As the title suggests, this will be my last post concerning my service work this semester in the Washington Neighborhood. I completed my last hours of service on November 19th at the Saint Patrick’s parish dinner. The last few weeks that I spent at the dinner were with the members of Saint Pat’s parish and not any of the other parishes around Dubuque. I learned last week that the union will no longer be putting on the dinner during the third Wednesday of the month so the St. Pat’s people will be doing that dinner as well now. During my last few weeks, I didn’t notice any anger or some of the attempts at misleading that I saw in previous weeks. All of the people that attended the dinners were very gracious and kind to the volunteers and others. This makes me wonder why I noticed some of those actions during those couple of weeks and not at any other time. Perhaps there were a couple of people that gave me that perception that did not attend any more dinners. Overall, I leave the service opportunity with a very good feeling about the volunteers as well as the people that attend the dinner. I have next listed the goals and the means for reaching those goals that I made for my service project before I began volunteering. I then list my assessments about how I think that did during my service in reaching those goals after my hours were complete.
Goals:
My goals for this service project are to 1) learn about the people that live in the Washington Neighborhood, 2) get to know other people that volunteer at the dinner and what their motivations for helping are, and 3) to increase my ability to perform service and to help understand why I should spend time volunteering within the community.
Means:
The means for achieving these goals will be mainly accomplished through my time volunteering at the dinner at St. Patrick’s Parish every Wednesday from 3:45 until 6:15. I will make sure to try and talk with the people that attend the dinner when I can so that I can learn as much about them as possible. I will also take the opportunities that I have to talk to the other volunteers that help out with the dinner. I will also try and take time to reflect about my service experience each week to see what I have gained from my volunteering time. I will get to know the Washington Neighborhood better by participating in the clean-up day on October 18th which will be a great time for me to see where the people live. The Winterization Project on October 25th will allow me to see inside the homes of some of the people within in the Neighborhood and maybe some of the struggles that they are encountering.
Assessments:
1) I believe that I have learned a lot about the people that live in the Washington Neighborhood during my 30 hours of service. I was able to see where people lived, both inside and outside of their homes while I was performing service at the clean-up and winterization challenge. I have learned that many people live very simply and in conditions that are well below to what I am used to. Many people are trying to improve the condition of the neighborhood, but there are still many properties in need of drastic help. My time at Saint Patrick’s Parish has taught me that many people from the Washington Neighborhood are in such great need that they must rely on the dinners for survival. I believe that my areas of service were ideal for this goal and I think that I achieved it.
2) I spent much of my service time working with many different people. This did not allow me to build any close relationships with other volunteers, but I was able to see a wide range of people doing service. I learned that the people with the Washington Neighborhood Association spend a lot of their free time trying to help out their area just so that it is a better place to live. Their motivations are to make their neighborhood a better place to raise a family. I was able to draw that the main reason that people volunteered at the weekly dinners were because they know of the need for their help. Many of the volunteers knew many of the people and would talk to them while they were there. The main goal of the volunteers was to make the people feel welcome and do everything that they could to let them have a nice, peaceful meal.
3) I think that my service time did allow me to increase my ability to do volunteer work. The main thing that I have learned is that there are service opportunities everywhere and I could volunteer my time nearly every day if I so choose to. I possess many of the talents that are required for service, I just need to put some of my time off to the side so that I can use them. Spending 2 to 3 hours a week volunteering is easily doable for me at this time of my life and I am going to attempt and volunteer more than I have in the past. I am going to attend some of the dinners next semester as I know that I have no other commitments on Wednesday’s evening and I have really enjoyed working at the dinner this semester.
I think that I achieved most of my goals that I created before service began. I think that the main reason that I was able to do this was because of the service sites that I worked at. The clean-up and winterization project were great in allowing me to get a look at the neighborhood in way that I would not have gotten to see otherwise. This also allowed me to see volunteers that were different than the ones that help out at the dinners. I think my primary service site was absolutely perfect for my goals and the overall point of the project. I was among many people that truly needed help and many other volunteers. Looking back, I don’t think I would change anything about my service. It has been a great experience and I am really glad to be a part of the honors program with this required class.
