Previous Seagraves Service Grants for Student Organizations
2009-2010
2008-2009
2007-2008
2006-2007 2005-2006 2004-2005
The Seagraves Service Grants for Student Organizations are available to all officially recognized UNC-Chapel Hill student organizations to support public service projects in North Carolina. Through the generosity of an alumnus, grants of up to $300 are awarded from a pool of $3,000. The program is named in honor of Mildred Yeager Seagraves, grandmother of the donor. Funds may be requested for any costs associated with the proposed service project, including supplies, travel, equipment, and other related programming expenses. Proposals are requested in the fall semester for projects to be completed by the end of the same academic year.
2009-2010 Grantees
Immigration Law Association – Know Your Rights
The Immigration Law Association will
provide Know Your Rights Training and
Power of Attorney clinics to immigrants
in ESL classes at Durham Tech Community
College and elementary schools in Chapel
Hill and Durham. Their goal is to ensure
immigrants know their rights if they
are stopped, arrested, or detained.
Community Partner: Durham Tech Community College
Counties Served: Durham, Orange, Chatham
UNC Habitat for Humanity – Fairview Community Holiday Dinner
UNC Habitat for Humanity will organize a catered holiday dinner as a community building program for members of Fairview housing community. It is designed to bring together residents in a safe and friendly environment in a day of activities for families to enjoy together while having an opportunity to meet some of their neighbors.
Community Partners: Habitat for Humanity Orange County
County Served: Orange
Carolina Association of Black Journalists – High School Minority Journalism Workshop
The Carolina Association of Black Journalists and the North Carolina Scholastic Media Association will pair up to host twelve to fifteen high school students from underserved areas of NC to attend a journalism workshop one weekend in February. The workshop will feature broadcast journalism and equipment training, a live broadcast, and dinner.
Community Partners: North Carolina Scholastic Media Association
County Served: Guilford, Lenoir, Pender
American Medical Students Association – Refugee Health Action Initiative
The American Medical Students Association will provide basic first aid and personal health supplies as well as a brief health-system orientation to recently resettled refugees who are clients of World Relief. They will also conduct health screenings within the Orange County Burmese Community.
Community Partner: World Relief
County Served: Durham, Wake, Orange
Lambda Law Students Association – Same-Sex Couple Healthcare Power of Attorney Clinics
The Lambda Law Students Association will organize a Know You Rights presentation and counsel same-sex couples as they complete Health Care Power of Attorney paperwork. The paperwork will ensure that clients can designate their partner for health care decision-making and visitation.
Community Partner: Equality NC
County Served: Pitt
Student National Medical Association –ZumbaGirls
The Student National Medical Association will teach girls of lower socio-economic backgrounds how to maintain a healthy life-style in their project, ZumbaGirls. The girls will participate in Zumba group exercises and discussing how to maintain a healthy lifestyle.
Community Partner: Citizen’s School
County Served: Durham
Homeless Outreach Poverty Education – “Talking Sidewalks”
Homeless Outreach Poverty Education (HOPE), a project of the Campus Y, will use their grant to publish “Talking Sidewalks”, a literary magazine written entirely by the men, women, and children living on the streets and in the shelters of Chapel Hill. The magazine will come at the end of a twice-a-week creative writing workshops provided to the community by HOPE.
Community Partner: Housing for New Hope
County Served: Orange
Carolina Hispanic Association: Las Guapitas – Dual Literacy Program
Las Guapitas is a sub-group of the Carolina Hispanic Association that meets every week with Hispanic girls to promote higher education and increase self-esteem. Their Dual Literacy Program will purchase books for the girls to read to help improve their English reading comprehension. The students will read the books with the girls after school and discuss themes and words.
Community Partners: McDougle Middle School
County Served: Orange
Community Empowerment Fund – CEF Outreach and Borrower Workshops
The Community Empowerment Fund will sponsor workshops to help applicants with small-business development, financial planning, resume-building, job searching, marketing, connections to service, computer literacy, and more. Their goal is to reach out to the Latino population in Durham and Orange counties to increase awareness about the Fund and develop skills that will last beyond the terms of their loan.
