Small Change, Big Difference
03/15/2022
麻豆传媒's 1818 Community Engagement Grants enable servant leaders to find innovative ways to make a difference.
The 1818 Community Engagement Grant Program has only been around since 2018, but it is already making a big impact. The program, which was launched during 麻豆传媒鈥檚 bicentennial celebration, annually awards 18 grants of up to $1,000 each to groups of SLU students and faculty, in partnership with a local nonprofit, to make long-term, sustainable impacts in the St. Louis community. To date, more than 1,000 students and faculty have partnered with nearly 100 nonprofit organizations to assist nearly 5,150 people.
In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2019-20 grant cycle saw an almost 50% increase in the number of SLU participants in the program. Several projects focused on partnerships to expand relief efforts. While scaled back slightly, the projects had no less of an impact during the 2020-21 grant cycle, said Dr. Bobby Wassel (Grad Ed 鈥09, 鈥17), assistant director of SLU鈥檚 Center for Social Action.
鈥淔rom setting up virtual visits with residents of a local residential care facility to developing an informational booklet as part of the First Period Project, this year鈥檚 grants impacted over 3,000 people 鈥 more than the previous two years鈥 worth of grants combined,鈥 Wassel said.
The following projects represent just a handful of initiatives that received grants and demonstrate how servant leaders at SLU met significant needs in the community during an unprecedented time.
Delta Gamma Connections
The pandemic exacerbated feelings of social isolation and mental illness, particularly among older adults in residential care and skilled nursing facilities. With a goal to bring joy and companionship to those in need, sorority members of the Eta-Theta chapter of Delta Gamma at SLU reconnected with a community partner. Since 2019, sorority members have volunteered at the Mary Ryder Home, a St. Louis residential care facility that serves low-income women age 55 and over. Many of these women have a disability or mental illness and were especially affected when mandatory lockdowns canceled or limited in-person gatherings.
鈥淥ver half of the residents didn鈥檛 have any contact with their families,鈥 said Abigail Simon (DCHS 鈥21), a first-year grad student at Doisy College of Health Sciences who led the Delta Gamma Connections project. 鈥淭hese are the people who were hit the hardest during the pandemic because they would see others getting calls and they weren鈥檛.鈥
With grant funds, sorority members purchased nine Facebook Portals, devices similar to iPads, that allow video chats via Facebook Messenger and WhatsApp. They met with 20 residents for weekly virtual visits and measured their mental well-being over a few months. Sorority members found that the visits increased happiness and connectedness among residents and decreased depression and hospitalization.
鈥淕etting to spend time with my partner on the video chats meant connection during a year of isolation,鈥 Natalie Malloy, a member of Delta Gamma, said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been full of belly laughs and stories.鈥
Physics and Community Engagement
Missouri saw an incredible increase in the number of Black families who chose to home-school their children when the pandemic began, according to the U.S. Census Bureau鈥檚 Household Pulse Survey. Dr. Dannielle Davis, professor of higher education at SLU鈥檚 School of Education and national consultant on home schooling, said that鈥檚 unlikely to change soon.
Davis is the founder and executive director of Circle of Excellence Network, an initiative that provides supplemental instruction for underrepresented youth in grades six to 12 with a focus on home-schooled students. The network offers parent-educator workshops and exposure to a rigorous curriculum in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM).
鈥淏lack and brown youth aren鈥檛 always encouraged to pursue STEM, and I see this initiative as a way to populate the pipeline,鈥 Davis said. 鈥淩epresentation also matters, and it鈥檚 important that students see others who look like them.鈥
Davis leveraged technology to provide safe instruction for students in her Circle of Excellence Network during the pandemic. She launched the 鈥淧hysics and Community Engagement: Promoting Social Justice with Science鈥 project. The goal was to expose students from diverse backgrounds to physics, as well as to professionals of color in STEM and their historical contributions to the field.
Grant funds were used to hire physicist and international educational consultant Evelyn Washington, founder of the Kibolebole Educational Institute, to conduct weekly online classes designed specifically for middle school students.
The course topic 鈥淧hysics of the Pharaohs鈥 taught students fundamental concepts in physics. They also explored the discoveries made by Africans in the Nile Valley and discussed contemporary findings. Class highlights included an opportunity to virtually attend the National Society of Black Physicists annual conference.
