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Student balances service, school Print E-mail
Thursday, 08 March 2007
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Bouchard
300 service hours create new opportunities

by REBECCA GARDNER

Lifestyles Reporter

Community service: 300 hours of your time.

An educational scholarship: $1,000.

An opportunity to make a change in the lives of others: priceless.

Matthew J. Bouchard, a junior Spanish and anthropology double major, works at the Farm Workers Health Program at the Watauga Medical Center for the Appalachian State University North Carolina-Activating Citizenship Through Service program (NC-ACTS).

“The other day at camp, I was giving a music therapy session, teaching [English as a Second Language], when one of the immigrants said to me [in Spanish], ‘When I came to the U.S. I didn’t think I’d meet anyone as nice as you,”’ Bouchard said.


The immigrant made Bouchard realize that not a lot of people are reaching out in this community, he said.

The NC-ACTS program is an opportunity for students to work with one non-profit agency over one academic school year. The students receive an educational scholarship after completing their service hours.

“As key volunteers, the NC-ACTS students are first educated about the social issues their agency faces, then in turn educate others about those social issues, acting as part of the solution,” according
to the ACT Web site.

This is Bouchard’s first year with the NC-ACTS program and there are 22 other active members.

“I originally worked with [the Farm Labor Organizing Committee], and my buddy told me that this program was a way to work and get an educational award,” Bouchard said.

Todd A. Mortensen is in charge of the NC-ACTS program at Appalachian State University.  There are bi-weekly Thursday meetings for the students throughout the school year.

Bouchard’s responsibilities for the organization vary.

Bouchard is an “Outreach Worker” and his job entails going out at nights and giving free health assessments, which include blood pressure, blood sugar, height and weight measurements. Bouchard performs these tests himself.

“Health is invaluable, so I just help to provide positive directions to keep them alive,” Bouchard said.

“This even sparked an interest in medicine.”

Other responsibilities include first-aid education and other educational topics. For example, “if someone had high blood sugar, I would help them change their diet,” Bouchard said.

Bouchard is currently taking 15 semester hours of school work, so like the other NC-ACTS students, juggling 300 hours of community service is hard.

“I thought that if I can commit to 10 hours a week, then I can do it,” Bouchard said. “It’s like a part-time job.”

Prioritizing is also a big part of juggling school and NC-ACTS, Bouchard said.

“Right now I am taking the classes that I need to take and should have taken freshman year,”
Bouchard said.

Bouchard’s current project is Latino Health and Culture, which will try to provide access to people who they couldn’t serve, testing things such as HIV and cholesterol.

This project will be held in Avery County April 27 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.

“So far, I have learned that there is a huge segment of our population that’s completely ignored and don’t have voices, and it is like their wants and needs don’t enter our mainstream problem,” Bouchard said. “For example, immigration is more complex than it seems, and it is like there is power in inequality.”

The Latino Health and Culture Fair is Bouchard’s long-term goal.

“It’s also a call for student action,” Bouchard said. “We really want to get kids who can speak Spanish and compiling an ESL curriculum and send them out to different camps to keep the immigrants company and teach them English.”

SCHEDULE:

Monday:
8 a.m.- Go running
10 a.m. - Noon: Biology Lab
1-3 p.m. – Homework
3-5 p.m.- Math
7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m.- Higher Ground

Tuesday:
9:30-11 a.m- Biology
11:30 am- 2 p.m.- ‘Put Out the Vibe’ at the Coffee Shop
2p.m.- 5p.m.- Spanish Phonetics & Diction/ Advanced Conversation
5:30-9 p.m.- Outreach/ Music Therapy/ ESL

Wednesday:
8a.m.-2:45 p.m.- Office Hours at Medical Center
(set up appointments, planning, research- Health and Spanish)
3 p.m.- 5p.m.- Math
5 p.m.- 7 p.m. – Running or Swimming
7:30 p.m.- 9:30 p.m.- Higher Ground

Thursday:
9:30-11 a.m- Biology
11:30 am- 2 p.m.- ‘Put Out the Vibe’ at the Coffee Shop
2p.m.- 5p.m.- 2 Spanish Phonetics & Diction/ Advanced Conversation
5:30-9 p.m.- Outreach/ Music Therapy/ ESL

Friday:
This is usually an open day for appointments and translation
5-7 p.m.- Scuba class

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300 service hrs
written by eightshb, March 19, 2007
Matt very nice I am proud you are my nephew! I don't think that you have enough running in your limited schedule. smilies/grin.gif Good job talk to you soon. Love Uncle Jim and Aunt Debbie

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