Posts tagged education
22 Boom – Boulder Farmers Market – Episode 35
Apr 26th
In Episode 35 we go to the Boulder Farmers Market and talk with people all about the events, vendors and people that will be on the creek this summer every weekend for the Farmers Market, Jann Scott goes to the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (BMOCA) for the Art Expo, Jann then heads to the tracks for a look at the Super Stock Cars, Sportsman and Truck races at the Colorado National Speedway where he speaks with Jack Nugent and Bear Lynch about their wins on the tracks. Then in our business special we visit Jalino’s Pizza in Boulder to look at their award winning food, also Hotshots Movie Review by Dan Culberson of Source Code, and a firsthand look at the Boulder Creek Festival as produced by Boulder Channel 1. Not last and not least it’s Nina Storey at the Hometown fair in Boulder, the Memorial Day Bolder Boulder race. We also visit the Boulder Rural Fire Department for their public awareness event and Jann Scott talks with the fire chief. Then finally it’s music on the creek at Boulder Farmers market with Lil Bluegrass to wrap up the show.
Videos in this Episode

22 Boom Intro

Boulder Farmers Market 2011

Eric Roberts Spanish Guitar

The Family Dog

Rock and Roll Marathon Denver

Kitty and the Coyote

BMOCA Art Expo

Colorado National Speedway NASCAR Series 2011

Jalino’s Pizza Boulder

Hotshots Movie Review – Source Code

Boulder Creek Fest 2009 – Boulder Channel 1 Booth

Nina Storey at the Boulder Hometown Fair

Bolder Boulder 2010

Boulder Rural Fire Department

Outro
DOZENS OF CU STUDENTS TO DISPLAY SERVICE LEARNING PROJECTS ON APRIL 25
Apr 22nd
Stone, a senior molecular, cellular and developmental biology major, is one of dozens of CU-Boulder students who will have booths at an event highlighting local service learning projects they completed this spring as part of the Program for Writing and Rhetoric’s “Writing Initiative for Service and Engagement” project.
The free, public event will be held Monday, April 25, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the University Memorial Center, room 235. Anne K. Heinz, associate vice-chancellor for outreach and engagement, will give the keynote address.
“During the semester, I helped students with biology papers who were explaining complicated processes, while also helping students who could barely speak English write simple essays,” Stone said. “Throughout this experience I gained a deeper appreciation of the education I have received. It also has motivated me to keep furthering myself and to keep giving back as well.”
Each semester about 350 CU-Boulder students participate in community-based writing courses through the Program for Writing and Rhetoric, contributing well over 5,000 hours of their time to local community and nonprofit organizations, according to CU-Boulder Senior Instructor Sally Green, who teaches a course that partners her students with Arapahoe Ridge High School and Boulder High School students.
“This experience gives students the opportunity to develop and apply their communication skills in authentic contexts,” Green said. “They complete valuable projects for their community partners and gain an understanding of social, environmental and economic issues which informs their entire college education.”
In Green’s service learning class, “Writing on Science and Society,” her students tutor Boulder at-risk high school students in math and science for a total of 15 hours throughout the semester.
“They bring their own recent experience as high school students and their expertise and enthusiasm about their subjects to the tutoring experience,” Green said.
Students who take Program for Writing and Rhetoric service-learning courses learn about a number of issues including sustainability, food, education, the elderly, poverty and hunger while gaining practical experience in grant writing and document design. They also work with an array of organizations: schools and afterschool programs, community gardens, homeless shelters, organic farms, food banks and Boulder Parks and Recreation.
“Through the coursework, we want students to gain an understanding of a social issue, community dynamics, problem solving and written advocacy,” Green said.
After graduation on May 6, Stone will work as a research technician in a campus laboratory. She then plans to apply for medical school, with the long-term goal of being a surgeon.
More than 13,000 CU-Boulder students participate in some form of community service each year, and more than 3,500 are engaged in academic service learning, a teaching strategy that integrates meaningful community service with instruction. For more information about CU-Boulder’s civic engagement efforts visit http://www.colorado.edu/news/reports/civicengagement/.
-CU-
Safehouse Progressive Alliance for Nonviolence
Apr 1st
Safehouse Progressive Alliance for Nonviolence is a human rights organization committed to ending violence against women, youth and children through support, advocacy, education and community organizing.





