Community Partner: Housing for New Hope
County Served:Orange, Durham
Epsilon Eta – Seawell Science Club and After-School Gardening Program
Members of Epsilon Eta will visit Seawell Elementary School every Thursday afternoon to lead an after-school science club for 3rd-5th graders especially ESL students. The club will incorporate gardening, recycling, craft projects, and nature hikes as well as preparing nutritious and natural-food snacks together.
Community Partner: Seawell Elementary School
County Served: Orange
Carolina Taekwondo Club – Safe Girls
Project Safe Girls seeks to empower middle school girls through self-defense. Members of the Carolina Taekwondo Club will provide a supportive and energetic environment where participants will gain confidence and improve self-esteem while learning the basics and importance of safety.
Community Partners: Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA
County Served: Orange, Durham
2008-2009 Grantees
Native Health Initiative –
Native American Diversity Awareness
Partnership
The Native Health Initiative (NHI) partnered
with the UNC American Indian Center,
the UNC Teaching Fellows, and Native
communities in North Carolina to form
the Native American Diversity Awareness
Partnership (NADAP). NADAP connects
future educators with native students
within North Carolina to provide a two
way street of learning, encouraging
higher education and a better understanding
of the challenges facing native students
who are often times ignored by public
schools. The group hopes to implement
Youth Leadership Days Native communities
to expose future educators to Native
cultures.
Community Partner: Haliwa Saponi Tribal
School
Total Hours of Service: 100+
Counties Served: Cumberland, Hoke, Gulford,
Richmond, Sampson, and Wake
Carolina Association of Pharmacy
Students – Women’s Health Expo
The Carolina Association of Pharmacy
Students (CAPS) in the UNC Eshelman
School of Pharmacy partnered with the
Lupus Foundation, UNC Lineberger Cancer
Center, Orange County Rape Crisis Center
and Diabetes Sisters to organize the
Women’s Health Expo. The expo was a
free health-screening event held on
March 28th, 2009 at University Mall
in Chapel Hill that provided free bone
scans blood pressure checks, blood glucose
checks, lung volume measurements, skin
evaluations, and breast exam teaching
to almost 100 people. They hoped to
provide service to the community, promote
the profession of pharmacy and provide
skill practices for pharmacy students.
Community Partners: Lupus Foundation,
UNC Lineberger Cancer Center, Orange
County Rape Crisis Center, Diabetes
Sisters, Kerr Drug, University Mall
Total Hours of Service: 102
County Served: Orange
Carolina Pre-Medical Association
– Helping Others: One-to-One
The Carolina Pre-Medical Association
(CPMA) collaborated with Jordan High
School Key Club in Durham, NC to collect
and donate goods to the local homeless
shelter, the Inter-Faith Council for
Social Services. The purpose of the
project was to create bonds with future
college students while giving back to
the those in need within the community.
Students put together forty care packages
that included shampoo, razors, deodorant,
hand sanitizer, diapers, baby wipes,
kitchen supplies, and canned goods.
Community Partners: Jordan High School
and Inter-Faith Council
Total Hours of Service: 75
County Served: Orange
UNC Dance Marathon – Winter
Wonderland Hospital Social
UNC Dance Marathon provides a social
once a month to the children at UNC
hospitals as part of their efforts to
improve the lives of the children and
their families. The Winter Wonderland
Hospital Social provided games, arts
and crafts, food, and special kits that
included books, toys, and cards for
those children who could not participate
in the social. The group hopes to provide
an outlet for the children’s creative
energy that is limited by not being
able to play outside or in school. They
hope to build bonds with the children
and ultimately improve their quality
of life.
