Snapshots of our Member Campuses
Bennington College
"Literacy and Love of Words" a course
from the Center for Creative Teaching requires each student to
tutor a local child for 1.5 hours each week during the term. The
students are also building connections with those they tutor,
giving them positive role models who read, encourage reading,
and pay special attention to kids. With 30 students out in the
community, there is a lot of impact.
A Bennington student and Raise Your Voice Civic
Fellow organized the Dance for Democracy. Since she grew up in
Bennington, she related to the young adults who complain about
having nothing to do. With a "Month of Action" Grant
of the Raise Your Voice campaign, she was able to coordinate a
dance celebrating Democracy. It included food, prizes, a mock
vote, voter registration, local politicians, and candidates speaking
to young people. Many high school students attended, along with
college kids, and politically active adults. This event truly
brought everyone in the community together..
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Burlington College
Faculty, Staff, Students, and Trustees are adding
their names to the growing list of Vermonters who are taking part
in the Play it Forward "Hidden Hunger" Video challege
to have 5000 people see the video "Hidden Hunger" by
Thanksgiving 2004 The Burlington College Student Association will
host a Hunger Banquet on April 21, 2004 at 12:30 pm for the BC
Community. There will be a non-perishable food drive as part of
the May 29, 2004 Commencement Event.
Burlington College offers a B.A. in social ecology
with tracks in alternative agriculture and food systems; social
and political theory; activism, organizing, and community development;
sustainable design, building, and land use; and popular education;
The program explores eco-philosophies and anthropological studies
which can provide an informed basis for our actions in order to
take us beyond a "band-aid" approach to environmental
problems. Students will combine theoretical study with experiential
learning in community organizing, political action, ecological
economics, organic agriculture and alternative technology.
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Castleton State College
Students from the Social Welfare Policies, Programs
and Issues course partnered with the Vermont Agency of Human Services
on their reorganization project. With the passage of the FY2003
Appropriation Act, the Vermont General Assembly instructed the
Agency for Human Services to recommend a comprehensive plan for
reorganization of the Agency's operations. The students in this
course assist the Agency by distributing Agency surveys to community
residents, conducting survey focus groups to explain the survey
to those in need, serving as scribes for the Rutland County Community
meetings, and collecting the data and sending it to the Agency's
home office It is the hope that the valuable feedback received
from these surveys will allow the Agency to wisely spend public
funds, improve coordination and eliminate waste and overlapping
programs, enhance the efficiency and effectiveness of the Agency's
programs, and prepare the State of Vermont for the social dilemmas
it will be confronted with in the years and decades to come.
Students from the Community in American Society
class actively participated in Rutland's United Neighborhoods
(RUN) program "Crime and Substance Abuse: A Community Dialogue."
This program brought concerned residents from Rutland communities
together in organized discussions to produce an "action plan"
to help understand and lessen problems of crime and substance
abuse in the Rutland region. Students participated in various
capacities including recorders for meeting minutes, data gathers
and organizers, facilitators and community participants. This
course required time and work outside of the classroom, usually
in the evenings.
The Motor Learning course, within our Physical Education
Department, is currently working with the Vermont Adapted Ski
and Sport (VASS) program. VASS is committed to furthering the
equality and independence of individuals with disabilities by
providing access to sports and recreational activities. While
in the classroom and as volunteers working with VASS, students
will explore three major themes in Motor Learning: the information-processing
model, the whole verses part method of teaching and learning,
and designing appropriate learning activities based on skill,
learning style and ability of the learners. Students will leave
this class with a better understanding of major Motor Learning
concepts and with an appreciation for the value in establishing
reciprocal relationships with community members.
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Champlain College
Champlain College recently started two new groups
on campus, Students at Champlain for an Active Democracy and Student
forum to promote civic engagement on campus.
Champlain students hosted 10 deliberative dialogues
on their campus engaging over 100 people in topics ranging from
Gender issues, race issues, civil liberties, and the parking problem
on campus.
The Accounting program at Champlain has been involved
in service-learning through the nationwide Volunteer Income Tax
Assistance program, offering tax preparation to low-income and
elderly citizens for the past 20 years.
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Community College of Vermont
Upon hearing the plight of several families that
were suddenly evicted from their homes in October 2003, one CCV
Foundations of Reading and Writing class took action. The class
coordinated fundraising efforts at their CCV site, eventually
raising enough money for the evicted families to pay security
deposits and rent for new apartments, but this class was not done
yet. The families now had new places to live, but they had nothing
to furnish their new homes with. The class continued their fundraising
efforts and began seeking furniture donations from local stores.
Within a week, they were able to help these families completely
furnish their new apartments.