The students received packages that included the book The Star of Deep Beginnings: The Genesis of African Science and Technology by Charles Finch III, as well as a PhysicsQuest 2020 science kit, which were donated by the American Physical Society. Students learned about the incredible life and work of NASA鈥檚 Katherine Johnson through four activities based on force and motion. Lessons and experiments included: How mass affects falling objects (both on Earth and the moon), changing variables to affect pendulum motion, projectile motion with desk-mounted slingshots, and circular motion and centripetal force by swinging and launching whiffle balls and string.
Davis said the students are now applying their knowledge of physics to address climate change.
First Period Kit Project
A 2019 SLU study found that 21% of low-income women and girls surveyed in St. Louis
lack menstrual hygiene supplies, a situation called period poverty. In one of the
first needs assessments of its kind, Dr. Anne
Sebert Kuhlmann, associate professor of behavioral science and health education at
SLU鈥檚 College for Public Health and Social Justice, and her team documented the challenges that low-income people with periods face
in accessing basic sanitary supplies.
The pandemic intensified period poverty. People who previously received menstrual hygiene products in schools or public facilities found themselves without access to the products as those places closed due to mandatory shutdowns.
When a group of public health graduate students heard about period poverty and the demand in the area, they launched the Interactive First Period Kit Project. They teamed up with graphic designer Emma Johnson and co-authored a period booklet for first-time menstruators and their caregivers. The Go With the Flow booklets provide details about menstruation, peer advocacy, ways to reduce stigma and resources. The St. Louis Area Diaper Bank and its St. Louis Alliance for Period Supplies (SLAPS) program give the booklets to their partners, who distribute them to service providers and caregivers in first period supply kits.
Students who created the guide included Onyekachukwu Anikamadu, Gabriella Schmidt-Grimminger, Allie Pinson, Adrienne Beckett-Ansa and Jilliam Root. Together with SLAPS, they held local focus groups with menstruators ages 9 to 13 to gather data for the booklet. Respondents were asked a series of questions about the format of the booklet as well as questions about menstruation. The booklet incorporates an inclusive design and content that appeals to a broader audience.
鈥淓ven if you do not have a uterus, it is important to understand how a period affects others,鈥 Anikamadu said. 鈥淏eing an ally can help reduce stereotypes, boost support and provide peers a more comfortable environment during this confusing time.鈥
Road to a Greener SLU
Elyse Lewandowski, a senior in the Chaifetz School of Business, came up with the idea to create an urban farm on SLU鈥檚 campus.
Lewandowski was past president of Campus Kitchen, a student-led volunteer organization with a sustainability focus dedicated to fighting food insecurity for low-income residents in Midtown St. Louis.
The organization, which prepares and delivers healthy meals, wanted to expand upon
its mission by partnering with about 40 students from 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Health Sciences Learning
Community to create three raised
garden beds behind Reinert Hall.
For expertise on the growing and preparation process, Campus Kitchen staffers and volunteers consulted Fresh Gatherings, a student-run cafe at SLU that offers local farm-fresh food; and Good Life Growing, a social enterprise urban farming company focused on combating urban decay and food insecurity in north St. Louis.
The urban farm yields organic vegetables including peppers, squash, spinach, lettuce and tomatoes, as well as herbs.
鈥淚t adds a fresh component to the foods we serve to our community partners,鈥 Lewandowski said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 nice to spice it up and make it a bit more appealing.鈥
Campus Kitchen uses the veggies and herbs in dishes they prepare, cook and deliver to Billiken Bounty, an on-campus food pantry for SLU students, and community partners. Lewandowski said about 400 meals per week are served through community partners, including Council Tower Senior Living Apartments Community, Midtown 300, Father Dempsey鈥檚 Charity and Our Lady鈥檚 Inn.
Campus Kitchen is more than food nourishment; it鈥檚 about relationship-building in the community, which was needed more than ever during the pandemic.
鈥淎s SLU students, we鈥檙e guests in the Midtown St. Louis community,鈥 Lewandowski said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important that we respect the people who are already here and remain cognizant of the issues that impact their lives.鈥
麻豆传媒 Universitas
Universitas, the award-winning alumni magazine of 麻豆传媒, is distributed to SLU alumni, parents and benefactors around the world. The magazine includes campus news, feature stories, alumni profiles and class notes, and has a circulation of 132,265.