Community Partner: UNC Children’s Hospital
Total Hours of Service: 90
County Served: Orange
Health Policy and Management
Masters Student Council – Ronald McDonald
House Meals
Health Policy and Management (HPM) masters
students organized four dinners for
patients’ families at the Ronald McDonald
House (RMH) of Chapel Hill over the
past year. Their goal was to build relationships
with the families at RMH by preparing
full dinner experiences that typically
are unaffordable for these families
on their own. They hope to strengthen
ties between HPM and the community and
gain perspective into the patient-side
of healthcare.
Community Partner: Ronald McDonald House
of Chapel Hill
Total Hours of Service: 22
County Served: Orange
Muslim Students Association
– Project Downtown
The UNC Muslim Students Association
(MSA) partnered with Project Downtown,
a national initiative started by college
students to provide a Muslim voice against
homelessness and support programs providing
relief and education. The UNC MSA distributed
food and personal care among the homeless
at Urban Ministry, a Durham homeless
shelter, every Friday afternoon for
two hours. They hope to start career
development programs such as skills
trainings, provide Muslim ex-convicts
readjustment support, and to coordinate
housing efforts throughout the community.
Community Partner: Project Downtown
Total Hours of Service: 40
County Served: Durham
Criminal Justice Action and
Awareness Committee of the Campus Y
– Mentorship and Volunteer Program with
the Durham Youth Home
The Criminal Justice Action and Awareness
Committee (CJAA) of the UNC Campus Y
partnered with the Durham Youth Home
to mentor at-risk youth and juveniles
who have already committed crimes by
planning various activities to stimulate
their minds, challenge them, and redirect
their focus. UNC students volunteered
at the Home every week for two hours
and built a mentor relationship with
juveniles in the correction facility.
They hope to have a positive impact
on the kids by helping them realize
the alternatives to criminal activity.
Community Partner: Durham Youth Home
Total Hours of Service: 40+
County Served: Durham
Hmong Students Association
of Carolina – Winter Food/Toy Drive
The Hmong Students Association of Carolina
(HSAC) partnered with Pappy’s Market
and Vang Chiropractic Clinic to provide
relief to Hmong families in Hickory,
NC and the surrounding area. Students
distributed food and toys to families
and young children throughout the area
in the hopes of spreading a little cheer
and relief during the holiday season.
They hope that other members of the
Hmong community will be inspired to
provide similar service to other Hmong
families consistently in the future.
Community Partners: Pappy’s Market and
Vang Chiropractic Clinic
Total Hours of Service: 50
County Served: Catawba
2007-2008 Grantees
Alpha Medical Association – IMPACT Part II
The American Medical Association Medical Student Section (AMA-MSS) of the
UNC Chapel Hill School of Medicine is partnered with Grady A. Brown Elementary
School in Hillsborough to continue the "Improving Meals and Physical
Activity in Children and Teenagers" program. The program features training
for participating medical students to provide twelve weekly sessions in
the elementary school. The group hopes to promote healthy eating behaviors
and physical activity behaviors among students, and envisions this as a
part of a sustained, targeted community effort to battle obesity and sedentary
lifestyles.
Community Partner: Grady A. Brown Elementary School
Total Hours of Service: 25+
County Served: Orange
Carolina Pre-Medical Association – Healthier Kids = Brighter Futures
The Carolina Pre-Medical Association (CPMA) will host an interactive health
fair for 100 children in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA after school program.
The project will emphasize how easy and fun a healthy lifestyle can be,
and will educate children about obesity, nutrition, physical activity, personal
hygiene, and cold/flu prevention.
Community Partner: Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA
Total Hours of Service: 200
County Served: Orange
Domestic Violence Action Project – 50B Training
The Domestic Violence Action Project (DVAP) in the UNC School of Law is
working with Legal Aid of North Carolina to provide free legal representation
to victims of domestic violence who are seeking a civil domestic violence
protective order (50B). The training will prepare students to represent
victims in court. Law students also may attempt to obtain other types of
relief for the victim such as temporary custody, possession of residency,
automobiles, and/or other immediate necessities.
