Archive for January, 2009

How to Start Your Own Alternative Break Program

Friday, January 30th, 2009

You Can Start Your Own Program

Here is the ultimate question: what happens if your college or university does not have an alternative/service break program? Sure, there are lots of other organizations you can go through, but wouldn’t it all just be a whole lot easier if your school had its own program, a homebase right on your very own campus?  Well, here is the great news: you can start one.

The Miracle Organization–Break Away

That’s right–you can start your school’s very own alternative breaks program, all through one wonderful organization called Break Away.  Break Away is a facilitator between a school and its service site/alternative break site.  It currently has a relationship with about 140 different schools across the US, a number that is constantly changing since Break Away is continuously trying to get more schools to join their network.  In conjunction, Break Away has developed a relationship with about 400 nonprofit organizations for which the schools can serve on their breaks.  When a school is partnered with Break Away, the organization helps link the school to the nonprofit organizations in the geographical regions and service areas that it is interested in contributing to. 

First Step

And here is where you come in as the person to develop this relationship between your school and the hundreds of nonprofits that Break Away works with.  If you believe that your school would be better off with a service/alternative breaks program (as surely, every school would be), then you are invited to call a Break Away representative at (800) 903-0646.  When you speak with a Break Away representative, you can chat in further detail about the first steps you should take, contacts you can develop, resources you should use, and all the details in-between.  Ultimately, you can forge the relationship between your university and Break Away, greatly expanding the number of service opportunities open to students at your school.

Nonprofit Partnerships

Are you worried that Break Away does not have a partnership with a nonprofit suitable to the mission of your school?  Well, erase that fear.  Break Away’s 400 partnerships are all stored in a database, that is constantly–and I mean constantly–updated.  Break Away is forever-vigilant in monitoring the changing tides of nonprofits, making sure that each partnership is one that fits in line with the goals and ideals of Break Away; forever scouring for new partnerships; and forever open to nonprofits reaching out to them to form relationships.  You can also recommend a nonprofit that you think has potential to be a valuable partner, and Break Away can begin to initiate a relationship with them!  Their partnerships are really ever-growing, and ever-strengthening.

Call Today!

Thus, if you find yourself pining for a service trip that your school does not offer, you can change that.  Start today and call (800) 903-0646.  The representatives there will be as happy to hear from you as you are happy to hear from them.  And, as an added bonus for those who want to lead such adventures, Break Away provides semi-annual training for alternative break student leaders.  Good luck and have fun!

***All information about Break Away provided by the lovely Samantha Giacobozzi, Programs Director for Break Away.***

Website of the day: Chariots of Fire

In the Words of a Salvation Army Super-Hero

Thursday, January 29th, 2009

In this blog, I like to include a write-up from a volunteer or a service learner at least once a week. I think that hearing first-hand accounts of different service from different people gives the act of volunteering a face and a place in our hearts. Because service means something different to everyone, it is important to hear the primary accounts of those whose lives have been characterized by service, and to realize that is always close to our hearts, and it is always attainable. This week’s service story is by Allyson Cohn, a young woman who is majoring in social work at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, a major ultimately chosen due to her long-term involvement with the Salvation Army. Allyson began volunteering with the Salvation Army’s after-school programs for children when she was in high school. Her hard work as a volunteer eventually led her to accept a position as the Children’s Center Assistant, a position she has been hard at work for since May of 2007 (while of course being a full-time student). Her story traces the history of her involvement with the Salvation Army and how the simple decision to volunteer as an after-school helper single-handedly changed her life. I am excited for you to read her story and be as touched by it as I was.

***

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My name is Allyson Cohn and I have been involved with the Salvation Army since my junior year in high school.  The Salvation Army Emergency Lodge is located in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. It is a temporary shelter which offers a wide variety of social services to those who have lost their job, have no where else to go and who are willing to be pro-active in resolving their homelessness (click here if you are interested in finding more information about the program). There are 12 family rooms at the shelter, and I work with all of the resident families directly. Imagine living in a dorm-sized room with all the members of your family with only four single beds, one bathroom, and no privacy. Imagine never being able to have friends over after school and having a shelter bus pick you up from school with the giant red Salvation Army logo plastered on the side.

The reason that I began to give back to my community is because I didn’t have any after school activities, so I began to tutor children ages 5 to 17 in their after school program from 3:00 pm to 5:00 pm twice a week. I was 16 at the time, and my suburban and sheltered bubble was abruptly popped when I entered the Salvation Army. There are all kinds of people there struggling to get back on their feet. I learned that people were there due to many different circumstances that occurred during their lives.

During my senior year, I was in the community internship program offered at my high school where I received credit to go volunteer 20 hours a week. I left school during 6th period, and went to the Salvation Army. I realized that I couldn’t get away from the Salvation Army! I was infatuated with the self rewarding job of making connections with people and gaining their trust. Most importantly, I loved bringing happiness to the children who were in such an unfathomable environment, sometimes due to their parent’s choices and actions. These kids did not choose to be at a homeless shelter, and in most cases, adolescents are forced to mature at an earlier age.

