Campus Connections 2004 - 2005
Monday, February 14, 2005
Jason Webley Tour Dates
I would like to live vicarously through all of my team mates all across the state. If any of you happen to be in / near one of the locations below, go to the show. It might be fun or something.
Then, we will all have something to talk about at SERVES.
Or we should all go see the same movie.
Or we could talk about that depressing story from the last meeting.
Feb 18 - Portland, OR - Red and Black Cafe
Feb 19 - Tacoma, WA - Kickstand Cafe
Feb 20 - Olympia, WA - Last Word Books
Feb 24 - Bellingham, WA - Bison Bookbinding
Feb 25 - Seattle, WA - The Perfect Room
March 1 - Spokane, WA - The Shop
March 2 - Helena, MT - Toadstone Theater
March 3 - Moscow, ID - Radavich Atic
March 4 - Walla Walla, WA - TBA
March 5 - Richland, WA - Ray's Golden Lion
Thursday, January 13, 2005
Fwd: Yesterday
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Joseph Baruch Warren
Date: Thu, 13 Jan 2005 10:07:54 -0800
Subject: Re: Yesterday
To: campus_connections@lists.wwu.edu
Dear Betsy,
I think that the Community Partner / Faculty Luncheon went really
well! Did you get that congratulatory email from Executive Dean
Leatherbarrow?
I don't know if it was the table placement, our brilliant "social
engineering" in the guest seating, the "Thinking about Service
Learning" activity, or just our ridiculous charm, (which is totally
the talk of the campus, by the way) but even Kim, who almost didn't
come based on how little she got out of previous years, seemed to walk
away with ideas and connections to grow an SL program at her center.
I was worried that Brian would leave empty handed, but he announced
that he had an internet development class, and agencies all FLOCKED to
him! I was worried about making that class work, now, with our
luncheon, this quarter is that much closer to a success for him!
The cross section of attendees was great. We were hoping for 25, we
got 50, and with the threat of snow no less! The guy from the teen
center with the skinny tie and asymmetrical hair, Cynthia, who's very
grace seems sometimes to make her seem out of place, the intense lady
from the library, the seemingly endless line of bright eyed
AmeriCorps, the people from all of the agencies with whom we had been
in contact, and the interdisciplinary smorgasbord of faculty members
all carefully shuffled to break out of their traditional cliques
facilitated connections that couldn't have happened through our office
alone.
Oh, and Steph and I presented to Donna's class last night, and it went
unexpectedly well. Neither of us had ever worked with an ESL class,
so it was an awkward start, finding the right way to talk in a way
that the students understood what we were saying, but that we weren't
talking down to them. I kind of wish we had discussed it with you
beforehand. It is an interesting class in that it is all adults with
families, and for the most part multiple jobs. As much as Stephanie
tells them that the students in her Soc. class had to really work to
fit S/L in to their "already-busy-lives" it seems hard, sometimes, to
compare the "Part Time Job / Full Time Class / Dating / Getting Rock
Band or Political Movement or Zine off the ground" already-busy-life
of a 19 year old day student with these ESL night students' "2 Full
Time Jobs / Part Time Student / Full Time Parent / Full Time Language
Student / Full Time Culture Student etc." already-busy-lives. But
instead of a straight presentation, it turned in to a discussion that
I think went really well. They know how excited we are about their
class. At least one student expressed interest in us helping her find
volunteer opportunities, which I said we were available to do.
As well as it went, though, I am glad yesterday is over. The 12 and
half hours, doorstep to doorstep workday really can be tiring, just as
selling all of one's daylight hours can be depressing. Still, I hope
more days like yesterday happen.
Also, Betsy, I am not sure if you have noticed this, but the last
couple of days have provided a slough of personal emails sent to the
whole group. I know that you are occasionally shaky with the
computer, so if you are worried when sending an email out that it will
accidentally go to the list serve instead of the person to whom you
are writing, let me know. I'm pretty good at that kind of thing.
Don't worry though, computers are tricky.
Your cubicle partner,
Joseph Warren
--
Would you like to see Some Interesting Things?
http://home.earthlink.net/~notatyrant
Tuesday, January 04, 2005
Monday, January 03, 2005
Reflective? I'm a F*#king MIRROR!
I have just returned from my weekend in Reno, my former home, the region of my first Americorps year, and I am now in the office trying to remember what my job consists of. As I remember, at least part of it is reflection, so I am taking this opportunity to share with you, the rockin'-ist Ameri-team anywhere! During my trip, I was going to visit my old work, the Ron Wood Family Resource Center, to see how things are going. They have grown in the months since I completed my VISTA term, adding staff members and desperately needed services to a semi-rural Nevada community. They have even incorporated the local WIC clinic.