In the Fall of 2003, twenty-four student reading
partners read a combined total of 2,046 hours with 569 elementary
school children at sixteen sites through Community College of
Vermont's America Reads program.
Community College of Vermont's 2003 Harvest for Hunger campaign
raised over $3000 and thousands of pounds of food to benefit Vermont's
hungry people. Donations were made to over 18 organizations across
Vermont.
Community College of Vermont changed its annual statewide staff
meeting, CCV Convocation to be a daylong service-learning project.
Staff members learn about the state park, take part in a number
of service projects then spend a couple of hours reflecting on
the value of the project.
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Goddard College
The M.A. Concentration in Partnership Education
is designed to enable graduates to assume leadership positions
in educational and community environments, and bring the ideals
of a more just, equitable, and caring society into his or her
practice.
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Green Mountain College
"Students from the Special Topics on Energy
and the Environment class spent the semester working with Efficiency
Vermont in order to get every household in Poultney to 'Change
a Light.' The goal was to replace one energy inefficient light
bulb with an energy efficient compact fluorescent bulb. The students
did most of the groundwork, from handing out bulbs at Williams
Hardware during Parents Weekend to making calls and delivering
bulbs themselves. This project received much press and was very
successful. There was an end of the semester celebration with
Efficiency VT, Williams Hardware, the town manager and the students
from the class. Each were given a personal letter from the governor."
"The Leisure Systems Design and Evaluation
class worked with the Supervisor of Rutland City Parks and Recreation
to conduct a region-wide inventory of recreation facilities and
programs. This information will be used to help plan for the scope
of and services offered in the Rutland Regional Recreation Center,
currently in its planning stages. The students reflected on this
work in the form of both a written document and a formal presentation
given to staff members from Rutland City Parks and Recreation."
"The Poultney Partners Mentoring Program was
established in the fall of 2003 as a result of several initiatives
resulting from meetings by the town and Green Mountain College
over the last year on how the two could work more closely together.
Both groups identified mentoring of youth as an important need
in Poultney and a good service opportunity for college students.
The mission of Poultney Partners is to foster caring, supportive,
and meaningful connections between older and younger students
in the Poultney community. There are currently 43 mentors from
GMC and 43+ mentees from the elementary and junior high schools.
This has been a highly successful program with great press and
feedback from both Poultney and Green Mountain College."
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Johnson State College
As part of a unit on Classical and Operant Conditioning,
students in Dr. Gina Mireault's Introductory Psychology ventured
out of the classroom to the North Country Animal League to learn
to apply the principles of learning. Their task was twofold: learn
the strengths and weaknesses of learning theory through its application,
and teach shelter dogs some basic etiquette to shorten their stay
in the shelter and ease their transition to home life.
Johnson State College's strategic planning process
includes the integration of academic and student life experiences.
The college is determining strategies to develop a full and accessible
range of co-curricular programming that is dynamic, well supported,
linked to academic curricula, and deeply embedded in the life
of the college. A focal point of this will be service learning.
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Lyndon State College
Students at Lyndon State College used a Month of
Action mini-grant to create a video about civic engagement happening
at campuses across the state.
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Marlboro College
The college's community assembly is modeled on the
traditional New England Town Meeting. All students, faculty and
staff members may participate, each with an equal vote. The monthly
assembly governs community life and serves as a forum for college-wide
issues. Community sentiment figures heavily into administrative
decisions, and Town Meeting representatives serve on a number
of faculty and administrative committees, and represent the students
at trustee meetings. Town Meeting distributes thousands of dollars
to committee projects and student initiatives.
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Middlebury College
The Fall 2003 ES 401 course tackled three different
projects related to the theme of environmental justice. The primary
community partner was the Toxics Action Center (a statewide organization
located in Montpelier), but each of the three groups also worked
with local citizen groups in communities facing environmental
injustices. The students have been fully immersed in issues such
as cancer clusters with a variety of environmental pollutants
as likely causes, and rural communities battling multi-national
mining corporations. It was a mind and eye-opening experience
for them-many have expressed the desire to be more civicly engaged,
to continue an active role either on these issues or issues facing
their hometown local communities, and several will be pursuing
graduate work in public health. Students from this class displayed
results of their work at Toxic Action Center's annual conference
and participated in a media press release for the statewide map
of toxic sites that they produced.
Students from an Environmental Policy class spent
the semester researching data related to sprawl and its effects,
and specifically, any data that might explain the relationship
between the outflow of population from the biggest town to smaller
towns in the county, high property tax rates, and the larger town's
stagnant housing growth. This data was then presented to town
and county officials, lawmakers, and planning boards, and printed
in an article in the county newspaper.
