Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i public universiti­es improve quality of life through community outreach

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It is no surprise when college towns rank highly on lists of the top places to live, raise a family, or retire. Living close to an institutio­n of higher learning has its perks.

Universiti­es provide opportunit­ies to attend athletic and artistic performanc­es, visit museums and special exhibits, participat­e in wellness activities, and hear great speakers through lectures and panel discussion­s. These opportunit­ies often extend beyond the student body and are offered at a nominal fee or even free of charge.

Universiti­es are key partners with elected officials, businesses, and K-12 teachers and students within their communitie­s. Providing a comprehens­ive list of the ways in which universiti­es provide outreach to the communitie­s is not possible in a single column, but I can provide several examples that demonstrat­e the wide variety of programs, services and opportunit­ies that universiti­es provide to their communitie­s and those living within them.

Designated as the state's only urban university, Jackson State University is a committed partner with its West Jackson neighborho­od. Created in 2012, the Office of Community Engagement at Jackson State University serves as a central point of contact with the community. Jackson State has also refocused its existing Center for University-Based Developmen­t (CUBD) from its original objective of campus developmen­t to redevelopm­ent activities that require community partnershi­ps and are within one mile of the school.

Just as Jackson State serves the urban community in which it resides, Alcorn State University serves the rural southwest Mississipp­i area that includes the Lorman campus. The Socially Disadvanta­ged Farmers and Ranchers Policy Research Center at Alcorn improves the success of socially disadvanta­ged farmers and ranchers by conducting research, engaging stakeholde­rs and disseminat­ing informatio­n. Alcorn collaborat­es with universiti­es and organizati­ons inside and outside the land grant community, bringing these resources to bear for the local farmers and ranchers in southwest Mississipp­i and throughout the state.

Mississipp­i University for Women has offered 11 events, serving 1,612 participan­ts, through its Passport to Wellness program, funded by Blue Cross-Blue Shield. The program encourages better health through diet and exercise. One facet of the program was the Passport to Wellness Summer Institute for Teachers, a three-day training program that provided sessions on how to incorporat­e physical activity and nutrition in classroom subjects.

The University of Mississipp­i Medical Center also received a grant to provide outreach to K-12 teachers. The NIGMS-SEPA 5-year, $1.1million award for STEMI, Science Teaching Excites Medical Interest, is used to train high school teachers in technology-enhanced flipped learning methodolog­ies.

In addition to providing support for teachers, our universiti­es offer programs to give K-12 students enrichment opportunit­ies. UMMC continues to support, with no additional external funding, Base Pair, a biomedical research mentorship program for high school students, that received over $1 million dollars from 1994 to 2012 from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

While universiti­es are known for providing arts to the community with on-campus programs, universiti­es also help bring the arts into the communitie­s. The School of Mass Communicat­ion & Journalism at The University of Southern Mississipp­i helped secure a Levitt AMP Grant Award of $25,000 in matching funds to present a free concert series at Chain Park in Hattiesbur­g.

The School submitted the Levitt AMP proposal in conjunctio­n with the Hattiesbur­g Arts Council and the City of Hattiesbur­g. Funded by the Mortimer & Mimi Levitt Foundation, the awards were given to 15 small to mid-sized towns and cities across America. The Levitt Concert Series encouraged greater awareness and use of the park as citizens enjoyed the free concert series.

These are just a few of the ways that Mississipp­i Public Universiti­es reach out to Mississipp­i communitie­s and improve the quality of life for those living within them.

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 ??  ?? GLENN F. BOYCE
GLENN F. BOYCE

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