Thursday, April 12, 2012

The Power of Student Engagement - Atlanta, GA


Engaging our future leaders on the issues of homelessness is critical to building a caring community and over the last year, RCOH has continued to work with students from the elementary to the university levels in Atlanta.

Tamara Weinstein, 3rd grade teacher at The Children’s School, continues to promote homelessness awareness and education with her students. After listening to the stories of three previously homeless individuals who have been successful in maintaining permanent housing, the third graders wrote letters to city officials about their ideas on how to address homelessness in Atlanta. Click here to read their letters.

Elizabeth Hearn, a middle school teacher from The Paideia School organized a homeless immersion where students lived on the streets for one week without shelter, money or basic necessities. They also produced a 30 minute documentary, “Reducing the Distance,” on how the intensive and educational experience changed their perceptions about homelessness and helped them to see that “[homeless people] are people, too, just like us.”

High school students from The Lovett School, participated in RCOH’s Street to Home outreach and Celebrating Success events. After learning about the challenges and hearing success stories of previously homeless individuals, seniors have taken on special projects around homelessness and the Student Services Board selected RCOH and Trinity Community Ministries to receive a generous donation.

Universities in Atlanta have also stepped up their involvement around homelessness. Georgia State University partnered with RCOH to offer their expertise in public relations, Emory University students also partnered with RCOH and other organizations for a spring break “Homeless Immersion” week. Inspired by Elizabeth Hearn from the Paideia School, sophomore Shyama Appareddy organized the five-day simulated homeless experience to raise awareness about the issue. “I wanted Emory students to have the opportunity to break out of the ‘Emory Bubble’ and reduce the distance between us and our neighbors in the greater community,” says Shyama. Kennesaw State University put on a Homelessness Awareness Week giving students and faculty an opportunity to learn more about the “invisible and stigmatized sector of society.” Computer science students from Georgia Institute of Technology have taken it a step further by creating a very useful database for RCOH’s Street to Home program.

This kind of meaningful engagement is what cultivates involvement that ultimately contributes to ending chronic homelessness in Atlanta. Discovering what homelessness means, and exploring ways that we can all become socially responsible, has made a lasting impact on these young people—the future leaders—in metro Atlanta.

2 comments:

  1. So glad to hear that students in area schools are educating students about what it means to be homeless in metro Atlanta and about the very difficult and complicated issues involved in solving homelessness.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Students are the future of this nation! Involving students of all ages in the fight to end homelessness is a sure way to change the lives of those affected by homelessness!

    ReplyDelete