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After two years of being a regular volunteer, I was offered a position to be the Children’s Center Assistant during the summer of 2008 when the director left on maternity leave. This position was full time and was a complete 180 of what I was used to doing in comparison to previous summers! It was time for me to grow up, enter the real world, and I soon became “Ms. Ally” to the children, parents and my colleagues.   Since it was summer vacation for the kids, we planned a wide range of fun activities for the children to partake in. We went to Noah’s Ark, Stone Fire Pizza Arcade, Milwaukee Brewers baseball games, and numerous activities at the local Boys and Girls club.

Being that the Boys and Girls Club is so close to the Salvation Army, my boss and I had the opportunity to work in conjunction with their programs.  For instance, we served on the programming committee for their annual summer T.A.L.K campaign, (Take Action Listen and Know) which promotes a safe and healthy community in association with the Milwaukee Police Department and with sponsoring companies in the neighborhood.  Another community activity that I was active in was “Feed the Kids.”  The Feed the Kids program provides free lunches for the youth during the summer months to ensure that all children have access to a nutritious lunch even when school is not in session.  My duties included riding on routes to  stop at local parks to pass out bag lunches to the children.  (This proved to be a very moving experience–some of the kids were so hungry, they would scarf their lunch so fast and get back in line for another one.)

Now, I am currently enrolled at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee and I just recently declared my major as social work.  My job at the Salvation Army has given me the experience and opportunity that most people don’t get until they graduate college. Through the strong relationships and hands-on experiences with the kids, I have learned a lot about myself and the harsh reality that these children must face on a daily basis.

 

I am committed to making these children feel not ashamed that they are residing at a shelter! I am committed to helping them if they are falling behind in their school work, and most importantly, I am always there to be their friend.  Each and every family that I come across has a unique story and we have both provided each other with memories that will last. In the future, I hope to one day take over the Children’s Department and become the Director or work more closely with teenagers. Although my job is one that I can’t just leave at the door when I come home from work, I constantly remind myself that I actually made a difference today. Just one smile, that’s all the makes it worth it in the end.

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***

Website of the day: National Association of Social Workers

Time to Plan Your Post-Graduation Service Abroad

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

 

Why Volunteer Abroad After Graduation?

Although this blog has focused on what you can do as a university student, service does not end with graduation.  In fact, after graduation, so many more doors open up, as you are a working member of society and can devote your career,  your free time, and/or some of your extra money to service-related causes.  You can volunteer locally in your free time, spend your vacations volunteering, and/or help work with social service entrepreneurship, if you have the funds.  

One of the most amazing ways to serve post-graduation is by going abroad with an organized service trip if you have the time, the will, and the means.  Going abroad to serve can be a truly exciting option, as it allows you to devote a solid block of your time to a service project, away from your daily life, and thus away from routine, allowing you to open yourself up to the place in which you are serving. 

Like we said in yesterday’s blog post,

While traveling, routine becomes impossible.  You are forced to deal with uncomfortable situations, to reach into the depths of yourself and trust your instinct.  You are forced to reach outside of yourself and make relationships based on respect and interest.  You can not rely on normalcy, on expectation.  You live with intuition.  At times you are desperately nervous, but to act in your truest calling takes being uncomfortable, takes putting yourself in situations where you simply can not expect the outcome.  In these situations you become AWARE, and thus become able to act out simple truths of service in your own unique, sincere way. 

  

 

 If the thought of this type of service work excites you, there are some amazing programs out there just waiting for your application.  See below for an Enchanting Challenge recommended list.

 

Visions in Action

 

 Visions in Action is an amazing option for the college graduate is looking for a little adventure, and to give a little back along the way. Their self-described mission is to achieve “social and economic justice in the developing world through grassroots programs and communities of self-reliant volunteers.  This is accomplished through our classic volunteer program, which supports NGOs in our program countries, and through our supported volunteer program, which staffs our development programs.” A pretty admirable mission, wouldn’t you say?  These programs range in length from 6-12 months, and are currently available in the following countries: Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Mexico, and Liberia.  To apply to serve with Visions in Action, click here. If 6-12 months is just a little too long for you, there is a short-term volunteer program, available in Tanzania and Mexico, to which you can apply here

 

Transitions Abroad

 

Also, as mentioned in yesterday’s blog, a mountain of information about different volunteer programs worldwide can be found at the Transitions Abroad website, which provides information for students AND graduates on how to volunteer abroad.  Transitions Abroad provides information on programs raning from the Peace Corps to United Planet, and in places from Argentina to Vietnam, and everywhere alphabetically in-between. 

 

Experiential Learning International

 

A third great resource to turn to is Experiential Learning International, an organization that develops partnerships with local organizations in 19 different countries, setting up volunteer work that can last 1 week to 1 year.  There is something for everyone, as their website sums up: “Whether you would like to devote your time to caring for orphans in the Philippines, teaching in a rural school in Ghana, breeding tortoises in the Galapagos, building a Holocaust memorial in Poland, working at a health camp in India, planting trees in rural Tanzania, or any of the hundreds of other options available, we can set up the right program for you.”  I’m sold by that description! 

