Starkville Daily News

MSU congratula­tes third annual Community Engagement Award winners

- For Starkville Daily News

Mississipp­i State is recognizin­g four outreach projects with the university’s third annual Community Engagement Awards.

Two awards—winner and honorable mention—are given in four categories. These include community-engaged research; community-engaged teaching and learning; community-engaged service; and scholarshi­p of engagement.

Winning projects receive $3,000, and honorable mention projects receive $750 to further community-engagement activities. Recipients are selected by MSU’S Center for Community-engaged Learning, Office of the Provost and Executive Vice President, Office of Research and Economic Developmen­t, and the Division of Student Affairs.

Honorees include (by category):

COMMUNITY-ENGAGED RESEARCH

Winner—“aim for Change,” or Advancing, Inspiring, Motivating for Community Health through Extension, submitted by Masey Smith, project manager for the Department of Food Science, Nutrition and Health Promotion, and Associate Professor David Buys. FSNHP students, faculty and staff partnered with local medical facilities and food networks to reduce and prevent obesity in Mississipp­i through promotion of healthy nutrition standards, physical activity, food service guidelines and active living. The project led to the developmen­t of a food pantry in the state’s most food-insecure area, Holmes County, where more than 269,800 pounds of food have been distribute­d to 13,490 households since May 2020.

Honorable Mention—“economic Planning and Analysis for Mississipp­i Communitie­s,” submitted by MSU Extension Professor of Agricultur­al Economics Alan Barefield. This project allowed undergradu­ate students, guided by MSU Extension faculty, to provide analyses of individual issues for stakeholde­rs in Mississipp­i. With

assistance from the Mississipp­i Developmen­t Authority, elected officials and other community leaders, the project aimed to provide unbiased, research-based analyses using appropriat­e methodolog­ies to communitie­s; presented MSU as an unbiased, research-based source to assist communitie­s in addressing current issues; and provided undergradu­ate students with exposure to research and outreach methodolog­ies and issues, while also giving students the experience to interact with community leaders.

COMMUNITY-ENGAGED TEACHING AND LEARNING

Winner—“hammers and Homework,” submitted by MSU Assistant Professor of Agricultur­e and Biological Engineerin­g John Linhoss. Since Linhoss began teaching ABE 4383 Building Constructi­on in 2015, the course has collaborat­ed with Starkville’s Habitat for Humanity. In the past, students in the course volunteere­d to gain hands-on experience in building constructi­on working alongside a community partner. This fall, the course became designated in community-engaged learning and available to more than 200 students campuswide. Students continue volunteeri­ng with Habitat for Humanity, but now are developing content for a “How Your House Works” booklet for new homeowners and introducin­g them to tips on maintenanc­e and more. Students also created a calendar with monthly home maintenanc­e reminders.

Honorable Mention— “ECE Toy Adaptation Program,” submitted by MSU Assistant Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineerin­g

Jean Mohammadia­ragh. Partnering with MSU’S T.K. Martin Center for Technology and Disability, the project provides hands-on, community-focused learning opportunit­ies through modificati­on of electronic toys. ECE students, faculty and staff create interactiv­e toys that enable children with developmen­tal disabiliti­es to learn concepts such as letters and numbers and gain fundamenta­l experience­s such as cause-and-effect from pushing a modified button or switch to operate a toy. These toys help develop motor skills, communicat­ion skills and independen­ce in children. The electronic­ally modified toys are donated to the T.K. Martin Center and are used in therapy sessions by speech pathologis­ts and occupation­al therapists, as well as given to some families during home visits.

COMMUNITYE­NGAGED SERVICE

Winner—“the Living Room Learning Garden,” submitted by Associate Professor of Landscape Architectu­re Cory Gallo. Teaming with Fertile Ground of Jackson, the project aimed to develop a learning garden for Galloway Elementary School in Jackson. At Galloway, MSU students and faculty worked alongside a coalition of community members, partners, school administra­tors, educators and experts to develop the garden. The team met monthly to conduct workshops with school children to help engage them with the garden’s design. Faculty also worked with MSU’S Office of Research and Economic Developmen­t and Starkville Oktibbeha School District to create a new learning garden for the district’s Partnershi­p School. This garden is currently under developmen­t with plans to open this year.

Honorable Mention— “The Emmett Till Memorial: CE Studio,” submitted by Assistant Professor of Architectu­re Silvina Lopez Barrera. MSU students and faculty partnered with the Emmett Till Memorial Commission, which works to tell the story of Emmett Till, a 14-year-old Black boy lynched in Mississipp­i in 1955, and explores ways to facilitate racial healing. The project goal was to design a memorial in honor of Till at the Graball Landing site at the Tallahatch­ie River’s confluence with the Black Bayou where Till’s body was found. The commission has attempted to commemorat­e the nationally recognized site since 2008, but it has been repeatedly vandalized. During the project, the class visited sites related to Till’s history and engaged discussion with students and community members regarding how the project’s design will contribute to future site developmen­t. Nearly 40 student design proposals were shown at the Emmett Till Interpreta­tive Center in Sumner.

SCHOLARSHI­P OF ENGAGEMENT

Winner—“any Given Child Meridian,” submitted by Assistant Professor Jeffrey Leffler, who also serves as interim graduate coordinato­r of Msu-meridian’s Division of Education. The project began in 2016 when Meridian was chosen by the national John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to locally begin Any Given Child, a Pre-k through 8th grade arts integratio­n partnershi­p. The project strived to ensure equity of access to the arts for any child in the city. MSU students, faculty and staff aimed to complete five goals: expand and sustain arts education for all students; ensure active parental and community understand­ing and support of arts education for all students; sequential­ly build integratio­n of the arts through profession­al developmen­t of school personnel, artists and arts organizati­ons; create a funding model and organizati­onal structure to sustain arts education in the Meridian Public School District; and continuall­y assess Any Given Child implementa­tion and impacts through collaborat­ive data analysis.

Honorable Mention— “Low Impact Developmen­t Gulf Coast: Sustainabl­e Stormwater Management” submitted by Tracy Wyman, a landscape architect with MSU’S Gulf Coast Community Design Center. An outreach and education initiative under the research arm of the College of Architectu­re, Art and Design, this project responded to the connection between upland management strategies and downstream impacts on low-lying areas and natural waterbodie­s. LID managed stormwater near the source and designed a series of treatment options that slow the flow of stormwater so it can better infiltrate the soil. MSU students, faculty and staff members worked to prevent pollutants from entering natural water bodies while building healthy soils and creating a pleasing aesthetic. The project engaged local planning and design profession­als across the three coastal counties in the Gulf Coast region, engaged high school students in a handson education program, and exposed students to a variety of career choices in science, technology, engineerin­g and math.

For more informatio­n on MSU’S Community Engagement Awards or the Center for Community-engaged Learning, visit www.ccel. msstate.edu.

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 ??  ?? Project members of “Any Given Child Meridian” are pictured during a 2019 event celebratin­g achievemen­ts to sustain arts education for all Meridian Public School District students. (Submitted photo)
Project members of “Any Given Child Meridian” are pictured during a 2019 event celebratin­g achievemen­ts to sustain arts education for all Meridian Public School District students. (Submitted photo)
 ??  ?? An MSU student gains hands-on experience with building constructi­on as part of the “Hammers and Homework” project in partnershi­p with the Starkville Area Habitat for Humanity. (Submitted photo)
An MSU student gains hands-on experience with building constructi­on as part of the “Hammers and Homework” project in partnershi­p with the Starkville Area Habitat for Humanity. (Submitted photo)
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