Month: October 2025

Reflection #4

As I am approaching the end of the semester, I am beginning to wrap up and perform the final steps of my research project. I have just sent out the survey I made on community organizations over a week ago to exactly 40 professors at SIUE who teach science or ecology courses. Currently, I have only 10 responses in total, yet I believe that these results alone are going to set a precedent for any other professors who decide to participate. Many of the answers that I have received on my survey have been relatively similar, with only 1 or 2 outliers. It appears that the majority of the participants are in agreement on what roles community organizations could play on campus, whether that is giving lectures to students or advertising volunteer opportunities. Unfortunately, these participants do not speak for the majority of SIUE professors, so until I get more responses, I will simply analyze the current ones and look for trends. 

Most of the questions I posed within the survey allowed the participants to share their experience with and feelings about community organizations. For example, when asked what classes they currently teach or plan on teaching at SIUE that benefit from involvement with community organizations, many of the participants simply said “None”. However, courses in Geography and Anthropology were mentioned as possibilities. While these responses were not extremely significant on their own, it was what their responders went on to say which caught my attention. The same participants who offered solutions for the first question later mentioned how they had students doing community service work for community organizations in the past. The majority of the responders, regardless of any experience with community organizations or lack thereof, had a positive outlook on these groups and the impact they can have on the lives of students. But when the question of “How is this beneficial to Heartlands?” comes up, there are two specific questions that I like to look at. First off, how would the professors utilize these community organizations in class? Most of the participants said either through lectures or networking with students. Beyond that, there were several topics that professors had brought up when asked what courses could benefit from a community organization lead, such as climate change, forever chemicals, and urban farming. Even though my number of responses is rather low, I am able to notice patterns in responses, which could change or remain constant as more participants decide to join. 

The second half of the semester has just begun, and the time to collect data is slowly decreasing. In this next week, I will make adding more participants my priority by resending the survey to the professors who I have not received a response from. The biggest issue with the trends I am currently noticing is that I have no idea whether or not they will hold up as I get more responses. I want to be able to give Heartlands a reliable product that will allow them to partner with students and professors at SIUE in order to push their projects forward. Right now, I simply need to ensure that I get the most answers possible. Then, and only then, can I begin decoding the data. 

Implementation Plan

My goal is to determine what specific issues affect local regions in order to determine how to get people engaged on problems in their community. I will do this by going to local sites and researching the community problems that they are trying to fix. Some data points that I will need for this are: what problems each site is attempting to fix, what regions these problems affect, and what the average adult can do to contribute. The results of my research will allow me to make an infographic breaking down individual problems faced by local residents, which can help me understand what causes people from specific regions are most likely to support and what they can do to contribute.

Reflection #3

Recently, my research into local sites aimed at solving water equity issues in communities has proven unsuccessful. While the sites that I have found in and outside of Heartlands have offered great opportunities for community involvement and volunteering, they still fell short of my goal of giving young adults a reason to be interested in water conservation. I want to give Heartlands a way to connect to people within my age range who are willing to invest some of their time into aiding conservation organizations that work in their region. Now, I have decided the best way to reach this goal is to cut out local sites and connect Heartlands to young adults through SIUE instead. 

SIUE has a large number of students who fit the “young adult” age range. Besides meeting this criterion, there are many students who currently take classes related to ecology and water resources as well. In order to reach these particular students, the method I am going for is to reach out to the professors of these courses and have them connect the students to Heartlands. I created a list of 40 courses that would either mention or teach concepts related to ecology. Among the many core subjects were anthropology, biology, chemistry, civil engineering, and environmental science. Even though not every course listed will go about teaching ecology, I made sure that the outliers were at least related to a type of science. Afterwards, I found the professors who will be teaching each course next semester, which brings me to my new product for this project. 

My plan is not to sign each professor up for a specific program or give them a site to visit. Instead, I merely want to set up contact between these teachers and Heartlands Conservancy, so that they have a list of potential SIUE professors. All I need to do now is separate the professors who are interested from the professors who are not, which I will be doing through a survey. Using the list I have just come up with, I plan on sending the 40 professors a survey that questions their interest in working with community organizations on water equity issues. Some questions ask about the professor about their experience working with community organizations while others ask the professor how they believe their students could benefit from partnering with local organizations. After I receive responses from the professors, I will send these results to Heartlands so that they will know which teachers they can collaborate with. 

In the end, Heartlands Conservancy will have a long list of professors at SIUE that they can partner with in order to connect to an even longer list of young adults. Although it is unfortunate that my original plans for this project did not turn out the way that I expect, I believe that my new product will prove a lot more useful to Heartlands in the long run. As I have stated already, the sites that I found were engaging, but not motivative enough for the average young adult. If I want to get people my age involved in water conservation, finding those who are already interested in ecology and introducing them to Heartlands is the best approach.

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