 

Center for Cultural Interchange

 

A final great site that I truly recommend is the Center for Cultural Interchange.  This program is open to anyone 16 years old or older: high school students, college students, and professionals who are looking for something a little different.  Their programs seek to give the server a profound experience by giving them the opportunity to have a profound effect on their environment.  Service work through the Center for Cultural Interchange can last from 2-12 weeks, and can be served in the following countries: Argentina, Australia, Benin, Cambodia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, Ghana, India, Kenya, New Zealand, Spain, South Africa, Tanzania, and Thailand.  If you are interested in applying, click here

 

Okay, I will stop boring you with my own descriptions, and simply conclude with a list of other sites that I recommend you check out.  Have fun, and as always, comment and email with any questions, comments, suggestions, and new ideas! Suerte!! 

 

Other Great Organizations 

**If you need a little extra encouragement to volunteer, I can guarantee this article will convince you! :-)

Time to Plan Your Semester Abroad

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

As the spring semester dawns upon us, you may begin thinking about studying abroad in the upcoming academic school year.  Studying abroad is a wonderful way to travel in a structured yet liberated manner.  You have the security of a well-constructed academic program built around you, while also having the freedom outside of academia to build your own path within this journey.  It is the best of both worlds…An exploration simultaneously guided and free. 

Moreover, studying abroad is a profound exploration! Studying abroad gives you the time to come to know a place intimately, whether you decide to study abroad for a summer, a semester, or even an entire year.  It takes a long time to scratch beneath the surface of a place, time that is often not available in just a short vacation.  Studying abroad is a rare moment in one’s life when you are afforded the time it takes to build a deep relationship between you and your host city or host country.

Any type of studying abroad is invaluable to your life.  At home, often things are familiar, expected, predictable.  Most of the time, things can go according to plan, with some foresight.  However, when abroad, especially at first, there is a good chance that not much will go according to plan.  With the chaos of learning a new public transportation system, a new city grid, a new culture, and perhaps a new language, there are too many variables to be controlled.  Studying abroad allows you to develop the tools necessary to still function and succeed in an uncontrollable environment. Studying abroad teaches you how to be adaptable and flexible, how to turn to plan b, and often plans c and d, with fluidity and patience.  It is an experience that awards you the tools that are deeply valuable to your life and to handling the inevitable curveballs that will come with certain points of your life. 

Studying abroad imparts onto you not only the tools to navigate life, but also the tools to realize the truths within yourself.  While travelling, routine becomes impossible.  You are forced to deal with uncomfortable situations, to reach into the depths of yourself and trust your instinct.  You are forced to reach outside of yourself and make relationships based on respect and interest.  You can not rely on normalcy, on expectation.  You live with intuition.  At times you are desperately nervous, but I believe that to act in the ways in which you are called to act takes being uncomfortable, takes putting yourself in situations where you simply can not expect the outcome.  These situations are where you become AWARE, and thus become able to act upon simple truths in your own unique way.

Now, with studying abroad becoming more popular and more viable, different kinds of programs are popping up all over the board.  With these different opportunites, many different study abroad opportunities centered on service have arisen.  And really, what better way to come to know a place–and to come to better know yourself–than by serving within it, by reaching into the heart of its hunger and helping to feed it with the nourishment it needs, and nourishing yourself in the process.  Anyone can visit a place and touch upon every guidebook marker the city boasts, but few can have an experience intimate enough to know the face of that city’s need, and even fewer have the reward of helping to fulfill that need.  By serving in a place, you move beyond infatuation and romanticism into love, which is always the ultimate goal anyways, right? :-)   Here are some steps that you should follow to find the service semester tailored to you:

  1. As a student wanting to study abroad, your first order of business is to visit your university’s study abroad office.  There is a 99% chance they will have a great office with tons of different programs from which you can choose, and most likely at least a few of these programs will include service.   The biggest benefit of embarking on a study abroad trip coordinated by your university is that it will then be very simple for your credits to transfer, making your road to graduation still a smooth road to walk.
  2. However, if your school does not offer a study abroad service trip that fits your needs, there are plenty of other opportunities to which you can turn.  They just might take a little extra paperwork to ensure the proper transfer of credits, but a little pen and paper never hurt anyone!  The very first website I would visit in your quest is the the Council on International Educational Exchange (CIEE) site.   CIEE offers programs spanning the globe:  across Africa, throughout Europe, all over Latin America, and of course in Asia, Australia, and the Middle East as well.   And don’t worry, service learning is a major part of many of their programs.
  3. Another great webiste you should turn to in this hunt for your perfect service study abroad trip is the National Registration Center for Study Abroad.  This site is a collection of hundreds of study abroad programs, and the specific page that I have linked you to is a collection of programs that are available to United States university students.   On this page, the programs are categorized alphabetically by their language, which can be a great starting point.  To the right of the program’s language, country, and city information is a contact email, to which you can write and ask about service options.
  4. Another gold mine for service abroad is Cross-Cultural Solutions.  Although this organization does not partner up with universities, which would facilitate your journey during the school year, they offer 1-12-week programs that could be ideal for your summer vacation.  Cross-Cultural Solutions currently offers programs inthe following  twelve countries: Brazil, China, Costa Rica, Ghana, Guatemala, India, Morocco, Peru, Russia, South Africa, Tanzania, and Thailand.
  5. An amazing website to research a plethora of study abroad programs open to university undergraduate and graduate students is the Transitions Abroad website.  On their webpage, they describe themselves as a “portal for undergraduate and graduate study abroad,” and the description is spot-on.  There is a mountain of information there for you to explore, so have fun!
  6. For studying abroad in South America, specifically Argentina, GIC Argentina is a wonderful program to go through.  It offers semester abroad and summer abroad programs to Buenos Aires, Mendoza, and Patagonia.  They also coordinate a number of volunteer programs, with which your study abroad GIC program can work in conjunction.

