JEP student worker and local child in an undated photo.
|
Good KarmaUSC Colleges Joint Educational Project puts a new spin on community service
By Kaitlin Solimine July 2004
Maybe its karma that causes good things to happen to good people.
My mother has always said that everything works out for the best,
says USC College senior and Joint Educational Project volunteer Anita
Nageswaran. And it really seems that everything does turn out well for
me.
Nageswaran, who is a double major in religion and biology and a
Baccalaureate M.D. program participant, has sculpted her undergraduate
experience around service to others. She, like thousands of other USC
students, spends most of her volunteer time at the Colleges Joint
Educational Project (JEP), one of the nations oldest and largest
service-learning programs.
The Woman with a Plan
JEP wasnt always the service-learning powerhouse it is now, but it
always had lofty visions. In 1972, the late Barbara Gardner, director
of what was then the Colleges center for urban affairs, noticed a
growing divide between the University and its surrounding community and
decided to take action.
Gardner wanted to develop a way in which USC students and the
community could have a more reciprocal relationship, says Tammy
Anderson, current director of JEP.
As a result, Gardner established a program (now JEP) that would act as
a broker for mutually beneficial educational partnerships, connecting
faculty, students and academic courses with schools, hospitals and
community-based agencies in the neighboring community as well as
greater L.A. The idea was that not only would the community benefit,
but USC students would also gain a new sort of knowledge through their
tutoring and/or mentoring experiences.
JEP emphasizes the fact that members of an academic community have as
much to gain from the surrounding community as the community gains from
them, says College Dean Joseph Aoun. Students who grind away alone in
a dorm room deprive themselves of the knowledge of others and of the
rewarding, reinforcing experience of sharing their own unique
knowledge.
The academic community at USC has quickly recognized the benefits of
JEP. The program has blossomed from just 200 USC student participants
in its first year to more than 2,000 today. JEP staff and student
assistants work with more than 50 faculty to develop service-learning
components in courses where faculty believe that community service will
enrich student understanding of class concepts and readings. At the
same time, the program now partners with organizations such as foster
care programs, battered womens shelters and after-school programs.
The Trojan Health Volunteers (THV), which originated in 1987, is such a
partnered program. THV places pre-med students in local hospitals and
clinics and is one of the most popular JEP programs.
The white-coat experience of THV offers precocious students the
opportunity to see the real ER, working in some of the largest and
busiest hospitals in L.A., says Anderson.
Nationally Recognized
In 2000, Time Magazine/Princeton Review recognized JEPs integral role
in USCs commitment to public service when it featured USC as its
College of the Year 2000. The accolade was largely based on the
Colleges longtime support of service learning.
Anderson defends the honor. JEPs long-term goal is for students to
develop increased awareness and appreciation for the validity of an
academic discipline beyond the confines of the classroom, she says.
Sometimes it seems selfish, says Nageswaran. I mean, so many of my
experiences volunteering through an organization like JEPs Trojan
Health Volunteers directly relate to my pre-med coursework and help me
academically, as well as personally.
Whether they come selfishly or selflessly, the learning experiences
available to students through JEP are certainly aplenty. Though most
participants (which now total nearly 50,000 since 1972) first pass
through the doors of the old Victorian house on 34th Street that houses
JEP in order to get extra credit for a class, many stay on,
volunteering and eventually even working as program assistants who
coordinate student placement into JEP programs.
JEPs Student Impact
Lia Evans, a College junior majoring in sociology and minoring in
Spanish and psychology, has found that JEP has given her a new
perspective on life and her studies.
Doing JEP has helped me understand how lucky I am, says Evans, who
won the 2004 Peer Achievement Award for her commitment to community
service and tutors at a JEP-affiliated high school. I also have begun
to notice the reflection of my tutoring on my sociological coursework
and vice versa.
Nageswaran, who works at JEP as a program assistant for both a battered
womens shelter and a foster care program and is a THV volunteer, has
also felt the impact of JEP on her life.
The women in the battered womens shelter are so strong to be able to
break out of a negative cycle of abuse, she says. Its really
inspiring to me.
These shared insights often cause JEP volunteers to feel a strong camaraderie on campus.
JEP is like a family to me. Were all doing meaningful work and making
similar connections between our time in JEP programs and our time in
USC classrooms. It connects us in such a significant way, says
Nageswaran. I hardly know anyone at USC who hasnt volunteered through
JEP it becomes such a common experience.
Likewise, JEP seems to breed a similar I can make a difference attitude among its many participants.
I always try to enjoy the here and now, says Evans. I focus on
what I can do to affect positive change on a personal day-to-day basis
rather than feeling burdened by trying to save the entire world.
|
 |
|