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New England Culinary
Institute
Students in the Bachelor of Arts in Food and Beverage
Management program spent the term working with the Northeast Organic
Farming Association and VT FEED (Food Education Every Day) program
to further the mission of promoting sound eating habits in children.
Students examined current practices in school cafeterias, family
dining habits, food availability to schools and budget-minded
families, as well as the nutritional needs of young people. Through
their research, and self-managed team, students worked in conjunction
with the community partner and their Nutrition professor, to put
together a presentation and supporting materials that VT FEED
will be able to use to continue with their mission of educating
schools, parents, and children about the importance of healthy
eating. In staying with the mission of NOFA, students focused
on supporting Vermont farmers and food producers.
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Norwich University
Students in Geoff Davison's PE class (Programming
and Activities for the Disabled and Aging) organize competitions
for Special Olympics participants who normally train for one sport
for eight weeks and then have only one opportunity to compete.
This process, repeated for several sports that the athlete may
be involved in, can be quite boring. The class-organized events
therefore provide an intermediary event as well as another opportunity
for competition. Because of the great work his students have done,
Norwich University has become one of only eight US universities
to be chosen to implement Special Olympics curriculum throughout
the department. SL was a major component of this success.
Six students in Wendy Cox's Architectural Design
Studio were invited by The Keene Community Trust to find creative
solutions to some of the site development and planning issues
currently facing the Town of Keene, New York. The team's focus
was to promote features that fostered a sense of community and
allowed for pedestrian access to services and amenities. After
developing plans and making recommendations, a bound volume of
their work, with original color graphics, was presented to the
Keene Valley Library.
Students in one section of Rowly Brucken's Historical
Methods course interviewed Norwich staff, faculty, and alumni
about their experiences with civil rights issues and struggles.
They will present their completed research papers to a committee
which is forming a Museum of Acceptance on the NU campus. From
this pool of about 30 NU community members, several will be chosen
for formal induction and all documents will be displayed in the
Norwich University Museum of Acceptance.
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Saint Michael's College
As a result of taking a First Year Seminar course
that focused on Peace and Justice issues a student was paired
up with a third grade class at a local elementary school in Burlington,
VT. As a result of this experience, the SMC student was matched
up with a young girl that made her residence in a local homeless
shelter. Her experience with this young girl and with COTS (Committee
on Temporary Shelter) resulted in her becoming a regular volunteer
with this organization. This past year, she organized all the
volunteer coordination at two shelters: The Family Firehouse Shelter
and The Main Street Shelter both located in Burlington. Also,
she initiated a project to establish a sustainable mentoring and
tutoring program at both of these shelters.
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Southern Vermont College
Throughout the Fall 2003 semester, the Holistic
Nursing: Populations at Risk nursing students collaborated with
Southwestern Vermont Medical Center and area churches to host
Flu Clinics for the Bennington community. Sixteen students spent
three hours each day for four weeks administering flu shots to
area residents for a total of approximately 1000 hours of service
to the community. For a resident(s) who could not pay, the College's
nursing students administered the flu shot for free.
During the Fall 2003 semester, the Marketing class helped develop
a marketing survey for the Employment Connections division of
United Counseling Services. The survey will help target specific
self-employment opportunities in Bennington for citizens with
disabilities.
During the Fall 2002 semester, the Advertising class
worked with 12 non-profit agencies including Meals on Wheels,
The American Red Cross, Bennington Coalition for the Homeless,
and The AIDS Project of Southern Vermont to write and produce
public service announcements on the College's radio station.
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Springfield College
of Human Resources
Springfield students and the Springfield College
Center for Social Change partnered with the St. Johnsbury Academy
to produce a one-act play names shoes about the difficult experiences
that low income people encounter on a daily bases. This play was
performed for local 5th and 6th graders to educate the local youth
on the issues of poverty.
Springfield College has partnered with different
organizations such as the Department of Corrections Workcamp and
a Mood Disorders Support Group to host art shows for the community
that help educate people about different issues in their community.
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Sterling College
In 1999 Environmental Science students surveyed
sediment levels in streams in the Caspian Lake watershed in Greensboro,
Vermont, using a combination of qualitative and quantitative methods.
Students in Service Learning repeated the surveys in 2003. Greensboro
Association members used the results to inform road management
practices in the watershed. Serendipitously, the student findings
are relevant to an Act 250 review, currently in progress.
Students in Foundations of Outdoor Education and
Leadership led teambuilding activities with 6th graders from both
Craftsbury Academy and Wolcott Elementary. Next fall these students
will be in the same 7th grade class. The 36 students broke into
small groups comprised of students from both schools, learned
each others names, and then participated in a variety of problem-solving
activities ranging from trying to balance the whole group on a
small platform, to negotiating an "acid river" by helping
each other balance while walking on a cable between two trees.