As of now, that is the best information I can offer.  However, like always, any comments and suggestions are more than welcome, and if anyone in the audience has tips for studying abroad, hand ‘em over!  As a recap, these are the steps and sites that we recommend:

  1. Visit your university’s study abroad office.
  2. Visit the CIEE website.
  3. Visit the National Registration Center for Study Abroad.
  4. Visit the Cross-Cultural Solutions site.
  5. Visit the Transitions Abroad site.
  6. Visit the GIC Argentina site.

Remember to have fun while you research! :-)

Back to School…Time to Plan Spring Break!

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Last Tuesday and again today students are trickling back to school to begin the Spring 2009 semester…Which means that spring breaks all across the nation are about to be planned.  This year, check out some service trip options and/or some ways you can travel in an ecologically-friendly way–I promise it can be just as much fun as a crazy trip to Cabo and just as exotic as any Caribbean cruise.  So many people do not choose service trips and ecological trips simply because they do not have the information.  Well, no excuse: here it is! 

Your first step: check with your school’s service office and/or study abroad office: chances are they have an alternative spring break program.

Your second step: if your school does not have a service office and/or their study abroad programs do not coordinate service spring breaks, check out the following websites for all-inclusive information on service spring breaks around the world:

Alternative Spring Breaks          Council on International Educational Exchange             Idealist.org  

For a more narrow, specified field, check out the following information.

  • If you have a craving to build houses over spring break, research Habitat for Humanity opportunities. 
  • If you have a craving to help marine life, research the Oceanic Society opportunities. 
  • If your dream is to volunteer in Africa or in Mexico, check out the Visions in Action site.
  • If your corazon is in South America, visit the GIC site.
  • To help combat racial and social economic injustice, visit the Global Citizens Network site (hurry, applications for 2009 trips are due by February 15th!).
  • If community development is your forte, research Cross-Cultural Solutions.
  • If the environment is your passion, check out Sierra Club opportunities.
  • If volunteering with your family is your niche, visit Idealist.org’s family volunteer page.

If you research these links and ultimately decide that a service trip is just not for you, or rather you find that there aren’t any service trips that you can find in your dream destination, do not worry: you can still make your spring break ecologically-friendly.  By travelling in an environmentally-respectful way, you can travel in a way that is kind to the environment, and kind to your destination’s economy.  So you can still do good as you have fun over spring break! :-)

Lonely Planet guidebooks caution their readers to “tread lightly, travel responsibly and enjoy the serendipitous magic independent travel affords.  International travel is growing at a jaw-dropping rate, and we still firmly believe in the benefits it can bring–but, as always, we encourage you to consider the impact your visit will have on both the global environment and the local economies, cultures and ecosystems” (from their Brazil guidebook).   Lonely Planet sums it up beautifully: while it is now more accessible to travel around the world, we need to be aware of our footprint as we cross these frontiers.  With a little research, a little planning, and a little caution, this is quite feasible to do.

A great starting point I can offer for travelling responsibly is to visit the Responsible Travel website.  It offers pre-arranged tours, from biking through the Atlas Mountains, to staying in quaint cottages in Eastern Europe, to trekking through the jungles of Borneo, all in an environmentally-responsible way.  The site also offers information on how to offset your carbon useage during your travels, how to buy eco-friendly travel gear, and also how to volunteer when you travel (I had to throw that in there).  It is a great site, and I recommend it for any traveller, especially the up-and-coming spring-breaker.

Suerte, and good luck with planning your 2009 spring break! If you have any specific questions, feel free to make a comment on the blog, and we will get right back to you with the specific information that you need.

Let’s Stand Together as We Change the World

Friday, January 23rd, 2009

 ”Across the world, most people want stronger protections for the environment, greater respect for human rights, and concerted efforts to end poverty, corruption and war” (Avaaz.org).  It’s true.  The world is changing.  It is no longer a giant land where actions are isolated and limited in their effects.  We have entered a global world, facilitated by the Internet, where actions have a butterfly affect.  We can no longer mindlessly abuse natural resources or ignore civil wars in far-away nations.  One thing is certain in this new era: we must be accountable. 

