Archive for the ‘Academics’ Category

Service-Learning Advocate Spotlight: Sara Hickenbottom

Catherine Wade Monday, November 7th, 2011

Sara is one of the Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research’s returning Service-Learning Advocates from last year. She hails from Elk Grove in Northern California and is a sophomore, double majoring in Biblical Studies and History with a minor in Theology. She is currently studying to become a college Bible professor. This desire was inspired by working last year at the CASLR with several of the Service-Learning Bible courses.

This year Sara is working with quite a few Community Partners, including the Azusa Unified School District (AUSD), specifically within Special Education; Foothill Community Center; Foothill Community Church; the Azusa Wellness Center; Stepping Stones for Women; David & Margaret Family Services; and the City of Azusa, including working with Mayor Rocha. Her second year working at the CASLR has been quite a whirlwind of activities and projects. She has also helped facilitate the first online Service-Learning course.

Sara loves working at the CASLR because it allows her to see the big picture of what Service-Learning offers and its mission to provide reciprocal learning and partnership between APU classes and the Azusa community, helping to make a difference in both the lives of the APU students and the Community Partners. She finds great joy in working with her Community Partners, and also likes having the opportunity to empower her fellow students to go out into the community in order to use their developing skills and to learn more in return. Planning and organizing events is also a favorite of her varied tasks as an SLA.

Some of her best experiences so far have been working with Dr. Duke’s Introduction to Biblical Literature: Exodus/Deuteronomy class. She got the chance to take this class last semester where she had a great experience learning about the Jewish traditions of Passover. They planned and hosted a Passover Celebration at Foothill Community Church, where they spent all day in the kitchen bonding as a class preparing the traditional feast. Students from the Service-Learning BLNG 414: Advanced Hebrew class partnered with them by coming to read the traditional blessings in the original language. It was a special experience for everyone involved.

This semester, Sara has had the opportunity to work with Dr. Duke in the same class as a Service-Learning Advocate. Since it is a fall semester class, instead of learning about Passover, the students have been researching and presenting on the Festival of Sukkot, the Jewish Feast of Booths or Tabernacles, which is an eight- day autumn harvest festival.

Sara hopes to leave behind a legacy of organized and well established projects for those SLAs who will come after her. She also has to admit that she will be leaving behind a few great blunders as well. She won the “CASLR Blunder of the Year” award last year for a series of unfortunate events at a school visit and feels that she might be in the running once again for this year, despite her best efforts. The CASLR yearly blunder award is a playful award given out to the SLA with the best story of a project gone awry. This is a way to provide safe sharing of inevitable human errors while focusing on the opportunity to learn and grow from such mistakes.

Sara’s strengths are Input, Belief, Connectedness, Consistency, and Restorative. Her SLA “Buddy,” a first year SLA, would most likely describe her as detail oriented, talkative, funny, passionate, and able to get along well with others. Working at the CASLR has allowed her to be able to see the needs of the community around her in a new way. Partnering with her Community Partners and hearing their different perspectives has also been quite thought provoking and inspiring for her.

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The Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research (CASLR) at Azusa Pacific University now collaborates with more than 70 undergraduate classes each semester with a Service-Learning component integrated within their syllabi. What students are learning in the classroom is immediately applied in practical ways that makes a difference in the community as well as giving great hands-on experience to participating students.

The CASLR employ nine undergraduate students to organize all functioning components, including communicating with the professors, the students in each class, the community partners, and organizing all the logistics. These amazingly talented individuals are called Service-Learning Advocates (SLAs), and they are the hands and feet of this sizable endeavor.

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Mary C. Pearce is the Graduate Assistant Coordinator for Student Professional Development and Program Support  at the Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research, Working on a Masters of Science in College Counseling and Student Development


 


Service-Learning Advocate Spotlight: Reade Tillman

Catherine Wade Monday, October 17th, 2011

Reade is one of our three new Service-Learning Advocates (SLAs) who started this year. She hails from Colorado Springs, Colorado, a sophomore on the APU women’s soccer team, studying Biochemistry (pre-med) with a minor in Spanish. I sat down with her over coffee this month to get her perspective about being a part of the Center Academic Service-Learning and Research as an SLA.

Reade is a detailed individual and enjoys the varied tasks of her position, which provide a refreshing variation to her assigned tasks as a biochemistry/pre-med major. What Reade personally values and gains most from being an SLA in the CASLR is the rich mentorship and wisdom of the varying ages of women in the office. She also finds working with upper-classmen encouraging and helpful. She finds their experience an invaluable resource.

