Monday, April 26, 2010

AmeriCorps Week is Coming!

Betsy This is Betsy Knoll serving with the 4-H Mentor Michigan Initiative and Ottawa County Michigan State University Extension. Our 4-H Mentor Michigan Initiative members are hard at work planning several unique service projects and events for the 2010 AmeriCorps Week coming up this May. With a program as large as ours, it’s hard to give props to all the great service being done during that week, but here are two projects that are occurring within our program:

AmeriCorps member Barb Brow of Ottawa County MSU Extension is passionate about education and reading. So it is particularly fitting that she is coordinating a book drive to benefit the Holland Medical Center with their Reach Out and Read program. Reach Out and Read is a program to help promote literacy in the home. The doctors and nurses at the Holland Medical Center have been specially trained in literacy development to further assist in this effort. Barb is collecting new and gently used books so each young patient can be given a new book that they can take with them to build a library at home. The Holland Medical Center is also collecting used books to assist in the construction of their own literacy room. Within their waiting room children and parents will have access to the library while waiting for their appointments.

AC Week 2010 Logo - EDIT Since the start of the month of April, Barb has collected more than 100 new and used books – but she isn’t done yet! The drive is continuing through AmeriCorps Week (May 8 – 15) and she would love your help. If you don’t have a service project (or if you’d like to participate in another) during AmeriCorps Week, contact Barb at browb@msu.edu or call 616-994-4574 to host a collection box at your site.

Another great project going on during AmeriCorps Week is Step Up Lansing, spearheaded by 4-H Mentor Michigan Initiative AmeriCorps member Jillian Tremonti. On Saturday, May 8, 2010, AmeriCorps members and alumni in the greater Lansing area will gather together to host an event called "Step Up Lansing: Get Things Done for Our Community." This event is designed to promote National Service and challenge Lansing residents to volunteer during the 2010 AmeriCorps Week.

Lansing-area AmeriCorps members recognize AmeriCorps Week as a perfect opportunity to help residents get involved within their community, spread the word about National Service, and share the importance of giving back. On May 8, "Step Up Lansing" will offer residents the chance to participate in a number of different community service projects at various service hubs throughout the greater Lansing area. Each service hub will focus on different types of projects – beautification, restoration, awareness, conservation, clean-ups, and trainings are currently being offered. Service hubs will range in focus and skill level in an effort to accommodate the diversity of participating volunteers.

If you are an AmeriCorps member in the Lansing area and would like to get involved, please contact Jillian Tremonti at tremont5@msu.edu, or call 517-353-9418.

These are just a few of the projects going on within our program. Tell us about your service projects planned for the 2010 AmeriCorps Week; we want to hear about them! And I’ll see many of you at the Russ Mawby Signature Service Project next month in Kalamazoo!

Friday, April 16, 2010

AmeriCorps & The Value of Community Involvement

Someone once said that children “may forget what you said but they will never forget how you made them feel.” Here at MARESA’s AmeriCorps, we strive to improve the lives of the children we work with each and every day.

Kathryn Johnson Hi! I’m Kathryn Johnson, writing to you from Marquette on majestic Lake Superior. I’m a second-year member serving with the Marquette-Alger Regional Educational Service Agency, which is the ISD for two Upper Peninsula counties. There are 10 members in our AmeriCorps program, eight of which are based in local K-12 schools. The other two are based at the MARESA office and support education programs throughout our two counties.

We all work with at-risk students in one way or another. Our members serving at the high schools and middle schools develop relationships with students who struggle with attendance and often have numerous problems outside of school. By developing caring and trusting relationships, our members help these students improve their school attendance, tutor them with homework to complete assignments, and in the process also increase self-confidence in the students by encouraging them every step of the way. These members also operate before- and after-school homework labs where any student can come in and receive tutoring on homework assignments. These homework labs also provide a safe and relatively quiet atmosphere in which to do their school work – this is so important to the success of students who do not have that option in their home environments.

At the elementary level, our members are more focused on Christina Widder - School Fundraiserenrichment activities, recruiting parent volunteers, and programming. Two AmeriCorps volunteers are placed at one specific school that has a history of the most local at-risk students for both academic failure and behavior problems. While the members sometimes provide behavior intervention and in-school suspension support, they focus on ways to keep the students and surrounding community involved in the success of the youth at the school. Whether volunteering to coordinate Community Resource Center activities or making pasties (U.P. favorite food – pastry shell filled with meat and veggies), they try their best to help boost the self confidence of the students and involve the parents to make the school a better place for the kids.