And the world is responding to this call for accountability.  As I listened to the BBC Broadcast this morning, I heard an unending list of progressive, collective measures taken by world leaders across the planet.  Today Japan launched its first satellite to monitor greenhouse gas emissions.  Next month, the US plans to do the same.  The German government has asked its people to cut back on their meat consumption in an effort to become more environmental, a sacrifice considering Germans get a whopping 39% of their daily calories from meat.   The Pope is launching his own channel onto YouTube.  

It’s not just governments, either.  Individuals are doing everything in their power to increase the ties that bind, in a socially-responsible way.  Everywhere I look I see people trying to give back, trying to connect the dots across the world.  From people like Matt, dancing around the world (click here for the webpage), making people smile in all corners of the globe:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zlfKdbWwruY&feature=PlayList&p=5712CC5563227DEE&playnext=1&index=21]

To celebrities using their fame to make change, like Chris Martin together with Oxfam making their campaign for fair trade (click here for the webpage):

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We need to change our world, and it is important to remember that we can’t do it alone.  We have to stand together to make these changes happen.  So remember these guys when you think about how you can serve the world (click here to see the webpage):

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Let’s all stand together to serve our world, to make it the place we know it can be.  I hope this blog helps you in your path to finding where you can best serve, the place “where your deep gladness and the world’s deep hunger meet” (Frederick Buechner).  Make sure to check out the links listed on the left side of the page to help you with your quest!

Website of the day: We are the World

How to Greenify Your Life: Words of Wisdom from a Sustainability Guru

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

In yesterday’s post, we talked about all the ways in which you can choose a green major while in college and then pursue a green career, all-the-while while making time to serve green in-between.  While those are amazing options for an ever-expanding environmental need, there are always ways to become green without having to devote your entire education and career from the get-go solely to the environmental movement.  To fit with the realization that green is moving from a fad to a simply a part of the necessary fabric of our lives, many educational focuses, careers, and service opportunities are “greenifying,” or adding environmental stresses onto their already existing foundations.  This trend is exciting, as it allows us all to be a part of the movement to give back to our communities by giving back to our planet. 

Caitlin Cunningham is a young woman who is a part of this greenifying trend, and has some interesting insight to share about it.  Caitlin just recently graduated from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro with a degree in Interior Architecture.  When she started her major, she was excited to be part of the world of design.  Four-and-a-half years later she completed her major determined and excited to enter the design field with a sustainable approach.  Below is her experience in her own words.

Green Living

by Caitlin Cunningham

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Upon entering college at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, I decided to study interior architecture.  The Interior Architecture program at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro is a unique major unlike any other interior design field in the States. The studio-based atmosphere emphasizes working with not only your fellow classmates and professors, but also with the surrounding community. Throughout this four-and-a-half-year program, we are taught basic design tools, such as drafting, drawing, and modeling.  We then implement these new skills into major studio projects that include working with real-life situations. This deployment of our skills provides us with the ability to transfer our lessons from the classroom into real life practice.

 

As this major is not completely environmentally-driven, we are the future designers of our generation, and there has been one specific professor that believes it is extremely important to educate us about the impact design has on the environment.  This professor is Anna Marsha-Baker, my second year professor in Interior Architecture, and more importantly, my mentor. Her consistent emphasis on green design and sustainability really took a hold of my thinking and was the instigator to my future passion.

 

Anna taught us of the influence design has on the environment by turning basic design assignments into an in-depth look at what our impact is on the planet. In her class, the students learned to research not only the sustainable/green products that we would specify in our designs, but we would really learn to understand the connection of our constructed environment and identify the users of each designed space. Designing for the specific users occupying a particular space leads to fewer mistakes, less future demolition, and affectively, a smaller impact on the environment.  It is a very effective method for designing with environmental efficiency and sustainability. 

 

Anna extended her influence outside of the classroom by creating the Sustainability Committee on campus. This committee was a part from our design program but encompassed all of the university. All departments worked together to help make our campus more sustainable. Through efforts to lessen waste at dining services and increase recycling as well educational programs focused on environmentalism, the words sustainable and green dramatically gained popularity in less than two years. It was an exciting time in my life, knowing that what I really enjoyed learning about was now also becoming more popular among my professors and my college community.  Moreover, this was all happening against the backdrop of the national discussion concerning sustainability, which made our college efforts feel intertwined and heightened with those of our entire country.

 

I believe my passion for green design and a greener life style provided me with some amazing opportunities. I was able to transcribe my knowledge of not just design, but of green design, into internships and extracurricular activities.  Perhaps one of the most rewarding opportunities I have had is interning with The Children’s Inn at NIH (National Institute of Health).  While working with The Children’s Inn on various renovation projects, I was able to provide the facilities manager with some greener alternatives that will increase air quality for the numerous ill children staying at The Inn. This was extremely important, as the Inn is a long-term stay facility for patients of low immune deficiencies.