Some of the community partners with which Reade works with are St. Frances of Rome School in Azusa, where a COMM 111: Public Communications class meets with sixth grade students to prepare them for a Speech Night. Working with the Speech Night project is a special treat because she had the opportunity to be a part of this class during a previous semester and has personal experience of its reciprocal impact for both the APU students and the sixth grade students. Another of Reade’s programs is Angels Sing, which is a caroling event that BUSI 210: Principals of Organization and Management students help organize for Visiting Angels, an in-home care organization for senior citizens. This year’s Angels Sing event is scheduled for December 7 from 3pm to 8pm. Extra volunteers are welcome to participate.

Being a part of the CASLR team has influenced Reade both professionally as well as spiritually. Since she is a pre-med student with many years still to go in schooling, she has loved the opportunity to apply what she is learning in the community and to be able to make a difference now while she is still in school. Spiritually, Reade is blessed by the CASLR’s representation of the Body of Christ, all working together, utilizing everyone’s unique talents, and helping each other as one unit in a loving, caring environment.

Reade hopes to be able to continue contributing to the CASLR through her passion and intentionality to complete her assignments with excellence, and to leave behind a trail of small secret encouragements to the rest of the office staff. Reade’s top Strengths are: Woo, Achiever, Strategic, Includer, and Belief. She enjoys the challenge of meeting new people and winning them over to her cause by being a positive, passionate example. She is able to really get behind a goal or mission, believe strongly in it, and persuade others to join her enthusiasm. She is also able to visualize new possibilities and think through them in order to find the most efficient logistical solution to issues that might arise. Her SLA Buddies, the two teammates assigned to be her first line of help and resource in the office, would most likely describe her as independent, liking to be challenged, but not afraid of asking questions.

~

The Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research (CASLR) at Azusa Pacific University now collaborates with more than 70 undergraduate classes each semester with a Service-Learning component integrated within their syllabi. What students are learning in the classroom is immediately applied in practical ways that makes a difference in the community as well as giving great hands-on experience to participating students.

The CASLR employ nine undergraduate students to organize all functioning components, including communicating with the professors, the students in each class, the community partners, and organizing all the logistics. These amazingly talented individuals are called Service-Learning Advocates (SLAs), and they are the hands and feet of this sizable endeavor.

~

Mary C. Pearce is the Graduate Assistant Coordinator for Student Professional Development and Program Support  at the Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research, Working on a Masters of Science in College Counseling and Student Development


 


 

Building Blocks for Sustainability: the Community Scholars Program

Catherine Wade Wednesday, October 5th, 2011

The Community Scholars Program, spearheaded by Dr. Judy Hutchinson, Executive Director for the Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research, and other key Service-Learning staff, marks a groundbreaking effort to introduce a collaborative model of community-based scholarship focused on improving the overall health of the City of Azusa.   The program united a range of city institutions: the Azusa Police Department, Our Neighborhood Homework House, the Azusa City Library, St. Frances of Rome Church, the Neighborhood Wellness Center, the Azusa Chamber of Commerce, the Azusa Unified School District, and Azusa Pacific University.

 

Above: Scholars receiving their “Community Builder” awards.

From left: Nancy Johnson (Azusa City Library), Father Aloysius Ezeonyeka (St. Frances of Rome), Emma Cook (Chamber of Commerce), Crystal Marquez (Our Neighborhood Homework House), Dr. Robert Duke (Azusa Pacific University), Alexis Ruiz-Alessi (Azusa Unified School District), Julia Pusztai (Neighborhood Wellness Center), and Xavier Torres (Azusa Police Department).

Representatives from each partner agency/organization met regularly throughout the spring 2011 semester, learning and implementing community development research tools, which included studying the history and current state of Azusa, generating a shared vision for its future, mapping and evaluating each agency’s network, evaluating top concerns facing the city, and creating interlocking chains of resources and partnerships to address those issues.

Community Scholars performing a cause-consequence analysis exercise.

The Community Scholars Program yielded many significant insights into the challenges, opportunities, and underlying infrastructure of the city, as well as new avenues for networking and partnership.

True community empowerment was demonstrated, as the program supported the capacity of the city of Azusa and its members to act as scholars and generate knowledge by collaborating in this sustainable community-building project.

Xavier Torres, Azusa Police sergeant concluded, “It was a unique program that brought strangers together who became friends and can now work together and share resources.” Moving forward, the Community Scholars plan to meet on a quarterly basis, rotating host responsibilities, and maintaining strong relationships and dynamic project collaboration.

On September 19, the Community Scholars reunited for their inaugural quarterly reunion, graciously hosted by St. Frances of Rome Church. The group dined together, renewed previous commitments, and discussed ongoing collaborative projects, before attending the Azusa City Council meeting and formally presenting the activities and outcomes of the Community Scholars Program, spreading their excitement and vision for a strong, healthy Azusa.

