10 KCC students to receive awards for community service

KCC students participate in a Bruins Give Back event at the Food Bank in December.

KCC students participate in a Bruins Give Back event at the Food Bank in December.

Ten Kellogg Community College students will be honored this month with Michigan Campus Compact awards recognizing their dedication and commitment to community service.

KCC students Joshua Englehart and Melissa Swarts will receive the organization’s Commitment to Service Award for work completed through their service learning studies at KCC.  The award recognizes students’ breadth or depth of community involvement or service experience and this year will be given to just 34 students statewide.

Eight other KCC students will receive the Heart and Soul Award, which is given to students to recognize the value of their time, effort and personal commitment to their communities as evidenced through their service activities.

Heart and Soul Award recipients will include Hallie Adams, Rebekah Daly, Keeton Foley, Alexandra Guebara, Cassidy Kerr, Stephanie Mastin, Tammy Phillips and Martha Smith.

All of the student award winners will be honored during the 17th annual Outstanding Student Service Awards Celebration to be held from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday at the Kellogg Hotel and Conference Center in East Lansing.

“It will be an honor to celebrate the tremendous accomplishments that our students have been able to achieve while serving in our community,” said Kate DeGraaf, service learning manager at KCC. “These students are a wonderful example of KCC’s commitment to give back to our community through service.”

Expanding community service initiatives at KCC include a service learning requirement for many of the college’s future graduates, as well as a number of community service events held at the college each semester.

Earlier this year KCC was recognized as one of just two two-year colleges in the state to be listed on the 2013 President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll, the highest honor a college or university can receive for its commitment to volunteering, service learning and civic engagement.

For more information about community service or service learning efforts at KCC, visit www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning or contact Service Learning Manager Kate DeGraaf at 269-965-3931 ext. 2211 or at degraafk@kellogg.edu.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

KCC earns national recognition for role in community service

Bruins Give Back participants serve during an event in February.

Bruins Give Back participants serve during an event in February.

Kellogg Community College is one of just two two-year colleges and one of just 15 schools in the state to be listed on the 2013 President’s Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll, the highest honor a college or university can receive for its commitment to volunteering, service learning and civic engagement.

Nationwide, 690 schools were named to the list, which is administered by the federal Corporation for National & Community Service to recognize institutions that commit to achieving meaningful, measureable outcomes in the communities they serve.

Kate DeGraaf, service learning manager at KCC, said the recognition highlights the college’s commitment to producing service-minded graduates who are aware of their communities’ needs as well as how to meet them.

“KCC is dedicated to giving back to our community and over the last few years has established a service learning program to provide an avenue for our students to give back and become leaders in our community,” DeGraaf said. “It is an honor to receive this award and to be able to celebrate the huge success of our students.”

KCC hosts several civic engagement and awareness events each year, including three Bruins Give Back volunteer events at locations around Battle Creek and one Volunteer and Civic Engagement Fair held on campus each semester. Beginning last fall, a service learning endorsement requiring at least 15 hours of dedicated service learning experience became a requirement for every KCC graduate pursuing a degree outside of the applied sciences.

“KCC is committed to community service and will continue to promote and support activities that encourage our students to participate in and engage with their communities,” DeGraaf said.

The CNCS has administered the Honor Roll designation since 2006 and manages the program in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Education and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, along with the American Council on Education and Campus Compact.

For more information about community service or service learning efforts at KCC, visit
www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning or contact Service Learning Manager
Kate DeGraaf at 269-965-3931 ext. 2211 or at degraafk@kellogg.edu.

For more information about CNCS Honor Roll eligibility and to view the full list of
Honor Roll awardees, visit www.nationalservice.gov.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

Next Bruins Give Back volunteer event is 1 to 4 p.m. Feb. 15

A Bruins Give Back participant paints the interior of a Habitat for Humanity house in Battle Creek in December 2012.

A Bruins Give Back participant paints the interior of a Habitat for Humanity house in Battle Creek.

Kellogg Community College students and employees are invited to join together in service as part of the first Bruins Give Back volunteer event of the semester, scheduled for 1 to 4 p.m. Friday, Feb. 15, at three Battle Creek area locations.

Bruins Give Back is a volunteer event that occurs three times each semester and is open to all Kellogg Community College students, faculty and employees to participate. Volunteers get a free T-shirt, lunch and, most importantly, the opportunity to become more involved in their community.

A service learning event hosted with the college’s Student Life office and community organization HandsOn Battle Creek, the next Bruins Give Back events are scheduled from 1 to 4 p.m. on Friday, March 8, and Friday, April 19.

The three service opportunities participants can choose from Feb. 15 are:

  • Community Action, 350 N. 22nd St.: Volunteers will help pack boxes for the food distribution efforts of The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP).
  • The Haven of Rest Ministries, 11 Green St.: Volunteers will serve at the Calhoun County homeless shelter by serving food, cleaning, assembling furniture or decorating.
  • Valley View Elementary School, 960 Avenue A, Springfield: Volunteers will help children make and decorate collection boxes for Read n’ Give, a national book drive that supports community literacy programs.