 

An especially enriching extracurricular activity that I have had the opportunity to serve with is UNCgreen, my campus’s environmental activism organization.  Throughout my college career, I had seen the need for young professionals to speak out on various issues that impact their lives. Working with UNCgreen was a way to encourage others to speak to their professors, employers, and landlords, to let them all know what change they want to see that would help the environment.  With this organization, I helped formulate a petition to implement a green fee in UNCG’s tuition, so each semester each student would contribute $5 to aid in greening our campus even more. This is an important example of how the power of unity and activism can help green our environment just a little bit more.

 

***

 

 

In her own words, Caitlin beautifully and inspiringly sums up how the environmentalism that was stressed within her academic major opened up new interning and volunteering opportunities that left her greatly enriched.  Not only did she have fun doing what she love doing, but on top of that she left college allowing the world to breathe a little more easily.  There is no doubt she will go on to use this education and these experiences to greenify the planet as she beautifies it through design.  We can all use her as an inspiration! 

Check out her current activities at her employer’s website, Helicon Works, right here.

Website of the day: EcoGeek

Going Green and Giving Green

Wednesday, January 21st, 2009

 

A Green U.S.A.

 

In the words of Thomas Friedman, “Green is the new red, white, and blue” (Hot, Flat, and Crowded, 173).  Everywhere I look, I feel that statement reinforced.  From the President’s inaugural speech to his website, he underscores our need to turn to renewable energy and to stop abusing resources.  Take a little spin around his Energy and Environment webpage and right away you will be struck by its headline and first bullet point:

New Energy for America

  • 5 million green collar jobs

The United States’ presidential administration is resolving to solve our energy problems.  Unbelievable!  And it’s not just the US.  A recent BBC headline read, “Tories Plan ‘Energy Revolution’.  Now, if that doesn’t catch your eye!  The article summarizes the British government’s plans to minimize their gas and oil imports as well as their carbon emissions, while maximizing their energy effectiveness (i.e., harnessing energy and channeling it without wasting it).  This article is not only an interesting read, but also a great reminder that this green movement is international, and will continue to become more and more international as time goes on.

 

With the new political focus comes an ensuing response from the educational, economic, and professional sectors to face the facts and go green. 

 

Green College

 

Let’s start with education.  I found a comprehensive list of environmental academic majors called (appropriately) Enviro Education Majors , and its contents blew my mind.  There is everything from Agricultural Science to Ecotourism to Population Studies to Zoology, and everything alphabetically in-between.  Whatever you are interested in, it now comes in green.  What is also really interesting is that even if you do not major in an environmentally focused field, there are a number of academic courses and programs you can take to give you the tools needed to direct your knowledge and your field of focus towards that of helping the environment.   For instance, for architecture and design majors, there is LEED, Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, a certification program that teaches students how to design and rate buildings on their environmental efficiency. In addition, for every major, there is the Green Corps, a volunteer organization directed at running environmental campaigns to promote and pass environmental policy.  Any college graduate can enroll in their training school and learn the tools to become an environmental activist.  For more details, visit their website.

 

Green Careers

 

As for jobs, well just look at the aforementioned Presidential task: the creation of 5 million green collar jobs.  Just like academic majors, these jobs cover the range of professions, from environmental law to sustainable farming—something for everyone.  And it is not as if you need to be a scientist to have a green collar job.  The environmental era is ushering in brand new products and systems that need to be engineered, manufactured, and sold.  Take for instance, the business of windmills.  Suddenly, a relatively new business like the windmill industry is in demand and thus in dire need for people to make the product and for people to sell the product.  In an article on the online journal Science, Robin Arnette brings to light the fact that “Over the last 2 decades, research and investment in sustainable energy have increased dramatically. Wind power, meanwhile, has become one of the fastest growing sources of electricity generation in the United States and the world” (click here to read the full text).  This means that thousands and thousands of windmill turbines are being installed in the US and abroad, which means that thousands and thousands of people are needed for all the components, from the windmill’s initial building to its final installation (click here if you are interested in either an internship or career in wind energy). 

 

Such jobs are becoming so necessary and so popular that there are now a number of colleges and universities that offer academic programs in wind research.  In her article, Robin Arnette lists the following programs:

  • Texas Tech University Wind Science and Engineering Research Center
  • University of Massachusetts Center for Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy
  • University of Utah Wind Energy Research Program
  • MIT Laboratory for Energy and the Environment
  • Illinois Institute of Technology Energy and Sustainability Institute

And we are only talking about wind energy jobs in these examples!  I wanted to give you a little taste of the depth of opportunity behind each green job, as there are literally hundreds and thousands of new careers being created to fit the rising tide (no pun intended) of necessary environmentalism.  For a list of some of the most pressing green jobs and how to become qualified for them, visit the Green Opportunities website. 

 

A Green Economy

 

As always comes with booming jobs comes the potential for a booming economy.  Some companies have made enormous profits from producing environmentally sustainable products, such as the wind power company Vestas (visit their site here).  These companies have shown innovation, ingenuity, and dedication to developing what is necessary, and largely still, unavailable; they have filled a desperately needed niche.  Just as there is an untapped green job market, there is an untapped green economy, and it has the power to be great.