 

APU Tutors Make Learning Come Alive

Catherine Wade Monday, September 26th, 2011

On Thursday, September 8th, the Azusa City Library celebrated International Literacy Day. The library recognized the transformative efforts of “Azusa Reads, Writes, & Counts,” which provides Azusa’s elementary school students with free tutoring from APU students. This program is provided by Azusa Pacific University’s Office of Community-Based Federal Work-Study (C-B FWS) and facilitated by the Center for Academic Service-Learning and Research (CASLR).

Dr. Judy Hutchinson, CASLR’s Executive Director, and Stacey Kim, Coordinator for C-B FWS Programs, received a “Literacy Service Award” and certificates of recognition from the California Senate and Legislative Assembly in honor of this program’s significant contribution to community literacy.

The following is an excerpt from a speech by a grateful father, John Garcia, who shared with attendees how the Azusa Reads, Writes, and Counts program had helped his daughters:

“How do you get a child in the first grade to be reading at a sixth grade level? Yes, genetics play a part in it- but even a person blest with natural athletic skills cannot compete at a professional level without good coaching, and that is what we found at Azusa Reads: excellent one-on-one coaching. By the time our daughter was in the 1st grade she was reading at the sixth grade level and comprehending what she was reading. The APU students motivated her to read by the interest they showed in her and by making it fun. This interest in her progress made her feel special and enjoy reading that much more…

The warm attitudes the APU students have with the children also makes for a comfortable and motivating environment, and when someone is comfortable with something they will participate more. It helps them fall in love with reading, so much so that our daughter didn’t want to stop reading and even wanted to read in the shower…We have a younger daughter who is in 3rd grade and participating in this expanded program. So I ask again, how do you get a child who is in the third grade reading at a sixth grade level and doing 4th grade math as our younger daughter is doing. Once again, good coaching. In this expanded program she has learned in particular, long division in math and sentence structure in writing.

Now, you may be thinking, sure, these are some of the same things that are taught in the classroom; but in there, the student has to keep up with the pace with the rest of the students and may fall behind. This program gives them the chance to learn something that may have given him or her trouble in the classroom, and pick it up at their own pace. In this community there are many students who live in a home where English is not the primary language and struggle to keep up. This program gives them a change to get caught up. We have had parents tell us that their child was struggling in school but after a couple of months in the program they noticed a remarkable turnaround.

Since Azusa has such a diverse population it is important to have people willing to work with different races and ethnicities. The APU students have always embraced all and strive to make people who do not speak English feel comfortable and welcome. In closing, we would like to thank APU for caring so much for the students of this community, for donating its time and talent to this program, and for continuing to work hard for the success of this program and its students. We would also like to thank the Azusa Library for providing a super environment for this program. Congratulations APU and APU students for this honor.”

Dr. Hutchinson and Stacey Kim with Reed Strege, Assistant Director of the Azusa City Library.

 

Parents and students testify to the program’s impact during the ceremony.

 

Mayor Joe Rocha, library staff, APU representatives, and Azusa families celebrating together.

Executive coach spends time with executive students

Nick Karim Wednesday, March 23rd, 2011

Jason Womack, executive coach to global leaders, visited campus last week to talk to undergraduate students and students in The School of Business & Management’s Young Executive MBA and MA, Management programs. Womack came to campus a few weeks ago to get a better feel for our culture and how our students could most benefit from his expertise.  After returning last Thusday, March 17th he offered the following three tips for students:

1. Follow up with one new person you meet each week. Build your professional network long before you need to call on it.

2. Practice makes…comfortable. We do what we’ve done. So, if it’s time to do something new, it helps to practice on small things to prepare to perform on important ones.

3. Care. More. The world is a big place, and even though, we can play a big part by keeping our focus on what’s important to us. Care about that, learn about that, and share that with others.

Students can find his book about the importance of promise making called The Promise Effect here: http://www.tinyurl.com/TPDonAmazon. In addition, between now and June 15th, 2011 anyone can schedule a 30 minute call by visiting http://www.tungle.me/jasonwomack

It’s a cohort Christmas!

Nick Karim Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

When students choose APU’s MBA and MA, Management cohort programs for recent college graduates, they are choosing to be part of tight-knit community of about 20 students who go to every class together.  This community is the perfect place to spend a year in between college and career.  Not only do we do every class, for a year, with our cohort, but many of us work together as well. This is a picture of two of my cohort friends and myself at an office Christmas party.

YEMBAs celebrate Christmas together

  Tomorrow, our MBA cohort is having a Christmas celebration together before we all leave for Christmas break.  Many of us will see each other over break but will miss the others, i’m sure. I don’t know if any other MBA students in the country are like ours but this is family and why not celebrate Christmas with your family.

 

To learn how you can have the year of your life, travel abroad, and earn a graduate degree during one year “in between college and career,”  contact me at 626-815-4627 or at nkarim@apu.edu or ask one of my friends in the program.