Community Partner: Legal Aid of North Carolina
Total Hours of Service:
County Served: Chatham, Orange
Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. – Turkey Time
Kappa Alpha Psi is partnered with the Trinity Court/Prichard Park Family
Resource Center to provide Thanksgiving turkeys to 55 low-income families
in the community. The fraternity has a long-standing relationship with the
community including tutoring to its children. This project works to continue
and build upon the relationship that exists between the UNC students and
the families.
Community Partner: Trinity Court/Prichard Park Family Resource Center
Total Hours of Service: 42
County Served: Orange
Native Health Initiative (SHAC) – A Day into Health
The Native Health Initiative (NHI) is a Carolina student initiative that
aims to use the intellectual, financial and human capital resources of the
UNC community to improve the poor health status of American Indians in North
Carolina. "A Day into Health" will bring 20-25 American Indian
teenagers to UNC-Pembroke for a six-hour interactive workshop, led by UNC-Chapel
Hill and UNC-Pembroke students, in the hopes of inspiring them to pursue
a career in the health care field.
Community Partner: University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Total Hours of Service: 200
Counties Served: Bladen, Columbus, Hoke, Robeson, Sampson
Presbyterian Campus Ministry – Elliott Woods Tutoring Field Trips
Presbyterian Campus Ministry (PCM) will enhance and strengthen its existing
Elliott Woods tutoring program by providing two field trips (one fall and
one spring) for the children in partnership with the Church of Reconciliation.
Field trips include an educational film at the IMAX Theater and a trip to
Mapleview Farms for ice cream and games. PCM looks to provide opportunities
the students may not have otherwise, to strengthen mentoring relationships,
and to offer incentives for educational endeavors.
Community Partner: Church of Reconciliation
Total Hours of Service: 100
County Served: Orange
Student Poverty Reduction Outreach – Hargraves Tax Center
The Student Poverty Reduction Outreach (SPROUT) and the Hargraves Community
Center will provide free income tax filing assistance to low-income individuals.
Trained UNC students operate the center and focus on determining if the
applicant is eligible for the Earned Income Tax Credit. In two years, SPROUT
has saved more than $61,000 in income from leaving the community through
the filing center, and plans to expand the service this year with their
grant.
Community Partner: Hargraves Community Center
Total Hours of Service: 200
County Served: Orange
2006-2007 Grantees
Alpha Phi Omega Senior Prom
Alpha Phi Omega service
fraternity (APO) partnered with the Shepherd House adult care facility to
foster intergenerational relationships through hosting a “senior prom.”
At the event, 25 UNC students and 25 Shepherd House residents shared a great
evening of conversation, music, dancing, and Hawaiian décor (click
here for Daily Tar Heel article).
Community Partner: Shepherd House
Total Hours of Service: 80
County Served: Orange
Best Buddies Trip to Exploris
The UNC Chapel Hill chapter of Best
Buddies , which pairs college students and adults with mental
disabilities, organized a trip to the Exploris Museum in Raleigh to give
36 Buddies a chance to expand their horizons and learn about new cultures.
The Buddies enjoyed the exhibits and viewed an IMAX film with 11 College
Buddies.
Community Partner: Residential Services, Inc. (RSI,
Inc.)
Total Hours of Service: 86
Counties Served: Durham, Orange
Members of UNC Circle K partnered with 25 students in the Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA Boomerang program (which serves high school students in short-term suspension) to create a garden for learning and enjoyment. Grant funds were used to print and distribute the “Boomerang Garden Guide,” an educational booklet that included information and fun facts about the different plants in the garden and garden related puzzles and games.
Community Partner: Chapel Hill-Carrboro YMCA
Total Hours of Service: 65
County Served: Orange
Circle K Life Book Project
UNC Circle K interviewed 15 residents at Brookshire Nursing Center in Hillsborough to chronicle their lives in a life story scrapbook. The Life Book was unveiled at a dance in which 35 residents attended. The Life Book is now on display at Brookshire for all residents, staff, and visitors to enjoy. The project stimulated conversation between residents, staff, volunteers and family and built a foundation for similar projects in future years.