Sunday, November 30, 2008
Saturday, November 15, 2008
A Changing Community
The focus of this blog will be on the idea of communities. This discussion is extremely relevant to my ongoing service project as much of it has focused in the Washington Neighborhood. Many residents of the Washington Neighborhood are striving to transform the community into a much better place to live and raise families. However, this seems to be a continual ongoing process with no end in sight in the upcoming years. I believe that the people of the Washington Neighborhood are working as best as possible to improve their community, yet they are encountering the problems faced by any group that is attempting to transform an area. The only way in which a community can transform itself is to have every resident willing and able to help in the revitalization. This goal is nearly unachievable as there is almost a constant movement of people in and out of residencies in a neighborhood as large as the Washington Neighborhood. If there are any people in the community that do not care about improving the neighborhood and simply do nothing, then it will be nearly impossible for any goals or change to be achieved. Due to these reasons, change occurs gradually over time and cannot be obtained in relatively short periods of time.
I believe that my experience of helping to clean up the Washington Neighborhood for an entire Saturday morning allowed me to see some of the improvements that are being made and some that need to be made in the future for the revitalization to be complete. There were many homes that were in very good shape and it was obvious that the homeowners tried to keep them in working order. However, there were some properties that looked rundown and completely ignored. I know that the Washington Neighborhood has a policy of forcing residents to keep in the front of houses in good appearance as a way of trying to promote a better aesthetic look for the area. After walking through the alleys, it was obvious that many residents simply do not care what their houses look like and until that changes, the view of the neighborhood will not change. I can see that there are many residents that have taken an active role in attempting to promote change and have spent a lot of time to achieve the goals of the neighborhood. Unfortunately, until the push for change is taken up by every resident, the neighborhood will never fully reach its goals.
The narrator in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man is able to bring about change within in Harlem by simply making sympathetic speeches to its citizens. The narrator is able to do this despite not being an extremely well known public figure at the beginning of his active life. Ralph Ellison is trying to tell his readers that the key to promoting change within a community is to unite the residents under one goal. This happens in Ellison’s book through a relatively unknown speaker that ignites the people to push for change. He is able to talk about issues that may not directly affect the people, but he is able to convince them that it is in their best interests to think and act in a particular manner. By being an unknown person, the people become willing to take action on their own rather than simply following a leader. If this type of person would reveal themselves in the Washington Neighborhood, there would be a much better chance that the community would change. A leader could act as a gathering point and ignite the majority of people to really strive for improvement in their community.
I believe that my experience of helping to clean up the Washington Neighborhood for an entire Saturday morning allowed me to see some of the improvements that are being made and some that need to be made in the future for the revitalization to be complete. There were many homes that were in very good shape and it was obvious that the homeowners tried to keep them in working order. However, there were some properties that looked rundown and completely ignored. I know that the Washington Neighborhood has a policy of forcing residents to keep in the front of houses in good appearance as a way of trying to promote a better aesthetic look for the area. After walking through the alleys, it was obvious that many residents simply do not care what their houses look like and until that changes, the view of the neighborhood will not change. I can see that there are many residents that have taken an active role in attempting to promote change and have spent a lot of time to achieve the goals of the neighborhood. Unfortunately, until the push for change is taken up by every resident, the neighborhood will never fully reach its goals.
The narrator in Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man is able to bring about change within in Harlem by simply making sympathetic speeches to its citizens. The narrator is able to do this despite not being an extremely well known public figure at the beginning of his active life. Ralph Ellison is trying to tell his readers that the key to promoting change within a community is to unite the residents under one goal. This happens in Ellison’s book through a relatively unknown speaker that ignites the people to push for change. He is able to talk about issues that may not directly affect the people, but he is able to convince them that it is in their best interests to think and act in a particular manner. By being an unknown person, the people become willing to take action on their own rather than simply following a leader. If this type of person would reveal themselves in the Washington Neighborhood, there would be a much better chance that the community would change. A leader could act as a gathering point and ignite the majority of people to really strive for improvement in their community.
Saturday, November 8, 2008
The Story of Others
Through the service that I am performing, I have a unique opportunity to be able to talk about the lives of the people in the Washington Neighborhood. This blog is essentially acting as a literary work about the people in the neighborhood that can be accessed by the outside public. I believe that my specific area of service allows for me to get an inside look at the lives of some of the people in Dubuque that are less fortunate than most. From what I have seen thus far, some of the struggles that these people are facing need to be told because many people in Dubuque are unaware that people with such problems exist in their city. I have seen many people attending the dinner week after week and they seem to really need the dinner to be able to survive. I know that a dinner is offered somewhere in Dubuque every night and I would guess that there are some people that attend each one. Residents of Dubuque need to be aware of these people that are in dire need as many would probably be willing to donate products or time to help members of their town to live in a little more comfort. Many of these people were attending the dinner even before the recent downturn in the economy which shows that the state of America has not been as prosperous as some would like to believe. In addition to the commonalities of the attendees of the dinner, there are dozens of personal stories that need to be told as well.
