Nurturing Tomorrow’s Leaders
Chris Adams, Glenn College director of student services and programs, talks to high school students Gavin Jordan, left, and Nikhil Cherukupally at the Glenn College Democracy Camp. (Credit: Majesti Brown)
If you consider factors such as declining trust in institutions, partisan politics, social injustices and lack of action in Washington, D.C., you might understand if youth today beat a retreat from public service.
Truth is, students at the John Glenn College of Public Affairs see those issues and want to fix them.
“I like the fact that when our students turn on the news, they don’t turn the channel,” said Chris Adams, the college director of student services and programs. “They ask the question: What can I do in my own sphere of influence to solve the problems and help change the world?”
“The excitement our students have for going out and being engaged members of their community and working to solve these problems energizes me,” Adams said.
Jamiya Barnett, left, talks to Judge Nicole L. Sanders during her internship at the Hamilton County Common Pleas Drug Treatment and Recovery Court.
“While learning to be a public policy expert in my major, my minor helps focus on my interest in helping alleviate environmental issues in all communities,” she said. “The history minor helps expand my knowledge of the past so I can make smart and ethical decisions when influencing policy and legislation later in life based on historical facts and evidence.”
She also signed up for NEW Leadership Ohio, a five-day residential program hosted by the Glenn College, which introduces collegiate women throughout Ohio to successful female leaders and skills needed to become public service leaders.
“I participated in NEW Leadership Ohio to learn from women in the field who are breaking down barriers and making changes while doing what they love,” she said. “NEW Leadership Ohio taught me that the sky is the limit, and I can achieve anything I put my mind to. It showed me the importance of having a group of like-minded women supporting you at all times. This program also taught me the value of my voice and how it is important for me to be heard by others.”
A Student and Candidate
In just his first year at the Glenn College, Josh Hickman ran for his local school board of education.
Faculty at the Glenn College see their students as idealistic in their vision of the future.
“All of the students that come into my classes are really wanting to make a difference in the world,” says Associate Professor Erynn Beaton, acknowledging that sometimes they feel defeated in today’s political climate and eagerly seek her guidance on ways to turn their passions into purpose.
Students Drive Positive Change
Meet some Glenn College undergraduate students who know their passion for service and put it into practice — even before they’ve earned their degrees.
In the past academic year, she and one of her students, Ruby Lobert, helped the City of Columbus make decisions in a Participatory Grantmaking Process about where to spend American Rescue Act funds, and she encouraged another, Clovis Westlund, when they decided to organize a panel, Social Change Careers in Nonprofits, for a student event.
Beaton also shares with students her own civic engagement activities.