Community Partner: Brookshire Nursing Center
Total Hours of Service: 62
County Served: Northern Orange
Delta Delta Sigma Supply ENNEAD
Delta Delta Sigma, a pre-dental undergraduate student organization, works with the UNC School of Dentistry ENNEAD Society of Dental Volunteers to educate the community about the importance of good oral hygiene. Seagraves funds purchased three oral hygiene puppets for use at current and future health fairs, elementary schools and free clinics, as a fun way to motivate children to brush and floss their teeth correctly.
Community Partner: ENNEAD
Total Hours of Service: 35 and counting
Counties Served: All
Heels on Housing Assisting Families in Foreclosure
Members of Heels
on Housing, a student organization of the UNC School of Law, produced
and mailed “Foreclosure: What You Need to Know” brochures to
150 borrowers in Durham and Orange counties who are approaching foreclosure.
The brochures included information about the foreclosure process, homeowner
rights, and agencies that can help.
Community Partner: Center
for Responsible Lending
Total Hours of Service: 132
Counties Served: Durham, Orange
Hmong Student Association of Carolina College Fair
The Hmong Student Association of Carolina (HSAC) collaborated with Hmong students from Lenoir Rhyne College to organize a college fair and campus tours for families in Burke and Catawba Counties. The group addressed the limited access to higher education in the Hmong community due to linguistic challenges, socio-economic status and limited knowledge about the educational system. Fifty Hmong high school students participated.
Community Partner: Lenoir-Rhyne College HSAC
Total Hours of Service: 100
Counties Served: Burke, Catawba
Muslim Students Association Family Care Fair Day
The Muslim Students Association (MSA) partnered with the Mariam Clinic and the Islamic Association of Raleigh to host a free community health fair for underserved indigent immigrant populations. MSA’s role focused on publicizing the event to the Latino community. 650 individuals attended the fair; more than 300 received free blood work, 33 donated blood, and nine received free mammograms.
Community Partner: Mariam Clinic
Total Hours of Service: 50
Counties Served: Wake
Native Health Initiative A Day into Medicine
The Native Health Initiative (NHI) is a Carolina student initiative that aims to use the intellectual, financial and human capital resources of the UNC community to improve the poor health status of American Indians in North Carolina. NHI sponsored “A Day into Medicine” to inspire American Indian high school students to pursue careers in health care.
Community Partner: NC Health Careers ACCESS Program
Total Hours of Service: 27
Counties Served: Bladen, Columbus, Cumberland, Hoke, Orange, Person, Robeson, Sampson
Wesley Foundation Saturday Service Day: Gleaning
Members of the UNC Wesley Foundation
salvaged (gleaned) sweet potatoes from farms and donated them to agencies
who serve the poor. More than 5,000 pounds of potatoes were donated to three
interfaith food shelters in Wake County. Participants learned about sustainability
and the agriculture of North Carolina while aiding hunger relief efforts.
Community Partner: Society of St. Andrew
Total Hours of Service: 35
County Served: Wake
2005-2006 Grantees
American Medical Association
Seagraves funding supported the “Improving Meals and Physical Activity
in Children and Teens” Program (IMPACT). By harnessing the power of
peer influence and mentoring, empowering students to make healthy decisions,
encouraging leadership, and having fun, the program improved nutrition and
physical activity behaviors in both elementary and high school students
through weekly nutrition and exercise sessions. The project took place over
a period of 12 weeks and has set the foundation for continued collaboration
of Orange County schools and UNC School of Medicine. A total of 60 elementary
and high school students and 15 UNC students were involved in the program.
Total Hours of Service: 200
Community Served: Grady A. Brown Elementary School and Orange County High
School
Best Buddies
Best Buddies partnered with Residential Services Incorporated to provide
members and their buddies with a glimpse into a working farm in Cove City,
NC. Best Buddies pairs college students with mentally disabled adults in
the community, providing friendships and learning experiences. Throughout
the day, members were able to spend time with and strengthen their relationships
with their buddies through the many farm activities. In total, 55 individuals
were served by the project and participated in this experience. Seagraves
funds paid for the farm admission of all participants.
