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Exploring Community and Citizenship at St. Olaf College

Civic restlessness

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Photo essay by Julia Quanrud, on a civic engagement project at St. Olaf College

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Page 1: Civic restlessness

Exploring Community and Citizenship at St. Olaf

College

Page 2: Civic restlessness

In Northfield, Minnesota, a group of students at St. Olaf College recently reflected on completing a class series devoted to exploring concepts of citizenship, place, and community in America from a historical and civic

engagement perspective.

Page 3: Civic restlessness

The students took four, sequential courses together, starting with Civic Engagement:  Voting and Citizenship.  Caught in the midst of the 2008 national election, students taught civics classes at the local high school

and registered voters for the election.

Page 4: Civic restlessness

In their second semester, students took Local Vistas and Sustainability:  Making and Re-Making Landscapes, which involved visiting local historical sites in and around Northfield, helping them to map their community and

understand the "context of the community." 

Page 5: Civic restlessness

Reflecting on the experience of visiting local historical sites in Northfield, one student wrote, "I feel so much more connected to Northfield, the city I live in for the majority of the year."  Another student wrote, "No matter how

seemingly insignificant, the local is always important."

Page 6: Civic restlessness

The students kicked off the 2009 fall semester with Immigration and Ethnicity in the Local Schools. Students used early 20th century census

data to understand the effects of immigration in the Northfield schools, and in the process of analyzing this data, the students learned an accidental lesson about the social history of Northfield when they found records of

immigrants with the same surnames as some of their classmates.

Page 7: Civic restlessness

Our American Lives:  Globalization and Citizenship Radio Project was the final course in the four-part series.  Modeled after This American Life,

students worked in small groups to create radio shows about stories that had both a local and a global perspective.

Page 8: Civic restlessness

   Students’ radio shows, available via the link at the end of this presentation, covered topics ranging from seafood and lutefisk, to t-shirt production.  The students studying t-shirt production used their connections with local t-shirt producers to create a class t-shirt.  The students found that while t-shirts were a global production that usually required inputs from multiple countries, they also carried a local context in that t-shirts imply membership, whether with a team, an institution, or a class. 

Page 9: Civic restlessness

Another student radio show investigated the community impact of a proposed ethanol plant, which, in the end, was never built due to

community intervention.  The students were enthusiastic about being able to create radio shows that captured the spirit of their community.  Said one

student, “It just made it so much more personal.  The radio show was a really fun way to collaborate.”

Page 10: Civic restlessness

 

Led by Professor Eric Fure-Slocum, the classes were also co-taught by Colin Wells, Matt Rohn, Judy Kutulas, and Megan Feeney, respectively. In addition to the multiple partnerships that the professors and the students forged in the community, they also partnered with the St. Olaf Center for Experiential Learning and its Associate Director, Nate Jacob, who helped

facilitate the students’ reflection at the end of the course series by  conducting a world café series of reflection projects.

Page 11: Civic restlessness

 

During the reflection process, the students talked about how the course series and its emphasis on civic engagement helped them to get to know Northfield.  Several students said that because of their experience they were now more involved, while others wrote that the class had changed

how they thought of learning.  A student wrote, “The history and ideas we read about in class were no longer just text in books, but real and living.”

Page 12: Civic restlessness

 

“Thanks to the ACE projects, I have realized that Northfield, while it is small, has a very rich history that ties heavily into the development of

bigger cities like Minneapolis as well as smaller cities in the surrounding areas…Northfield’s gradual development was connected to a wide variety

of economic and political developments I never even thought about.”

Page 13: Civic restlessness

To learn more about American Conversations and St. Olaf

College, visitwww.stolaf.edu/services/cel/students/ACE_Am_Studies.html

To learn more about Minnesota Campus Compact,

visitwww.mncampuscompact.org