The personal stories of the patrons would be the main source that outsiders could really learn about the problems of the people. Reading about the experiences of others allows people to learn and increase their own knowledge which could help the readers in their own lives. Many people will hear the stories about the struggles of the patrons and decide that they should take action and help them out as much as possible. This type of action could not happen unless the citizens of Dubuque are aware of the problems within in their city. This type of situation has happened throughout history; once people become aware of a problem, they take action to try and solve the situation. This specific situation with the people of the Washington Neighborhood is no different and the best way for people to decide how to take action is by hearing about it from firsthand accounts.
Martha Nussbaum writes in her book, Cultivating Humanity, about the value of reading literature. Nussbaum argues that much of what people do and believe comes from how they interpret the things that they read. According to her, nearly everything can be interpreted in a different manner depending on the reader. She spends a large section of her discussion focusing on tragedies. I think this area of literature most connects to the lives of the people that attend the dinners as their lives are not what is seen as desirable by most people. Nussbaum says, “Tragedies acquaint the young citizen with the bad things that may happen in a human life, long before life itself does so.” I am sure that many of the patrons that attend the dinner are in that situation due to circumstances completely out of their control or just because of poor luck. Despite this fact, Nussbaum would still say that by reading about the personal stories of these people, people can learn how to avoid that situation as best as they can. The stories of the people that attend the free dinner need to be heard by the rest of Dubuque. By doing so, people will be more likely to offer their services. Life is unpredictable and any person could be in that situation of need at some point in their lifetime so hearing about the experiences of others will help them to survive in that situation.
The personal stories of the patrons would be the main source that outsiders could really learn about the problems of the people. Reading about the experiences of others allows people to learn and increase their own knowledge which could help the readers in their own lives. Many people will hear the stories about the struggles of the patrons and decide that they should take action and help them out as much as possible. This type of action could not happen unless the citizens of Dubuque are aware of the problems within in their city. This type of situation has happened throughout history; once people become aware of a problem, they take action to try and solve the situation. This specific situation with the people of the Washington Neighborhood is no different and the best way for people to decide how to take action is by hearing about it from firsthand accounts.
Martha Nussbaum writes in her book, Cultivating Humanity, about the value of reading literature. Nussbaum argues that much of what people do and believe comes from how they interpret the things that they read. According to her, nearly everything can be interpreted in a different manner depending on the reader. She spends a large section of her discussion focusing on tragedies. I think this area of literature most connects to the lives of the people that attend the dinners as their lives are not what is seen as desirable by most people. Nussbaum says, “Tragedies acquaint the young citizen with the bad things that may happen in a human life, long before life itself does so.” I am sure that many of the patrons that attend the dinner are in that situation due to circumstances completely out of their control or just because of poor luck. Despite this fact, Nussbaum would still say that by reading about the personal stories of these people, people can learn how to avoid that situation as best as they can. The stories of the people that attend the free dinner need to be heard by the rest of Dubuque. By doing so, people will be more likely to offer their services. Life is unpredictable and any person could be in that situation of need at some point in their lifetime so hearing about the experiences of others will help them to survive in that situation.
Sunday, November 2, 2008
Further Reflection
I am using this blog post to further reflect on my service work in the Washington Neighborhood. I have thus far completed 22.5 of my goal of 30 hours of service. I have volunteered at Saint Patrick’s Parish a total of five times thus far for a total of 13 hours. I plan on volunteering at the dinner another three times to complete my service hour requirement. In the three weeks since my last post about service, I have worked with three different groups that put on the dinner. The only time that I have worked with the same group of people was two weeks ago when the Saint Patrick’s people organized the dinner as they had during my first week. Despite the fact that this meal was organized by the same group of people, there were still volunteers that I had not previously worked with. My third dinner was run by a group of union workers. This was a very different experience than any other as it was the most organized out of the five thus far. I expected this to be the case as I thought that a group of people who were a part of a union would be very organized and that they would run the dinner in that same manner. The most recent dinner was organized by a group from Holy Family Catholic Schools. This group brought in prepared food as the group from St. Columkille had done during my second week. I think the best part about working with new groups each week is meeting and being able to talk to different people.