Total Hours of Service: 180
Community Served: Adults with developmental disabilities in Orange County
Big Buddies
Through the creation of the Reader's Club, Big Buddies encouraged children
to read 180 minutes with their big buddy to improve their reading skills.
Children who completed their reading logs were invited to a party and rewarded
with pizza and a new book. Seagraves funds were used to purchase the books.
Twenty UNC volunteers participated in the project, 30 children participated
in the reading, and 15 children attended the party.
Total Hours of Service: 50
Community Served: Elementary aged children in Orange County
Heels on Housing
In collaboration with the Center for Responsible Lending, Heels on Housing
developed a Foreclosure Bill of Rights for families facing foreclosure.
The project began with a series of three foreclosure monitoring trainings
designed to familiarize students with foreclosure law in North Carolina.
These trainings helped students gain the necessary information to create
the Bill of Rights. With the Seagraves grants, 150 pamphlets were printed
and distributed to organizations that assist individuals with foreclosure,
including Legal Aid offices, and the Center for Responsible Lending.
Total Hours of Service: approximately 100
Community Served: Families in foreclosure or approaching foreclosure in
the Central Piedmont area
Hmong Student Association of Carolina (HSAC)
On a Saturday in early April, the Hmong Student Association of Carolina
and NC State brought 126 high school students from Burke and Catawba Counties
to Chapel Hill/Raleigh for a full day to tour both campuses. Guest speakers
lectured about higher education, admissions, college life, and offered seniors
the opportunity to compete for two scholarships. Students received information
packets detailing how to apply to college, college necessities, and other
helpful information. By promoting educational achievement in disadvantaged
high school students, specifically of Hmong descent, HSAC created a meaningful
experience for all involved. The Seagraves grant was used to fund transportation
costs. HSAC has a website with details on this event here.
The tour was a complete success for all parties involved. The future is
always brighter when Hmong students can share their dreams and aspire together.
- Yupheng Ly
Total Hours of Service: 400+
Communities Served: Hmong high school students in Catawba and Burke Counties
Nourish International
Through a partnership with the women and children residents of the Inter-Faith
Council's Project HomeStart, Nourish International created a sustainable
vegetable garden and provided residents with the skills and knowledge to
maintain the garden as a supplemental nutritional source. Every weekend
since February, Nourish International members and HomeStart residents have
worked to maintain the garden. Approximately 250 individuals live at Project
HomeStart each year and could benefit from the garden. Moreover, the garden
will continue to be cultivated over the summer and next year.
Total Hours of Service: 111
Communities Served: Residents of Project HomeStart, a shelter for homeless
women and children, in Orange County
Spanish-Speakers Assisting Latinos Student Association (SALSA)
In order to provide interpreting services for patients at the Student Health
Action Coalition, a student-run free health clinic, SALSA recruited native
Spanish speakers from the UNC romance languages department to act as clinic
patients. Through simulated patient interviews 10 volunteer interpreters
practiced interpreting medical/health issues. Roles were developed for each
actor who had a set of key vocabulary for given illnesses, including words
that are specific only to certain countries. Interviews were recorded and
analyzed after each session to increase student learning. Each Wednesday
throughout the semester, over 20 health clinic patients benefited from improved
interpretation services.
Total Hours of Service: 40
Communities Served: Spanish speaking SHAC patients and student interpreters
in Orange County
Students for Organ Donation (SOD)
Students for Organ Donation educated high school students at East Chapel
Hill High School about organ donation. Through an educational presentation
and a question and answer session held in health classes, students were
encouraged to become organ donors and raise awareness about organ donation
in the community. SOD has already planned to continue this project next
year and work to create student chapters at both East Chapel Hill and Chapel
Hill High Schools.