 

Green Service Trips

 

So with all of this excitement buzzing around the green world, how, you may ask, can you serve in a green way?  If your college or university offers service trips, it probably offers environmental service trips.  If however, your college or university does not offer service trips, or does not offer environmental service trips, I highly recommend that you check out what the Sierra Club has to offer.  The Sierra Club is a national environmental activist group that, among other tasks, coordinates eco-friendly service trips where volunteers are accompanied by Sierra Club aficionados, and together they work to restore natural habitats.  On their website, they describe their service trips as

ranging “from helping with research projects at whale calving grounds in Maui to assisting with archaeological site restoration in New Mexico. Usually, service trip participants team up with forest service rangers or park service personnel to restore wilderness areas, maintain trails, clean up trash and campsites, and remove non-native plants.”  For an up-to-date list of Sierra Club environmental service trips, click here.

 

Sierra Club

 

Who wouldn’t want to go to tropical Maui and work with exotic animals?  Who wouldn’t want to go to the mysterious deserts of New Mexico and work to restore parts of unbelievable history?  A green service trip will really help to heal the world in an environmental way, and also, it is absolutely fun.  In the end, it could also eventually lead you to a career in one of the emerging green fields, which also can be absolutely fun and absolutely always rewarding.

Heeding the Call to Service

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

Obama's Service Work on Martin Luther King, Jr. Day

Yesterday’s call to service was answered in one of the most inspiring acts of collective altruism our country has witnessed–literally hundreds of thousands of Americans devoted their day to service, including our President himself !  While President Obama spent the day visiting injured soldiers at Walter Reed Hospital and painting the walls of a homeless teen’s shelter in our nation’s capital, others across the country flocked to soup kitchens, performed medical and dental services free of charge, and coordinated donation drives.  According to the Washington Post, this year’s Martin Luther King Jr. Day witnessed 12,100 service events nation-wide, over twice seen on the same holiday last year (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/19/AR2009011902999.html).  What a way to start this new chapter.

Today, officially, the new chapter has begun, a chapter that is asking us all to serve in whatever way we can.  There are many issues facing our nation and our world at this crux in time, and we as a country need to mobilize ourselves in order to put the world back together again.  What is so beautiful is that we seem inspired to take on that challenge.  So let us begin. 

All of this talk about service reminds me of one of my greatest role models: Laura Eppinger.  I met Laura during college at Marquette University.  Laura was an idealistic journalism major who was always volunteering and coordinating service activities wherever and whenever she could.  During her junior year, she decided to study abroad in Cape Town, South Africa, in large part because that specific program included 14 hours of service work a week.  Laura went and spent four months working in an orphanage for children who had lost their parents to tuberculosis or AIDS.  Many of these children were themselves afflicted with TB and/or HIV/AIDS.  Needless to say, she came back a different person.  She had always been devoted to service, but upon her return to Marquette, she made it the center of her student life.  Soon after arriving back at campus, Laurabegan a 20 hour a week job at the Student Service Learning Office (a heavy task to handle, especially as she was allready studying her way through an overly-ambitious credit load and working as an editor for the student newspaper).  During her year at the Service Learning Office, Laura strengthened already-existing service learning programs and also worked to create new programs between Marquette University and Milwaukee County organizations and nonprofits.  When she graduated after that year, she left the Service Learning Office enriched and inspired by her work and passion.

But Laura did not stop there.  Upon graduation, she applied for and was offered a job with AmeriCorps to work as a Service Learning Coordinator for Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin.   Since July, she has been working tirelessly to mobilize the Ripon College student body and get everyone serving.  And that she does!  

In a way, all the service work that Laura now does for her career really began with her service trip to South Africa.  Below is a reflection she has written on this experience, and I think it is a beautiful piece to draw inspiration from as we embark upon a new mission in our country’s story, a mission to serve.

Cape Town Service Learning

by Laura Eppinger

laura1

In fall 2006, during the first semester of my junior year, I participated in Marquette University’s Cape Town Service-Learning Study Abroad Program. (More information can be found here: http://www.marquette.edu/safrica/about.shtml)

 

I was drawn to this program because of its uniqueness—it was Marquette’s only study abroad opportunity on the African continent, and there was a service-learning component. Our group of 12 Marquette students was enrolled at the University of the Western Cape and able to select two courses of our choosing. Another two were required, Theology of Reconciliation, Justice and Peace and Leadership in Grassroots Development. Through the Leadership course, my fellow students and I were placed at a nonprofit agencies for regular service (14 hours a week). We were encouraged to bring our experiences in the field of nonprofits into the Leadership course; these experiences were also valued in the Theology class.

 

My service-learning site was a children’s home for those orphaned by AIDS or tuberculosis, which was located in a township outside of Cape Town proper. I divided my time between on-site visits that included anything from cooking and cleaning to taking half a dozen children to a the local clinic for HIV and TB tests, and fund-raising or creating public relations material for the children’s home.

 

This service-learning placement shaped my time abroad, and my worldview thereafter, in many different ways, but one I would like to touch on is the visible tie between social injustice and physical isolation.

