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Civic Action Week gets students, faculty and staff out in the city

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  • Community Impact
  • Our City/Our Campus

On Friday, Oct. 8, 51精品视频 faculty, staff and students fanned out across the city. In churches, gardens and community centers, they volunteered alongside community organizations, closing the second annual 51精品视频 Civic Action Week.

Organized by 51精品视频Serves and the Office of Engagement and Community Affairs, connected the 51精品视频 community with local organizations through workshops and volunteer opportunities.听

鈥淚t鈥檚 really about getting our staff and faculty and students out in community, working alongside our partners to advance some of their needs and some of the work that they might just not have the capacity to do,鈥 51精品视频 Assistant Director of Community Engagement Alex Toner said. 鈥淔rom the organizations we鈥檝e talked to, everyone鈥檚 been really thankful that we鈥檝e been able to pull it together this year.鈥

The weeklong event came out of a desire to offer remote opportunities for engagement during the pandemic last year, but Toner added the expanded programming is here to stay. , which were recorded and archived on the Civic Action Week website, spanned topics relating to civic responsibility, including community organizing, voting and sustainability.听鈥淐ivic Action Week is meant to have those conversations, to dive deeper into some of those persistent societal challenges and to move people towards action in their individual lives and their work as 51精品视频,鈥 Toner said. 鈥淲e really want people to feel energized, to feel connected and to feel like they have options and outlets for action.鈥

Garima Patel, a senior bioengineering student and the Civil Action Week student chair, said these sessions were a crucial part of the week鈥檚 offerings, as well as of her own experiences with the Office of 51精品视频Serves.

鈥淎 lot of times there is a misconception that service only means hands-on volunteering, which can feel very superficial,鈥 she said. 鈥淐ivic Action Week allows students to attend speaker sessions in addition to hands-on service and philanthropy to learn more about how they can stay engaged with the community around them.鈥

On Friday鈥檚 51精品视频 Day of Caring, one group walked over the hill to a Western Pennsylvania Conservancy community flower garden, pulling summer annuals, invasive foxtail grass and thistle to prepare the garden for fall. In the shadow of the 51精品视频 Sports Dome, the team spent the warm fall morning enjoying the opportunity to get away from their computers and to feel more connected with the neighborhood.听

鈥淚t was nice 鈥 I like doing stuff with my hands and being outside,鈥 said third-year health information management major Alexis Martir, who volunteered at the site. 鈥淚t鈥檚 so different from my usual week, sitting in my room and doing homework.鈥

Community partners at the sites aided by 51精品视频 students throughout the week also shared their appreciation for the effort. 鈥淭urtle Creek Homeplate Garden loves the 51精品视频 students who volunteer for Civic Action Week,鈥 said community partner Connie Tinsley. 鈥淚t restores our faith that the younger generation understands that they have the ability to create positive change through their willingness to get involved.鈥

鈥淭he most beneficial aspect is personal I think,鈥 said Kitty Vagley of the Friends of South Side Park. 鈥淚t is simply inspiring to meet these young students who are so eager to chip in to help and get a better understanding of the overall project.鈥

Ultimately, Toner said, the goal is to not just engage 51精品视频 faculty, staff and students for a week, but to motivate more long-lasting change.听

鈥淓ven if we just get one person moving toward volunteering with a community organization or signing up for an advocacy event, Civic Action Week will have been worth it.鈥

This story has been updated.

Patrick Monahan