The activities demanded that the participants work together, and
in the course of the two-hour session, new friendships were forged
that will make next year's 7th grade class a more socially positive
environment. Meanwhile, the Sterling College students who facilitated
the activities learned a lot about managing a group of 6th graders!
Students in Woodlot Practices helped two Eden, Vermont
landowners thin some of their forested land. Students learned
precision chainsaw tree-felling techniques on the selective thinning
project. The landowners wanted to donate the small diameter maple
trees that were cut to Sterling's Emergency Heating Assistance
Project. Students in Tools and Their Application-a first-year
class that teaches safe, efficient use of tools important to natural
resource work-cut, split, and stacked the wood. Throughout the
winter, firewood was delivered to Craftsbury residents who couldn't
afford to buy firewood.
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University of Vermont
Nancy Welch's English class, Literacy Politics,
works with teens in the Teen Futures Program at the King Street
Youth Center to expand their use of the web, poetry, and creative
writing, while studying the differences in access to education
based on socio-economic status.
Richard Schramm's CDAE class created the Food Farms
and Schools Program, which works to link the Burlington School
system with local farmers in order to create more healthy options
for student lunches, and to expand the use of local farms as suppliers
in an effort to create a more sustainable community.
Lynne Bond's Community Psychology class works with
the City of Burlington Community and Economic Development office
to survey specific neighborhoods about community involvement and
leadership, and created recommendations for community leaderships
training. Two permanent results are the ongoing Forums on Racism
program and the Facilitative Leadership Program, both offered
by CEDO.
Jackie Weinstock's Human Development and Family
Studies class (all first years) works on 4 different projects
with the Burlington Boys and Girls Club (a dance class, a home
work club, a rock climbing program and one other) while studying
the concept of bullying in class.
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Vermont Law School
In keeping with Vermont Law School's dedication
to experiential learning, the South Royalton Legal Clinic offers
second and third year J.D. students the unique opportunity to
represent clients in actual civil cases. Student clinicians provide
help for persons otherwise unable to afford counsel in areas such
as family law, juvenile law and children's rights, Social Security,
welfare and unemployment compensation, civil rights and civil
liberties, landlord-tenant relations, consumer protection, bankruptcy,
contracts, wills, and federally subsidized health care and housing.
They have recently begun to provide some representation in immigration
law, as well.
Qualified students seeking to sharpen their research,
advocacy and litigation skills, while advancing the goals of environmental
protection, may enroll in Vermont Law School's Environmental and
Natural Resources Law Clinic. The Clinic builds on our expertise
in environmental and natural resources law and our extensive connections
throughout the local, regional, and national conservation communities.
Student clinicians work on behalf of public interest, environmental,
and conservation organizations, and learn how to find their way
through the complex maze of laws and procedures that regulate
economic development and resource extraction activities.
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Vermont Technical College
Vermont Technical College has formed a strong partnership
with Foundation for Excellent Schools through mentoring and Early
College Awareness days.
VTC is partnering with Braintree Elementary School
to create a Documenting our Communities project.
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Woodbury College
Wellness on Wheels Project
Eight students from a Family Systems class collaborated with Central
Vermont Community Action to increase the serving capacity of Wellness
on Wheels (WOW), a mobile unit project whose purpose is to deliver
health and human services to outlying rural Central Vermont communities.
In the first tier of the project, students interviewed representatives
of five partnering service agencies. Second, they researched information
on family systems-related agencies and created eight Resource
Notebooks for use on the mobile unit. The notebooks are used to
provide resource and service information to partners, communities,
and individuals.
Bringing Youth Voice to State Policy
During the Fall term of 2003, twelve students in Prevention Theory
and Practice teamed up with Central Vermont Community Partnership
(CVCP) to gather perspectives from youth on State and community
services. Students interviewed seventeen individuals to supplement
the Agency of Human Services (AHS) community inquiry process and
engage those unlikely to attend a meeting or complete a survey.
Students then analyzed the results for themes. CVCP used the results
to bring youth voice to the AHS restructuring effort.
Restructuring State Services with Input from
Communities
Central Vermont Community Partnership (CVCP) enlisted students
in the Assessment and Evaluation course to analyze qualitative
and quantitative information collected from the AHS community
inquiry process, an initiative to re-organize the Agency of Human
Services with input from communities. The students received raw
data from AHS Reorganization focus groups, interviews, and Stakeholder
Meetings along with regional Community Profile data. They analyzed
the data and extracted themes. CVCP used the results to make recommendations
to AHS regarding the restructuring of State services.
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