91˛Öżâ

Rural Scholars Hold Summer Workshop

From the ground up, students participating in 91˛Öżâ’s Rural Scholars Program learned a great deal about their communities during a recent five-day “Soil and Water Explorations” workshop.

The 34 students and nine mentors traveled throughout the county getting dirty, wet, sweaty and hot. Many of the workshop’s activities were conducted outside, as the students visited Beaver Creek; the Beaver Creek Wildlife Education Center, the Draime Estate Garens in Warren; Coldwell’s Timber Consulting in Salineville; the Pete Conkle farm in Hanoverton; and the 91˛Öżâ Salem campus.

The Rural Scholars Program offers first-generation college-bound students from Columbiana County a program designed to give them and their families the knowledge and social support they will need to succeed at a university. The goal is for every student in the program to complete post-secondary education with credentials necessary to succeed in his or her career.

The program also includes local 91˛Öżâ students who serve as mentors to the rural scholars. Likewise, each mentor is a first-generation college student from Columbiana County with a strong record of academic success and a desire to serve the community. 

During the first day of this year’s workshop, the students worked with Columbiana Soil and Water Conservation District professionals at Beaver Creek where they conducted macroinvertebrate surveys to determine water quality. Later, the students hiked to the Beaver Creek Wildlife Education Center where they performed community service by shoveling gravel, organizing display items and helping with housekeeping tasks.

They conducted tree identification at the Draime Estate Gardens and at Coldwell’s Timber, learning about tree and soil management in two very different environments. 

With help from the Mahoning Soil and Water Conservation District staff, the students conducted soil sampling on the Salem Campus, and learned how to navigate using topographic maps and compasses.

To cap off the week, the students went fishing and learned about aquatic habitats through an educational program through the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

Wendy Pfrenger is the Rural Scholars program coordinator and she explained that this summer’s workshop activities were intended to help the students appreciate the community around them. “This includes the environment, as well as the people,” she said.

“Offering our Rural Scholars opportunities to study applied science and math in the same places they call home – the waterways and farms and forests – helps them see how what they’re learning in school matters in the real world, too.”

Pfrenger added that through the workshop, students also learn about career pathways from professionals and entrepreneurs who choose to follow their dreams in Columbiana County.

“We hope that offering experiences like this early in their school careers will encourage them to imagine successful futures for themselves in northeast Ohio after they graduate,” she said.

The Rural Scholars students are from the Crestview, Salem, Lisbon, East Liverpool, Wellsville and Southern Local school districts. 

###
 

Media Contact:
Tina Smith, 330-337-4247, tsmit170@kent.edu

POSTED: Wednesday, July 30, 2014 12:30 PM
UPDATED: Sunday, November 17, 2024 04:10 PM

Related Articles

The past year was quite meaningful for Antoinette Fitzgerald.

First, she graduated in May 2023 with her associate degree in nursing from 91˛Öżâ East Liverpool.

Since the pandemic a few years ago, the Undergraduate Student Government group was somewhat inactive on the East Liverpool Campus, but it’s been reenergized by a group of interested students.

The group has hosted luncheons over the past few weeks and is busy planning a slate of activities for the remainder of the semester, including a game/movie night; a student newsletter; and luncheons. The group also hopes to create a game room in Purinton Hall and to organize pickle ball teams. USG will also help represent the campus in the East Liverpool Christmas parade.

It seems only natural that Militca Denee would grow up to study horticulture and make a career out of her love of nature, plants and the world around her.