Here at the MARESA office, there are two of us that are all over Marquette and Alger counties, depending on the project. One member helps to coordinate pre-K play groups to help children develop positive social interaction skills and support parents in assisting their children to develop those skills.

And then there’s my position, which is harder to describe….

I support Career and Technical Education (CTE) programs throughout our two counties. CTE is a broad category of anything from an elementary counselor conducting career exploration activities to high school welding, health occupations, and business classes. I have been involved with coordinating several skills competitions, such as the Upper Peninsula region Health Occupations Students of America (HOSA) where professionals in the healthcare field judged student events. I recently set up job shadowing activities for 90 eighth graders. I could not have accomplished this without the generous cooperation of our local professionals who were willing to take a few hours out of their work day to spend time explaining their jobs to these youngsters. Examples of the job shadow placements included the DNR fish hatchery, a circuit court judge, motorcycle mechanic, the U.S. Olympic Education Center, and a logging company. Each site happily agreed to demonstrate their processes and even let the kids try some hands-on, in-action activities in one way or another.

My next event is just around the corner next week and will be my biggest project of the year. It is the annual “Pathways to Your Future Career Day” where we bring all 800+ high school juniors on to the campus of Northern Michigan University for a day of career exploration with professionals who are set up on panels. For example, our “Government” panel consists of a Foreign Service diplomat, a Veterans’ Affairs officer, and the Upper Peninsula representative for Senator Carl Levin. All together there are 127 presenters who were kind enough to give up their time to participate in Career Day. The students sign up for specific panels by career pathway according to what they find most interesting and relevant to their own future careers. They will have the chance to listen to brief presentations from each professional and then ask them all sorts of questions about their experiences, salaries, etc. Will this make or break a career for each and every student? Of course not, but it might for a few and it certainly gets all 800 of them thinking about making solid plans for after high school.

Of course, we conduct service projects as well. Our favorite so far this year was cleaning up our newly-adopted stretch of Highway M-94. We truly got aACCleansUP kick out of some of the crazy items we found discarded on the side of the road covered up in the tall weeds, such as an alarm clock and a brass candle stick holder. But more importantly, we got to know some of the residents who have small farms along that road. One lady even happily showed off her mini-goats and pigs, telling us all about how she takes care of them. All of the residents we met thanked us for our efforts and offered to help out whenever we conduct our future clean-ups!

My experience with MARESA’s AmeriCorps has taught me about the value of community involvement. Recruiting volunteers that care about our local kids and communities has been instrumental in the success of our programs. As Margaret Mead once said, “Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it's the only thing that ever has.”

Friday, April 9, 2010

On your mark…get set…FIELD SEASON!

There you are at the starting line, getting ready to run your first marathon. You’re trembling with anticipation as you wait for the gun to go off and your heart is pounding so loudly you’re pretty sure the guy standing next to you is calculating your pulse in his head. You keep asking yourself, “Did I prepare enough? Did I plan enough? Do I have what it takes to complete this journey?”

We wear waders, not running shorts. We hold clipboards, shovels, native plant seedlings, and survey markers - not water bottles. We stand in the midst of eager groups of volunteers rather than with hundreds of racers. We are Huron Pines AmeriCorps and we are excitedly toeing our own starting line, waiting for the ice to melt and flowers to bloom. Like a runner training for a race, we’ve been preparing all winter to remove invasive species, inventory small dams, and design challenging service projects to get children and adults alike out into our fields and forests, to actively participate in restoring and protecting the natural resources of northeast Michigan. Its field season and WE ARE READY!

AE_shot My name is Abby and I serve with Huron Pines AmeriCorps, based in Grayling, an AmeriCorps program focused on conserving the forests, lakes, and streams of Michigan’s northeast 11 counties. AmeriCorps members help nonprofit organizations meet their goals to steward the region’s natural resources by serving in four key areas: volunteer engagement, habitat restoration, environmental stewardship, and through developing new conservation services. Through these efforts Huron Pines AmeriCorps is strengthening the organizations they serve, which in turn creates more effective natural resource conservation.

Already during the 2009-2010 term of service, our members have facilitated partnerships between natural resource professionals in the community and teachers in the DSC_1827 classroom. Children are benefitting from hands-on education opportunities - testing the water quality of local streams and observing live salmon in their classrooms. Members have spent time seeding and transplanting hundreds of native plants that will be used in local projects reducing soil erosion and other pollutants affecting our waters. These plants will also be offered to the community through the local Conservation District, as alternatives to exotic and potentially invasive plants when designing flower gardens.

