Thursday, November 12, 2009

AmeriCorps Opening Day

I attended Massachusetts AmeriCorps Opening Day this weekend! Since MACC VISTAs are mostly at different schools, we rarely see all of each other in one setting. Opening day was this past Friday at the Reggie Lewis Track & Athletic Center at Roxbury Community College. MACC was among more than 100 other AmeriCorps programs in the state.

The highlight of the day for me was listening to a spoken word piece from the Youth Empowerment Corps at Untied Teen Equality Center (UTEC). A group of people from this organization read a piece written by a teenager in the program. I believe they said she was 16. I would paraphrase a few lines from it, but that could not do her writing justice. In a nutshell, it was a thought-provoking view of our society, the state of our economy, and the nature of our culture … and how she wants it to be transformed.

Also I enjoyed the performance by Essencia Dancing from Youth Start AmeriCorps Program Roca Inc. I liked how they incorporated dance routines from different genres like bachata and hip hop. I have eclectic taste in music so the performance definitely had my stamp of approval.

I liked how this opening day allowed members from some AmeriCorps programs to showcase their work.

Overall it was just a nice break to catch up with other VISTAs. I did not realize how much I had done in three months till I spoke to other VISTAs in MACC and other programs.

For the Scholarship for Parents, I have conducted information sessions at the Allston-Brighton Resource Center, the Williams School in Chelsea, and ABCD Hyde Park Head Start among other organizations. I have attended community events such as New Bostonians Community Day near Government Center, BPS Showcase for Schools, and BPS Parent University’s Kickoff. I have also gone to individual school events such as Trotter Elementary School’s coffee hour, Lee Elementary School’s parent council meeting, and Guild Elementary School’s open house.

This sounds like a dizzying list of schools and organizations, but that goes to show you how extensive this outreach has been. Whether I have traveled to Chelsea, Dorchester, Roxbury, East Boston, Hyde Park, or Brighton, there are parents with a strong desire to attain a college degree.

Whether they plan to apply for school this spring, next fall, or in a few years from now, it has been amazing to hear their stories and determination to fit college into their schedule either part-time or full-time. Some of them need or want to take more ESL courses or college-level courses before committing to a bachelor’s degree program, but at least they are starting to develop plans for themselves. For some, that is a huge step in itself.



- Lindsay

Thursday, November 5, 2009

Greetings from Salem!

As I write this, I realize that it’s November and almost three months into my VISTA term, which is scary because in many ways the time has flown, at the same time there’s been a lot packed in to those three months! In October, my focus was split between outreach meetings with about a dozen community-based organizations to hear about their needs on behalf of the College and look at ways they might be able to build a mutually beneficial partnership with the college. It’s really interesting to hear about the challenges of non-profits during these difficult economic times. The meetings have also reinforced the challenge of our work: that often the type of short-term service or engagement that a college or university is most able to do is not helpful and sometimes even detrimental to those community organizations. My challenge at Salem State has been to try infuse service into the culture of a busy commuter student-dominated institution.

One of my major projects this past month has been to coordinate a large-scale food drive to benefit the six the largest food banks on the North Shore. I met with one of them a week before starting the drive and they mentioned how the organization had received a 25 percent increase in demand for food in the past year. With that dire need in mind, I tried to promote the drive using the “under-a-rock” method—that is unless you have been living under a rock then you should know about the food drive. Despite these efforts, and additional incentives offered to student organizations by the Student Government Association we had only received a moderate number of donations leading up to the deadline, and then on the final day…the flood gates opened. One student organization brought in six large boxes of food and several others made significant contributions. The drive ended very successfully and proved that the old maxim proves true on a college campus, if it weren’t for the last minute nothing would get done.

The craziness that is October in Salem culminated on Halloween when 100,000 visitors descended on the city (population 40,000.) A few VISTAs from Boston came out to experience the revelry with me, in what was easily the best Halloween I’ve had since undergrad.

Later,

Jay H