After having volunteered for five dinner thus far, I feel that I have a good sense of what tasks need to be performed and I have had to focus less time on figuring out what to do and this has enable me to spend more time noticing things about the people that attend the dinner. I first started to notice specific things two weeks ago when I had the duty of serving chicken nuggets to everyone. The meal is organized so that every person gets an initial serving of food and then they can go back up for seconds after everyone had been fed. A few people asked for extra food the first time through the line and I had to tell them that they could come up later for more. A few people were perfectly fine with hearing this news while others were visibly upset. One man even went as far as to come back through the line again and ask for a tray with just chicken nuggets. I have also noticed that while serving milk, people will come back up and ask for more milk and say that they did not receive any when they went through the line the first time. We knew that they received milk the first time through and are more than happy to give them more, but they feel as though they must lie in order to receive it. Last week while I was eating, they called for seconds and there was mad dash to get in line. We then observed some people taking that food and storing it in containers and leaving. There is supposed to be absolutely no carry-outs, but people do so anyway. The conclusions that I have drawn from this sort of behavior is that many of the people that attend the dinner feel as though they must lie or attempt to cheat the system in order to get enough food. We are more than willing to give everyone as much food as they want so no deception is needed. The people feel that they must be competitive in order to get what they want because that is what they have encountered throughout their lives and this does not change for them when they attend the meals. A small minority of the people will do anything to try and get ahead.
I have spent my other 9.5 hours of service working two Saturday mornings in and around the Washington neighborhood. The first 4 hours were as a part of the Washington Neighborhood clean-up in which I walked through the neighborhood picking up trash. The most noticeable thing that I saw was that there were very few people actually helping to clean-up the neighborhood. I know that there were some people that were working extremely hard, but I had just hoped to see more involvement from the people that lived in the area. I believe that walking through the alleys and many of the streets for an entire morning gave me a much better sense of what life is really like in the Washington Neighborhood. The second Saturday consisted of 5.5 hours of service as a part of the Dubuque winterizing challenge. This was a very organized service project with hundreds of volunteers where the main goal was to make the homes of Dubuque more energy efficient for the winter. I was a part of group that helped at three residencies where the people were of Hispanic heritage. I think this was actually a very good experience because it gave me a look into the lives of a sub-culture of people that live within the city of Dubuque. There was a language barrier in some cases, but that did not affect our duties of helping to prepare the houses for winter. The next time that I mention my service in this blog I will have completed my hourly requirement. I hope that I can use my last 7.5 hours to notice even more about the people that attend the dinners.
After having volunteered for five dinner thus far, I feel that I have a good sense of what tasks need to be performed and I have had to focus less time on figuring out what to do and this has enable me to spend more time noticing things about the people that attend the dinner. I first started to notice specific things two weeks ago when I had the duty of serving chicken nuggets to everyone. The meal is organized so that every person gets an initial serving of food and then they can go back up for seconds after everyone had been fed. A few people asked for extra food the first time through the line and I had to tell them that they could come up later for more. A few people were perfectly fine with hearing this news while others were visibly upset. One man even went as far as to come back through the line again and ask for a tray with just chicken nuggets. I have also noticed that while serving milk, people will come back up and ask for more milk and say that they did not receive any when they went through the line the first time. We knew that they received milk the first time through and are more than happy to give them more, but they feel as though they must lie in order to receive it. Last week while I was eating, they called for seconds and there was mad dash to get in line. We then observed some people taking that food and storing it in containers and leaving. There is supposed to be absolutely no carry-outs, but people do so anyway. The conclusions that I have drawn from this sort of behavior is that many of the people that attend the dinner feel as though they must lie or attempt to cheat the system in order to get enough food. We are more than willing to give everyone as much food as they want so no deception is needed. The people feel that they must be competitive in order to get what they want because that is what they have encountered throughout their lives and this does not change for them when they attend the meals. A small minority of the people will do anything to try and get ahead.
I have spent my other 9.5 hours of service working two Saturday mornings in and around the Washington neighborhood. The first 4 hours were as a part of the Washington Neighborhood clean-up in which I walked through the neighborhood picking up trash. The most noticeable thing that I saw was that there were very few people actually helping to clean-up the neighborhood. I know that there were some people that were working extremely hard, but I had just hoped to see more involvement from the people that lived in the area. I believe that walking through the alleys and many of the streets for an entire morning gave me a much better sense of what life is really like in the Washington Neighborhood. The second Saturday consisted of 5.5 hours of service as a part of the Dubuque winterizing challenge. This was a very organized service project with hundreds of volunteers where the main goal was to make the homes of Dubuque more energy efficient for the winter. I was a part of group that helped at three residencies where the people were of Hispanic heritage. I think this was actually a very good experience because it gave me a look into the lives of a sub-culture of people that live within the city of Dubuque. There was a language barrier in some cases, but that did not affect our duties of helping to prepare the houses for winter. The next time that I mention my service in this blog I will have completed my hourly requirement. I hope that I can use my last 7.5 hours to notice even more about the people that attend the dinners.
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