Total Hours of Service: 50
Community Served: High school students at East Chapel Hill High School
2004-2005 Grantees
American Medical Women's Association
The American Medical Women's Association carried out the Healthy Choices
project: a curriculum designed to help women in prison improve their knowledge
regarding issues affecting their physical and emotional well-being. Over
five small group sessions lasting two hours each, Healthy Choices taught
those imprisoned at Raleigh Correctional Center for Women about good health
and helped them develop a sense of community with other women. Most of these
women will be returning to society at large; AMWA sought to give them the
opportunity to be well informed and make healthy choices. Seagraves funding
was used to purchase refreshments and food as well as for printing and binding.
Total Expenses: $250
Community Served: 12 inmates at the Raleigh Correctional Center for Women
Total Hours of Service: 66
Best Buddies
Best Buddies is an international non-profit organization that strives to
enrich the lives of people with intellectual disabilities. The UNC-Chapel
Hill chapter of Best Buddies pairs college students with mentally disabled
adults in the community, providing friendships and learning experiences
for both. This Seagraves Grant supported a day-long trip to the Asheboro
Zoo for 22 UNC students and a total of 71 best buddies; the trip was completed
in collaboration with Duke University's Best Buddies Organization. Outings
are designed to place the buddies in a social atmosphere where they can
interact comfortably in the "real world." Funding was used for transportation
costs, refreshments, and prizes for outstanding buddy pairs.
Total Expenses: $296.07
Communities Served: adults with intellectual disabilities from Orange and
Durham Counties
Total Hours of Service: 232
Criminal Justice Action and Awareness (Campus Y)
Ten members of CJAA volunteered Wednesday evenings at the Durham County
Youth Home (DYH), a correctional facility for juvenile offenders between
the ages of 12 and 17. Funding was used to create a book club as well as
invest in durable art supplies, journals for creative writing workshops,
and other educational materials. Especially successful activities included
a poetry workshop and a challenging, eye-opening look at the realities facing
minorities in America. The youth at DYH often suffer from boredom and neglect
- CJAA activities helped inspire 20 young adults to gain a broadened perspective
and know that people care about them.
Total Expenses: $297.95
Community Served: juvenile detainees at the Durham County Youth Home
Total Hours of Service: 230
Las Guapitas (Campus Y)
Las Guapitas is a group of female Carolina students who visited McDougle
Middle School every Friday afternoon to mentor a group of 6th, 7th and 8th
grade Hispanic girls. This program aimed to promote self-esteem and encourage
the pursuit of higher education. Las Guapitas is in its third year and has
achieved success as a positive influence on the girls. Seagraves funding
was used for a celebration dinner involving families as well as a year-end
trip to Ocean Isle. See
newspaper story about how mentors help young Latinas through the Seagraves
Service Grants!
Total Expenses: $300
Community Served: 12 latina girls from McDougle Middle School
Total Hours of Service: 360
Senior Marshal Service Committee
The Senior Marshal Service Committee worked with underserved elementary-age
children during afterschool programs (sponsored by the Orange County Family
Resource Centers) by helping them develop their literacy skills and artistic
talents. Committee members devoted individual attention to 40 children over
five Fridays in Fall 2004 and nine Fridays in Spring 2005. This project
included an end-of-the-year gathering with the children and their families
to celebrate their achievements and showcase their works of literature and
art including poetry, autobiographies, and seasonal crafts. Seagraves funding
was used to purchase art and literature supplies as well as food and drink
for the end-of-year picnic.
Total Expenses: $266.82
Community Served: elementary school-age children in Orange County
Total Hours of Service: 210
Special Libraries Association, Student Chapter
Seagraves funding was used to create a small lending library at Project
Homestart, a homeless shelter for women and children in Chapel Hill. The
new lending library provides 51 books for the residents of the shelter to
read to their children. Books are categorized according to reading levels
as well as content: non-fiction, poetry, feeling, biography, and bilingual.
The goal of this project was to promote literacy in a disadvantaged, low-income
population of the community. SLA hopes that the library will 1) encourage
parents to read to their children; 2) empower children to read alone; and
3) prepare children for school.