To sign up to participate in a Bruins Give Back event, visit www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning/registerServLearn.html. Participants will receive an email after they sign up asking which location they would like to serve at. On the day of the event, participants will meet at their chosen locations.

For more information about this or future Bruins Give Back events, contact Kellogg Community College Service Learning Manager Kate DeGraaf at degraafk@kellogg.edu or at 269-965-3931 ext. 2211.

A reminder about KCC’s service learning requirement

KCC softball players work with kids at a local elementary school during a recent Bruins Give Back volunteer event.

KCC softball players work with kids at a local elementary school during a recent Bruins Give Back volunteer event.

Starting last semester at Kellogg Community College, service learning participation will be required for every student pursuing an associate degree outside of the applied sciences.

Each graduate must complete 15 hours of service learning activity in a course with a service-learning-certified faculty member or 24 hours of service learning as part of SERV 200, a course dedicated to service learning.

Kate DeGraaf, service learning manager at Kellogg Community College, said service learning offers a way for students to see how their specific talents and skills can impact the community, regardless of what subject they’re studying.

“Service learning is an avenue where students can learn more about themselves through real-life situations and reflection,” DeGraaf said. “It helps students see where they can be active agents of change in their careers and communities.”

Courses offered with a service learning endorsement for the Spring 2013 semester at Kellogg Community College include:

ART 223, ART 227, ART 230, BUAD 101, BUAD 251, BUAD 272, EDUC 200, HIST 210, HUMA 205, NURS 145, NURS 271, PARA 110, PARA 234, PARA 236, PARA 240, POSC 200, PSYC 201, PSYC 220, PSYC 250, SERV 200, SOCI 201, SOCI 202, SOCI 203, SPAN 202 and TSLS 105.

Completion of KCC’s service learning requirement will result in participating students receiving a service learning endorsement on their official college transcripts.

For more information about service learning at Kellogg Community College, visit www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning. Questions about service learning may be directed to Kellogg Community College’s Service Learning Manager Kate DeGraaf at degraafk@kellogg.edu or at 269-965-3931 ext. 2211.

Click here and here to view two CareerFocus features on service learning at Kellogg Community College, published last summer.

Grahl Center students volunteer more than 1,000 hours in fall

KCC students from the SERV 200 class with instructor Ann Lown.

KCC students from the SERV 200 class with instructor Ann Lown.

Students in the first-ever SERV 200 service learning course offered at Kellogg Community College’s Grahl Center in Coldwater served a combined total of 1,019 hours of community service during their fall semester.

As part of the course, 23 students each designed a 20-hour project to be implemented at a local nonprofit of their choice. Course instructor Ann Lown said the class was an awesome challenge for students and a great way to make a difference in Branch County.

“Think of the impact these students have made,” Lown said. “I’m blown away by all the ways they have served the community.”

Student projects included a fundraiser for the Humane Society of Branch County; a Christmas gift fundraiser and event for the Branch County Coalition Against Domestic Violence; a flag football event to raise funds for and awareness of causes related to cystic fibrosis; a bake sale for the Bronson Public Library; a medicine disposal event held in conjunction with the Michigan State Police; the creation of a website for Family Promise of Branch County; the production of care packages for troops in Africa; a healthy meal event for parents; several activities and events held for Beginnings Care for Life Center; increased awareness of the Habitat for Humanity ReStore; math tutoring in local schools; gift wrapping at an Eby-Klein Youth and Family Center event; and a cancer awareness event.

Course organizers said many of the students far exceeded their 20-hour service requirement for the course and that many plan to continue working with the organization they chose after the class has ended.

Josh Englehart, a student in the course, said during his final presentation that he plans to continue the cystic fibrosis fundraiser he completed for the course annually.

“I have the ability to give back and use my abilities to round up more support and awareness for cystic fibrosis,” Englehart said. “Next year my goal is to raise $10,000.”

An expanded service learning initiative that began at KCC this fall requires every student pursuing an associate degree outside of the applied sciences to complete 15 hours of service learning in a course with a service-learning certified faculty member or to complete 24 hours of service learning as part of SERV 200.

The course will be offered at the Grahl Center again this spring, with classes beginning on Jan. 25. Organizations interested in participating with KCC students in future service learning projects are encouraged to contact Grahl Center Director Bobbi Gagnon at 517-278-3300.

For more news about Kellogg Community College, view our latest press releases online at www.kellogg.edu/daily/category/press-releases.

Members of KCC baseball team give back to their community

Nearly two dozen Kellogg Community College baseball players spent a recent Friday morning packing boxes of food and working with elementary school students to make blankets for veterans.

Sophomore centerfielder Jake Miller was among the players at the headquarters of Community Action, where the team helped package 900 boxes of food for The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) to distribute to low-income people in the region.

“It’s huge,” Miller said of the team’s effort. “It’s huge for the community and it’s huge for our baseball team. Everyone respects our team more because of this.”

