genuine experience gained
in serving others thus becomes a springboard for greater accomplishment.
When we instill in our students a sense of service and social
responsibility learned from real life situations, we have offered
one of the great gifts any institution may bestow on its students.
Coincidentally, we have helped them meet what ought to be the
foremost requirement for any college degree. While we may agree
that knowledge is power, we are teaching out students that a spirit
of generosity and "plain hard work" is of equal if not greater
value.
President John E. (Jed) Williamson
UNIVERSITY OF VERMONT
Many institutions strive to create a clear educational
philosophy, a distinctive campus culture, a coherent curriculum,
and accomplished graduates. But too few of us remember that any
institution of higher education must also create a climate in
which civic responsibility can easily be fostered, indeed, a climate
where civic responsibility is an essential piece of the very workings
of that institution.
We know that students continue to learn when they
leave the classroom. We know that the co-curriculum of an institution
is just as important as the curriculum itself. Therefore, it follows
that the examples we set as members of the campus community are
central to our success. If we wish for our students to be open-minded,
informed, and empathetic, then we must behave this way ourselves.
We must show them that good decisions require emotional depth,
as well as intellectual rigor.
While we have learned that direct experience shapes
individual understanding and that learning occurs best in the
context of a compelling problem, there is far too little education
occurring outside of the classroom, in our surrounding communities,
effecting change beyond our campus confines.
This is an exciting time to be in a leadership position
in higher education. The research universities of this nation
must undergo significant changes in the next few years. As members
of a campus community, we are in an excellent position to lead
the way in this transformational effort. The universities that
will be successful in the next century will be those that become
genuinely engaged with their communities so that the intellectual
resources of the faculty, staff, and students are available to
every citizen of the state. In many ways, this is the true test
of whether a university or college president has fully absorbed
what it means to be dedicated to creating environments in which
the students of today can become the leaders of tomorrow.
Former president Judith Ramaley
VERMONT LAW SCHOOL
An involved citizenry and a responsive legal system
are both essential if democracy is to flourish. In recognition
of these imperatives, the Vermont Law School community actively
fosters civic participation and our curriculum emphasizes the
public-serving role of the lawyer. We enhance our legal studies
with lessons on understanding, acceptance, and respect for diverse
viewpoints, because we know that today's students will need these
tools to become tomorrow's effective civic leaders.
VLS is pleased to join its Vermont peers in signing
the Declaration on the Civic Responsibility of Higher Education.
Our shared commitment to democratic principles and public participation
can be the wellspring for renewed civic contributions and engagement,
in our local communities and across the nation.
Dean L. Kinvin Wroth
VERMONT TECHNICAL COLLEGE
Higher education as a corporate body feels the tug
of the intellect toward the allure of abstraction while its feet
are firmly in the bedrock reality of student development. The
civic responsibility of higher education is to develop the responsibility
of citizenship in each of our students. To profess the former
is to be held accountable for the latter. Vermont Technical College
accepts its civic responsibility as enacted through the preparation
of each of our graduates.
Former President Steven K. Ingram
WOODBURY COLLEGE
At Woodbury College, civic engagement and community
service are highly valued. That is why I am pleased to be among
the presidents of Vermont's colleges and universities signing
the President's Declaration today. We believe that adult learners
come to Woodbury not only to develop career skills, but also to
become more powerful, proactive members of their communities.
Students arrive seeking new knowledge and skills, but they also
carry with them the desire to create justice, establish harmony
between people, and develop healthy communities. A consciousness
about service is easily nurtured in adult students, who often
have a history of citizen participation. Through course work,
action learning, workshops and internship experiences, we will
continue to help students to develop and refine their personal
commitments to community service.
President Lawrence Mandell
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