Total Expenses: $300
Community Served: low income women and children in Chapel Hill
Total Hours of Service: 105
Student Health Action Coalition (SHAC) Outreach - Pharmacy School
Members
During three clinics, volunteer pharmacy students provided blood glucose
checks and blood pressure measurement services to help identify members
of the Lattisville Grove Community at risk for diabetes and hypertension.
Seagraves funding was used to purchase necessary equipment that can also
be utilized in future clinics. In addition, Pharmacy students were involved
with active counseling sessions for the patients. Students helped by providing
specific therapeutic and lifestyle recommendations.
Total Expenses: $298.46
Community Served: underserved Orange County residents near Lattisville Grove
Missionary Baptist Church
Total Hours of Service: 150
Student Poverty Reduction Outreach
SPROUT members provided direct support (including two members serving as
certified tax preparers and three members serving as tax prep assistants)
for local VITA sites at the UNC School of Law and the Chapel Hill Senior
Center. The project served over 1,900 low- to moderate-income people of
Orange County by ensuring that they maximize their tax refund and thus their
income. A significant percentage of the "working poor" in Orange County
do not claim their Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) and/or Child Tax Credit(s)
on their tax refunds each year. This project created strong, constructive
ties between the University and the community and served to raise student
awareness about the plight of the working poor in our community and beyond.
Seagraves funding was used to print flyers for VITA sites as well as purchase
food and refreshments for VITA site clients and volunteers.
Total Expenses: $109.93
Communities Served: working poor in Chapel Hill and Carroboro, Orange County
Total Hours of Service: 100
Tuberculosis Awareness Group
The Tuberculosis Awareness Group provided 40 care packages of toiletries
and other basic necessities for tuberculosis patients undergoing their two-week
isolation period for treatment. These patients are generally overlooked
particularly the homeless that do not have the help of family members. Thanks
to Seagraves funding, TAG delivered the packages to the Orange County Health
Department for dispersement to tuberculosis patients in counties including
Wake, Mecklenburg, and Guilford---all of whom will know that they are not
alone in their battle.
Total Expenses: $276.02
Community Served: indigent tuberculosis patients throughout NC
Total Hours of Service: 45
UNC Teen Court
Carolina Teen Court Assistance provided Trial Advocacy Training for Orange
and Chatham Counties Teen Court Programs. A total of four Skill Enhancement
Sessions (two each for Orange and Chatham County programs) were held for
25 teens. The Teen Court system is an alternative sentencing program for
youth offenders who have committed minor offenses. In Teen Court, high school
and middle school students volunteer as lawyers to prosecute and defend
their peers. UNC law students designed and implemented a curriculum and
training manual in addition to holding workshops for student volunteers
in each county. Seagraves funding was used to purchase necessary supplies
and refreshments for the Skill Sessions.
Total Expenses: $150
Communities Served: teens in Hillsboro, Orange County and Pittsboro, Chatham
County
Total Hours of Service: 45
Women in Law, UNC School of Law
Women in Law revised a comprehensive guide to women's rights under North
Carolina law entitled Women and the Law: A Handbook for North Carolina.
Women in Law began this publication in 1975; the most recent edition (from
1996) has now been updated due to important changes in state law. The handbook
is designed to educate women of our state about their rights in a range
of areas including social welfare, reproductive health, domestic violence,
finances, marriage, divorce, and employment. Look at Women
and the Law: A Handbook for North Carolina. One thousand copies were
printed and sent to 685 community resource centers across the state. Nineteen
law students and sixteen UNC Professors of Law and Government donated their
time. Seagraves funding was used for design costs.
Total Expenses: $300
Communities Served: female residents in all cities and every county of NC
Total Hours of Service: 250
The Carolina Center for Public Service strengthens the University's public service commitment by promoting scholarship and service that are responsive to the concerns of the state and contribute to the common good.
“A Community Engaged University” recognized by the
Carnegie Foundation