MURFREESBORO — When
was the last time you went to a career fair that featured basketball, face
painting and a beanbag toss?
Students at Mitchell-Neilson School in Murfreesboro enjoyed
all of that and more May 5 as MTSU students in the “Family Centered Community
Building II” class hosted a “Passport to Success” in the school gymnasium.
Third- through sixth-graders received “passports” upon
entering the gym and got them stamped at each table they visited. They could
have their photos taken wearing the clothes of the jobs they might like to
embrace in the future.
Tables promoted various disciplines in MTSU’s College of
Behavioral and Health Sciences, including fashion design; leisure, sport and
tourism; physical education; and athletic training. The Rutherford County Health
Department was on hand to promote healthy eating habits.
In addition to allowing the youngsters to blow off steam
following their TCAP exams, the fair gave them “exposure to potential future
careers with the hope that they would dream and aspire to be something very
specific,” said Claire Cook, an assistant professor in the MTSU Department of
Human Sciences who teaches the class.
Cook said she designed the “skeleton” of the project with
Mitchell-Neilson Principal Robin Newell. Cook said service-learning endeavors
such as this one prepare collegians for their future lives in “helping” careers
in two ways.
“One is understanding how you take an idea and a need … and
building on that … and learning a little bit more about what we do in a
professional setting and how we help,” Cook said.
Amber Dresch, a senior from Nashville, Tennessee, majoring
in family and consumer studies, laid the groundwork by talking to
Mitchell-Neilson students in advance and finding out about their interests.
“We were able to get to know some of the students on an
individual basis, as well,” Dresch said.
Two such students, fifth-graders Jasmine and Vanessa
Gonzalez, donned identical white doctor’s coats and held dry erase boards
proclaiming their mutual desire to become doctors as an MTSU student snapped
their photos.
The Gonzalez sisters said they want to be doctors because
they have wanted to help people ever since the first grade.
Meanwhile, other youngsters huddled in front of the
chemistry table, where a man demonstrated the wonders of Alka-Seltzer as it
released carbon dioxide in a small beaker of water.
MTSU students designed “Passport to Success” with a grant
from the Collaborative Learning and Leadership Institute, a partnership between
the College of Behavioral and Health Sciences and Murfreesboro City Schools.
The institute’s mission is to help students make the
connection between achieving academic success today and creating their own
personal and professional success tomorrow.
For more information, contact the College of Behavioral and
Health Sciences at 615-898-2900 or Mitchell-Neilson Principal Robin Newell at
615-890-7841.
No comments:
Post a Comment