Over the next few months, Huron Pines AmeriCorps members will be spreading out, through the 11-county region of Northeast Michigan, running their race. Members are poised to protect the Lake Huron shoreline from non-native phragmities and buckthorn. Communities will learn from Huron Pines AmeriCorps how the removal of small dams can lead to water quality improvement in local streams - allowing citizens to begin making informed decisions about what is best for their community. One member is ready to help roll out a recycling program in DSC_2213 Otsego County, a service unavailable until now. Huron Pines AmeriCorps members are set to implement brand new volunteer programs at all of their host sites that will recruit community members to become caretakers of nature preserves, a marine sanctuary, and permanently protected areas – providing a sense of ownership and investment in the preservation of Michigan’s scenic and natural spaces for current and future generations.

When you finish a marathon you usually receive a banana and a medal, but what is most rewarding is the overwhelming feeling of accomplishment and pride gained from completing what you set out to do. For Huron Pines AmeriCorps, each successful project and volunteer opportunity our members coordinate, like passing mile markers in a race, is another step toward strengthening the health of Michigan’s forests and waters for the communities we serve. Our members are ready to put our projects into action and engage local citizens. Fire that starter’s pistol – its field season!

To learn more about Huron Pines AmeriCorps please contact Program Director Casey Ressl at 989-344-0753 or visit our website: www.huronpines.org.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Schools of Hope

115 Hi there! My name is Tracy Lee Taylor, Coordinator of the Michigan’s AmeriCorps Schools of Hope Family Literacy program. Our program is centered on the hope of improving the lives of parents and children in Grand Rapids Public Schools through literacy. The program is a collaboration between The Heart of West Michigan United Way, the Grand Rapids Public School (GRPS) system, and the Literacy Center of West Michigan.

Since statistics have shown children in GRPS have significantly lower scores on standardized tests than children in outlying areas, Schools of Hope was founded on the belief that improving the literacy levels of both students and their parents is the best way to realize hope for a better life. Schools of Hope is divided into two distinct components; in-school tutoring for the children and English as a Second Language classes for non-English speaking parents.

Some of the greatest success stories of the Family Literacy program are shared by our amazing AmeriCorps members who serve as classroom teachers:

Every month we sponsor a Family Literacy Night at each of our partner schools within the city of Grand Rapids. The program, designed to bring families together in support of promoting the importance of literacy in homes where English is not the primary language; offers a meal, a lesson, and, most importantly, a chance to share experiences. At our last Family Night we wanted to give the children of our adult students a chance to express what this class has meant to them. One little girl was very anxious to share with us. She stood up, grinning from ear to ear, and said, “I am so excited my mom is learning to speak English. Now she can help me with my school work and I can help her learn!” Her excitement and enthusiasm really showed us the impact that offering English as a Second Language classes through AmeriCorps Schools of Hope program can have on the entire family!

-- Amanda Cook, Sibley Elementary School

Early on in the second semester, our class decided it would be fun to go on a field trip. We also decided it would be fun to see a movie. So, we found a movie that would work during our class period, the latest Jackie Chan movie, and I came up with the rules. The students could only speak English during our outing, they would have to order their own tickets, and in return, I would cover the costs. We all had a fantastic time. Probably the most exciting part, for me, was watching my students while they watched the movie. While many of them probably wouldn't have understood hardly any of it at the start of the year, I could tell by their laughter at certain parts that they understood a great deal of the movie. That was encouraging, and a lot of fun!

--Dan Hooley, Congress Elementary School

One of my students told me last week she was speaking with her DHS case worker on the phone and her supervisor on the other line commented on how good her English was. The supervisor told my student she could understand everything she was saying. What a great improvement!

Another success story involved one of my students at her place of work. Months ago her boss told her she really needed to speak more English if she wanted to keep her job. A few weeks ago she told me her boss has been so impressed with her English skills he might even give her a raise. She felt proud to tell me these two stories! It’s so good to hear students are applying what they’re learning to better their lives outside of the classroom! That’s what it’s all about!

--Kate Maitland, Sibley Elementary School

To find out more about Michigan’s AmeriCorps Schools of Hope, contact Program Director Tom Branigan at (616) 459-5151 or visit www.literacycenterwm.org.