Miller and the others are no strangers to volunteer work. Team members volunteer weekly at the area nonprofit student-athlete support service New Level Sports, helping youth with their homework, playing games and eating dinner with them and sometimes just hanging out with them to talk about their days.

“It’s always fun helping those kids out,” Miller said. “They always have rough days at school and we help cheer them up.”

On the other side of town that Friday morning was Derek Yoder, who, with another group of players, was assisting Renee Purdy’s fourth graders at Urbandale Elementary. They made blankets and cards the kids would later take to veterans at the local Veterans Affairs facility.

“Whenever opportunities come up we usually take advantage of them and help out where we can,” Yoder said. “It’s really important. It gives us a chance to get out in the community.”

Purdy said they were expecting volunteers as part of KCC’s Bruins Give Back volunteer event, which is held three times a semester at area locations, but they didn’t know the volunteers would be student-athletes until they arrived.

“We didn’t know they were coming, and when they walked in in their blue (KCC) shirts the kids were excited,” Purdy said. “They’ve been awesome. They’ve done 20 quilts in an hour and a half.”

Nine-year-old Isaac Turner said he was excited the players stopped by. Usually his class would be spending that time studying, Turner said.

“This is better than reading because we’re doing things,” he said.

And the kids weren’t the only ones enjoying themselves.

“I’ve never made a blanket like this before in my life,” Yoder said, fabric draped across his lap. “But it’s been fun.”

For more information about the baseball program at Kellogg Community College, visit www.kellogg.edu/athletics/baseball/index.html.

For more information about the next Bruins Give Back events, which are scheduled for Dec. 14, visit www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning/projects.html.

Register now for Nov. 9 Bruins Give Back volunteer events

If you’re looking for a way to get more involved in your community, serve with fellow Bruins and get a free lunch and T-shirt in the process, Bruins Give Back is for you.

Bruins Give Back is a volunteer event that occurs three times each semester and is open to all Kellogg Community College students, faculty and employees to participate.

A service learning event hosted with the college’s Student Life office and community organization HandsOn Battle Creek, the second Bruins Give Back events are scheduled for 9 a.m. to noon on Friday, Nov. 9.

Participants have four service options to choose from:

  • The Haven of Rest Ministries, 11 Green St.: Volunteers will help clean up after a meal, help set up for a meal and help serve a meal.
  • Urbandale Elementary, 123 N. Bedford Road: Volunteers will help fourth graders make fleece blankets to give to a community partner.
  • Homeless Health Fair, 11 Green St.: Volunteers will help organize the 2012 Homeless Health Fair by packing bags of food for the homeless to take with them as they leave the fair. Participants will meet at Haven of Rest.
  • Community Action, 350 N. 22nd St.: Volunteers will help pack boxes for the food distribution efforts of The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP).

To sign up to participate in a Bruins Give Back event, visit www.kellogg.edu/socialscience/servicelearning/registerServLearn.html.

Participants will receive an email after they sign up asking which location they would like to serve at. On the day of the event, participants will meet at their chosen locations.

For more information about this or future Bruins Give Back events, contact Kellogg Community College Service Learning Manager Kate DeGraaf at degraafk@kellogg.edu or at 269-965-3931 ext. 2211.

Pictured above, Bruins Give Back participants pack boxes for The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP) at Community Action during the first Bruins Give Back events of the semester in October.

Students at Grahl Center give back through service learning

As part of a new service learning requirement at Kellogg Community College, students at the Grahl Center in Coldwater are engaging in activities which directly benefit their community.

Starting this semester at Kellogg Community College, a service learning endorsement is required for every student pursuing an associate degree outside of the applied sciences. Each graduate must complete 15 hours of service learning in a course with a service-learning-certified faculty member or 24 hours of service learning as part of SERV 200, a course dedicated to service learning.

“Service learning creates a hands-on experience for students to apply their classroom learning while also helping students understand, appreciate and give back to the wonderful community we live in,” said Roberta Gagnon, director of the Grahl Center.

Recently, Gagnon and service learning instructor Ann Lown invited representatives to speak to students at Grahl about their organizations, which included the Branch County Community Foundation, Community Resources Network, Beginnings Care for Life, Humane Society of Branch County and the Branch County Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Students met with these experts to discuss possible projects that would help the students and the organizations.

The service learning initiative is just one more way KCC is committed to its role as a community partner in all of the locales within the College’s service district. Service learning combines service to the community with academic objectives to equally benefit the community and the student. Students participate in projects which meet community needs and which involve self-reflection, self-discovery and the acquisition of values, skills and content knowledge.

As KCC plans future service learning activities, organizations interested in partnering with the College are invited to contact Kathryn DeGraaf, manager of Service Learning, at degraafk@kellogg.edu or 269-965-3931, ext. 2211. Organizations in the Coldwater area can directly contact Roberta Gagnon at gagnonr@kellogg.edu or 517-278-3300.