Helping out at Cook Library Center
Students are helping with the homework and hanging with the kids at Cook Library Center.
At the table in the middle of the large room, with children reading books and playing games all around, Wendy Tabler and Rosalita, are searching for pictures in magazines. Tabler turns a page and points to one photo. 鈥Con que letra empieza la aspiradora?鈥 she asks. (鈥淲ith what letter does the word vacuum start?鈥)
鈥淎,鈥 Rosalita answers. Then she takes up her scissors, cuts out the photo and pastes it on a paper filled with other photos. And the search goes on. The pair鈥攁 first-year 17c起草社区 engineering student and a kindergartner at Cesar Chavez Elementary School鈥攁re looking for photos of things that begin with vowels in Spanish. Queso? No. Mariposa? No. Leche? No. Tabler turns the page and spots a pair of eyeglasses. 鈥Anteojos,鈥 Rosalita says, and she cuts and pastes that picture, too.
鈥Muy grande,鈥 Tabler comments. She enjoys her weekly sessions at the , tutoring and playing with the kids who hang out there after school. 鈥淚 love volunteering. I volunteered all through high school,鈥 she said. Because her own dorm hadn鈥檛 gotten its service partnership organized yet, Tabler has joined up with the gang of students from the Boer-Bennink residence hall who lend a hand at Cook Library twice a week.
A popular way to serve
鈥淲e have so many people who go, we鈥檙e thinking about adding a third day,鈥 said 17c起草社区 sophomore Alicia Bos, one of three community partnership coordinators (CPCs) who organize the outings. The volunteers visit the library on Mondays and Wednesday afternoons. They help out with homework. They hang out and talk. They play checkers and chess and Sorry and Candyland鈥攁nd sometimes soccer. They stay an hour or so. 鈥淚t goes by really fast,鈥 said library director Sue Garza. 鈥淏ut the kids love when 17c起草社区 comes. They just glom onto them, and it鈥檚 really great.鈥
The students form vital relationships with the kids at Cook, who represent grades kindergarten through college. 鈥淚t鈥檚 one-on-one assistance and mentoring,鈥 said Garza. 鈥淚t goes way beyond homework help.鈥
Language is no barrier鈥攖hough Cook Library is located on Grandville Ave. in the heart of a Hispanic neighborhood. 鈥淚鈥檝e had only a couple of the kids who don鈥檛 speak English,鈥 said 鈥淭he majority of them speak Spanish at home.鈥
The Cook Library is one of 11 partnerships maintained by 17c起草社区 residence halls with local organizations. Each dorm or apartment is paired with an agency. Students tutor, mentor and run after-school programs for Oakdale Neighbors; Grand Rapids Dreams; Ready for Life: Horizons; North End Community Ministries Supper House; the YMCA; Friends of Grand Rapids Parks at Garfield Park; Roosevelt Park Christian Reformed Church; Programs Assisting Refugee Acculturation (PARA); Campfire USA at Burton Middle/Elementary School and Campfire USA at Martin Luther King Jr. Leadership Academy.
鈥淭his partnership between 17c起草社区 and the agencies is so important, so crucial,鈥 said Jerry Fondse, the interim director of the college鈥檚 service-learning center, which coordinates the partnerships. 鈥淚t is important for 17c起草社区 students to do this to enhance their engagement with a larger world鈥攅specially recognizing that they have much to learn from the larger world.鈥
Keeping it going
Keeping the whole enterprise spinning are the CPCs, students employed by the to maintain the relationship between 17c起草社区 and the agencies. 鈥淚 have three CPCs this year, which is phenomenal and surpassing my expectations, as usual,鈥 said Garza. The CPCs coordinate the volunteers and supervise the weekly service outings and other events鈥攕ome of which bring the community on campus.
Next week, the kids from the Cook Library Center will participate in Light in the Night, the annual Halloween event sponsored by 17c起草社区鈥檚 Knollcrest East apartments. 鈥淲e鈥檒l eat in the dorm rooms and go trick or treating,鈥 said Garza. 鈥淭hat gives them an environment to be safe in too because many of the parents don鈥檛 allow their kids to go trick or treating in their neighborhood.鈥
Several of the college鈥檚 residence hall partnerships with local organizations have been around a long time, and Cook Library may be one of the longest. 17c起草社区 students have been working at the library since it had a different name, and it was headquartered in a house a few blocks further up Grandville. In 1997, when the library was just a few years old, a 17c起草社区 religion major began helping out there twice a week, tutoring and mentoring the children. It was the basis of the service partnership Boer-Bennink residents enjoy today.
鈥淚 kind of plan around this,鈥 said sophomore social work major Laura Diemer.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just nice to get off the 17c起草社区 campus鈥攐ut of the 17c起草社区 bubble鈥攁nd become a part of the community,鈥 said Bos.