Sadly, several feet of snow prevented my drive from Reno to Carson City, (actually the snow didn't prevent it. The road was open but my personal phobia of sliding off in to a ditch on highway 395 and being frozen in 8 feet of ice until spring did most of the actual Carson-City-visit-prevention.) Despite not being able to actually visit the newly expanded facilities, I did get the chance to talk with my former coworkers. One of the pieces of information that I was just now able to gather was the fact that the person who replaced me as the Service Learning Coordinator VISTA at RWFRC had quit. This took me a bit off guard. I know that a lot of VISTAs do leave. A smaller, but not insignificant number of non-VISTA Ameri-corpses quit too.
Our own team has withered in our first term. Still, I am a little upset, not because someone had the audacity to leave an Americorps position. Damn, that happens. My distress comes from the fact that her leaving marks the near-certain end of projects and programs that I started. As an Americorps, there is a real "if I help one person" mentality. "If Sarah is reading at grade level at the end of the year" or "If I help Beatrice figure out her food stamps so that she has enough to eat" or, "if I can help the McFarland family really prepare for an earthquake" or even in this Campus Connections program, "If I can get Dr. Truehart to include a Service Learning project in her environmental biology class, mine will not be time wasted."
I admit that this is an unfair description of Americorps. There is an element of achieving sustainability in all of our work. But as a VISTA sustainability isn't just an element of the job, it is THE job. So if, six months after leaving the service learning youth team which I created, the team no longer exists, my last year was really a terrible failure.
So what can I take from this?
It was only one wasted year, and I have a shiny new Education Award to show for it, not to mention a resume full of skills in exchange for this 12 month excursion in to dubiously successful do-good-ery.
One option for me would be to just pass blame. I mean, she did quit. It wasn't my fault. I left a "legacy binder" full of "how - to" manuals about further developing the programs I had inherited, maintaining, developing and even redefining those that I had started, and starting new projects as the agency / community needs and her interest arose.
Alternately I could go in to a fit of flagellatory self blame for the unsustainable programs to which I dedicated a year of my life. Or I could just sort of let go of it and be glad that I am currently in a job where I think that my work WILL have a lasting effect and try to convince myself that my disappointment about my work at Ron Wood isn't that big of a deal. I don't really know.
At Pre Service Orientation in Provo, Utah, oh so, so, so long ago, I vaguely remember one of the sessions we took focused on "letting go" of our projects when we left them. Considering the number of VISTAs who do two terms at the same site, or who are hired on to their sites after their terms end, I think that very few of us took that session too seriously. But I think that the point of the session was to allow us to accept the directions that our programs went when we left them, even if they seemed to be executed through methods other than those which we would have used. I wish I had raised my hand to ask, "So what if our program dies after we leave?"
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Counting, counting, counting.The progress report has this section that makes me want to yell at it."9. How many students/Community members did your volunteers directlyserve/tutor this reporting period?"We have 70 agencies and about 200 students. How many people wereserved? I dunno. I don't have any idea of a reasonable system bywhich to estimate it even.I just went through 200 forms to figure out that 4 of the 70 agenciesare schools! I don't know what our students were doing there!I am near yelling at my computer screen that we are not all tutoring programs.
Tuesday, December 07, 2004
On the up and up
I haven't been on this in a long time! I guess no one else has either since our last posting was on November 17. Oh well, here we go.
I just wanted to share with you the fact that we are on the up and up here at Gonzaga! Right before Thanksgiving not only were we able to locate a computer and hook it up to the internet, but almost all the inner controversy here on campus related to the Resource Center basically cleared up, ready for me to take a holiday break and come back to campus with a renewed sense of freedom. I must say, this entire experience has been truly one long course in the power of words. Words can mean so many different things to different people and frankly that has never been more apparent in my life. But nonetheless, things are looking up.
And what's better, I get the gift of a Palm Pilot from our Vice President for Diversity (which was fabulous, he's one of the most generous men I know). On top of that, I got a brand-new computer for my office the week after Thanksgiving as well...so truthfully, I really feel a sense of relief and freedom to actually get done what I want to get done...Things. I haven't been able to get things done because I've been wrapped up in dealing with controversy and organizing the office. New programs can be a pain.
So now I can type this up with the confidence that this program will be a total success. I have Christmas music playing on the computer, and I am getting a huge service-learning mentoring program organized to kick off in the spring. I am very excited, and just thought I'd share this with all of you.
On top of that, our cluster is going strong. We are planning some great Civic Engagement things, and we are getting along famously. We even planned a Christmas party for this upcoming weekend for our Spokane/Cheney cluster (official name to be released soon--stay tuned). Expect great things out of the Eastern side of the state.
Take care, and write back!
Bryce
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
I have finished an entire reflection journal!
I know, maybe I am writing too much, and really I am sharing all the
interesting bits with y'all, or at least those I decide are worth
typing and maintain a certain positivity to them. Anyway, I think
this is the first time I have ever actually FILLED a notebook before
deciding to either replace it with a fancier one or quitting the
reflective writing for a few months.