 

It has been only 15 years since apartheid rule was overturned in South Africa. The effects of this “separateness” are still real and lived. During apartheid, the government zoned different areas for different racial categories of the population (See: http://tinyurl.com/97wkv5). Commerce centers and developed areas with easy access to public transportation were generally zoned for White South Africans. Black and Coloured (mixed race) people were often forcefully removed from otherwise mixed neighborhoods and relegated to newly constructed government housing (which often lacked electricity and running water), or forced to build shantytowns. (For more about forced removals, see: http://www.districtsix.co.za/)

 

The reality was very similar, though not the law of the land, when I studied in Cape Town in 2006. The University of the Western Cape, where I studied, was a Coloured school during apartheid. It is still predominantly Coloured, and its students come from largely Coloured neighborhoods. The township I volunteered in is almost 100% Black or indigenous African. But the these populations share more than a so-called racial classification—statistics like average income level, high school graduation rates, rate of HIV infection, and crime rates are tied to a person’s race and, therefore, neighborhood. Simply put: Black or indigenous African people are at the greatest risk of contracting HIV in South Africa, and continue to live in neighborhoods with low graduation rates, low income rates, and high crime rates (http://www.avert.org/aidssouthafrica.htm; http://www.tc.columbia.edu/cICE/archives/3.1/31sachs.pdf).

 

But Cape Town tourism is booming; with nature reserves, Table Mountain, bars and clubs on Long Street, and all the beautiful beaches, I know I could have easily enjoyed South Africa and glossed over the social injustices that have lingered from and evolved since apartheid. But every week I traveled to grossly different neighborhoods in Cape Town and interacted with different segments of the population. It was often exhausting, unsettling and confusing to spend a seven-hour day at an HIV/TB orphanage and then return to our study abroad group’s house in a hip college town called Observatory, then attend university with a somewhat middle class population the next day.

 

But my jarring and disjointed experiences reflect the geography and society of South Africa and the nation’s history of oppression. I am convinced I could not have gained these insights without time spent at the service site, framed within an academic course.

 

The Cape Town Study Abroad Group

Table Mountain in Cape Town

 

***

Those are the words of Laura and her service…They inspire me everyday, and I am so happy to share them with you!  Stories like these show how the doors of service bring out parts of yourself that you never knew existed, and parts of the world that wouldn’t exist without your help.

A Call to Service

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Today is Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, a day that was officially decreed as a day of service.  However, with hectic schedules and too much asked of us in our fast-paced lives, this day has become more about a day off than a day to volunteer. 

 

Not anymore.  President-elect Obama has asked for a return to the roots of this holiday.  He spent yesterday at Washington DC’s Lincoln Memorial in the opening ceremony of tomorrow’s inauguration with rock star Bono as well as Martin Luther King III, who reminded the crowd of his father’s words that “everybody can be great, because anybody can serve” (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/01/18/AR2009011802083.html?hpid=topnews).  Obama and his family as well as Vice President-elect Joe Biden and his family plan to devote today to service, showing that volunteering is for everyone.  The call is being heard: today, volunteering is spreading like wildfire across the country, with over 8,500 events planned and hundreds of thousands expected to turn out.  (And it’s not too late for you to serve today—visit http://www.usaservice.org/content/home/ for a list of opportunities!)

 

The call may start today, but it does not stop with today.  President-elect Obama has issued a general call for service within this new chapter in our country’s story.    In the words of our next President, “We are one people; we are one nation; and together, we will begin the next great chapter in America’s story” (http://www.usaservice.org/content/home/).  And that next great chapter begins with service. 

 

If you visit Barack Obama’s website, http://www.barackobama.com/index.php, and you click on the issues tab, you can see that “Service” is listed as one of the next administration’s core issues.  If you visit the “Service” section (http://www.barackobama.com/issues/service/) you can see that the next Presidency will include a number of initiatives to promote volunteerism, including: an expansion of AmeriCorps and the Peace Corps; a $4,000 annual tax credit in return for 100 hours of annual public service; and the establishment of an agency devoted to strengthening nonprofits.  These initiatives not only imply that service is now more important than ever, but they also prove that it is now more feasible than ever.  The new administration realizes that people as a whole want to give back, but with the economic and time demands already restraining us, we do not always have the freedom to give as much as we would like.  But with these new initiatives, service is going to become a part of the economic and working fabric of our country; all parts are coming together to facilitate and strengthen the service sector, and this is a perfect opportunity for us all to change the structure of our lives so that they include more service. 

 

As university students, you have the unique opportunity to explore many different service opportunities with more flexibility than those locked into a 9-5 office job.  Service trips or local service projects are amazing places to start.  Upon graduation, AmeriCorps and Peace Corps are amazing service-related options that you can explore.  Furthermore, your devotion to service during your university years will improve your chances of being accepted for such programs as AmeriCorps and Peace Corps.  In many ways, the university students are the people who will make this dream in the US’s story come true, for it is you that will be coming to the work force with the new devotion to service within your careers, it is you that can build your career from the beginning on a foundation of service.  It is you that can make this chapter the greatest our country has yet seen.