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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Monday, Nov. 25, 2002
Jennifer McNulty
UC Santa Cruz
(831) 459-2495
jmcnulty@ucsc.edu
FRESNO HIGH GRAD REACHES OUT TO STUDENTS
AT HER ALMA MATER
SANTA CRUZ - Sociology major MaryJane Skjellerup
is reaching out by reaching back--to Fresno High School, that is.
Skjellerup is using the power and allure of technology
to introduce Hmong and Latino youth in her native Fresno to what's
available for them at the university.
Skjellerup, a graduate of Fresno High School
and a senior at the University of California, Santa Cruz, has single-handedly
launched the Community and Technology Leadership Program to encourage
Fresno High students from disadvantaged backgrounds to get on track
for college. She uses a combination of hands-on training in sophisticated
digital media technology, mentoring, and academic advising to give
teenagers a taste of what's available to college students.
"I want to encourage kids to come to the
university by giving them skills that will boost their confidence
and make them feel unique," said Skjellerup. "I want to
show them we're willing to invest in them."
Skjellerup says UCSC attracts idealists, and
she has coupled her own idealism with activism. With little more
than her own commitment and minimal start-up funds from UCSC's Global
Information Internship Program (GIIP), Skjellerup went back to her
hometown with a proposal Fresno High administrators jumped at.
"This is the first time we've ever done
anything like this, but it has been very worthwhile," said
Fresno High business computer technology teacher Helen Herzog, who
coordinates the project with Skjellerup with the support of her
department chair, Delaine Zody. "A lot of our students have
a very narrow vision of the opportunities open to them after they
graduate from high school. This has opened their eyes to the options
that are available for them. MaryJane has been a great help and
an inspiration to them."
Herzog and Zody selected six high school students
who came to UCSC for a two-day summer workshop. Tapping the two-inch-thick
training manual she put together for the workshop, Skjellerup describes
a daunting itinerary that covered college admissions, a campus tour,
web and graphic design instruction, and a daylong hands-on digital
film and editing course.
With that introduction, the students returned
to high school this fall where they are working with Skjellerup
and their teachers on community-service projects to prepare oral
histories of members of the Hmong and Latino communities in Fresno.
The group will produce two short video documentaries about their
subjects and post them on a web site about cultural awareness they
will design and launch.
"There are 40,000 Southeast Asian refugees
in Fresno. There's tremendous cultural diversity all around them,"
said Skjellerup. "But when I ask the kids if they know their
own parents' stories, they say 'No.' They don't think it's important.
I want to change that."
Skjellerup says working with high school students
is "refreshing."
"They learn so fast compared to adults,"
she said. Now that they've gotten a taste of technology, Skjellerup
hopes they'll stick with it and see college as a way to build their
expertise. So far, the program is a hit, with all participants saying
they want to return next year to help the "new kids."
If she can secure funding, Skjellerup would like
to expand her program next summer to a two-week residential workshop
with five students from six schools. Herzog, too, would like the
program to continue, with Skjellerup's protégés working
one-on-one next semester to share their new knowledge and skills
with Herzog's other students. "The students are learning the
newest technology--technology I hope they'll share if we are able
to purchase the necessary software licenses and upgrade our equipment,"
said Herzog.
Skjellerup's passion for learning is matched
by her desire to make the world a better place, so designing and
launching the Community and Technology Leadership Program came naturally.
From the beginning of her own years at UCSC, she has approached
college as a model hands-on learner. She discovered GIIP (pronounced
"jeep") during her sophomore year and has used it as a
platform for action ever since.
"Sociology is one of the majors that lets
you know about the problems in the world, all the inequality,"
said Skjellerup. "When it comes to really accomplishing things,
people can get lost between their ideals and the implementation
of real change." GIIP, she said, is "a mechanism for change."
UCSC sociology professor Paul Lubeck launched
GIIP in 1998 to address growing inequality in access to information
networks and global communications. Lubeck couldn't be more pleased
by Skjellerup's enthusiasm, and the difference she is making for
young people in Fresno.
"MaryJane is amazing," said Lubeck.
"She has really taken the ball and run with it. Now she's taking
the GIIP vision into the high school, and that's incredible."
By giving Hmong and Latino students at Fresno
High the tools of high-tech communication, Skjellerup is contributing
to GIIP's mission to "democratize globalization."
"Globalization is not just about making
financial transactions easier," she said. "It's a whole
new playing field, and if you don't know the rules, you have no
chance of succeeding. We're helping people learn the rules."
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This release also is available at: http://press.ucsc.edu
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