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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Aug. 14, 2008) — A grant-funded program at Tennessee
Tech University last month served as more than just a bridge between high
school and college for a dozen students who’ve been accepted for
admission this fall.
The month-long Summer Scholars Program was also designed to be a bridge
to academic and career success and community involvement for the participants
who came from across the state.
“The purpose of this program was to expose students to issues of
diversity, especially as those issues relate to the workplace,”
said Robert Owens, TTU’s Minority Affairs director who led the project.
Funded by a Tennessee Board of Regents Access and Diversity grant, it
brought together some students from the state’s underrepresented
rural counties with some from Tennessee’s metro areas, all of whom
will be majoring in a STEM (science, technology, engineering or math)
discipline.
In addition to providing those students with two valuable courses, math
and an introduction to college life that helps prepare them for things
like time management techniques, the program also provided three educational
and professional fieldtrips and an opportunity for community service involvement.
“This program was definitely designed to keep their schedules busy,
but every activity will somehow benefit them later in their academic or
professional lives. We tried to make the most of the month-long program,”
Owens said.
The group went on fieldtrips to the National Civil Rights Museum in Birmingham,
Ala., the Nissan plant in Smyrna and the Eastman Chemical plant in Kingsport.
“Most of these students had never before toured a facility of that
size, and we wanted to show them how their major directly applies to the
type of work they could be doing in their careers,” he said.
“At the same time, both of those Tennessee facilities employ a
significant number of TTU alumni, and we want to continue fostering those
kinds of relationships,” Owens continued.
Members of the group also had to put their intuitive thinking and carpentry
skills to work for their community service project.
They worked in cooperation with the Upper Cumberland Child Care Resource
and Referral Center to design and construct musical instruments for four
Macon County childcare centers that were damaged or destroyed by tornadoes
earlier this year.
“Service learning is a university priority, and this project showed
these students that they can actually use the skills they’re learning
through their majors to help the greater community. That’s service
learning at its best,” Owens said.
Evening program sessions gave the participating students insight into
such personal development issues as time management and study skills,
credit and finances, healthy relationships and drug and alcohol use.
Organizers also formed focus groups that allowed them to evaluate the
daily experiences of the students who participated in the program and
measure the evolution of their thinking, knowledge and experiences.
--Tracey Hackett
This information posted 14 August 2008
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