Students Tackle HIV/AIDS Awareness As Service Learning Project

PULLMAN, Wash. – A group of Washington State University students enrolled in Human Development 205 are working to increase awareness of HIV/AIDS in Whitman County as part of a service learning project.

The students agreed to take up the project at the suggestions of Whitman County Health Department Nurse Judy Stone.

“I needed help in raising awareness in the community among the public and professionals that HIV is here and that the health department offers a wide range of services in prevention and direct care,” Stone said.


 


In response, the students initiated a wide range of activities, including performing skits about the causes and prevention of the disease at Pullman High School from 9 a.m. to noon, Nov. 4. The skits, which are followed by presentations and question-and-answer sessions, are drawn from the “true-life stories” of people with HIV/AIDS and are designed to hit home with teens.


 


We wanted to really hit the students where they live to make them realize that HIV is real in their world,” said team member McKenna Hudson,.

The majority of the team members also have voluntarily been tested for HIV/AIDS to lend credibility to their campaign to get their peers to undergo testing. They will have an informational booth set up in Compton Union Building Room B7 from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Nov. 9. WSU Health and Wellness will provide free, private HIV/AIDS testing there from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.

WSU Professor Kim Kidwell, who team teaches HD 205 with instructor Krista Petty, said the class, subtitled “Navigating Life,” is designed to help students improve as individuals, as members of a team and as contributors to their community. The required service learning projects partner student teams with local non-profit or governmental agencies. Other projects this year include building community at a senior citizens apartment complex and working with school children to decorate restrooms at Neill Public Library in Pullman.

“It has been awesome to watch the community partners get excited about working with the students and the students get excited about working with their partners,” Kidwell said. “Nurturing a sense of home here is so important to the success of these kids, and working in the community does that.”

Petty agrees. “Tackling a community service project together is fabulous for learning team building, conflict management, interpersonal communications, accountability, proposal writing and presentation skills,” she said.

Kidwell, whose primary assignment is as a spring wheat breeder in the Department of Crop and Soil Sciences in the College of Agricultural, Human, and Natural Resource Sciences, first offered HD 205 last year. It filled to capacity then and is full again this year. It fulfills a general requirement at WSU and has become a required course in some majors, such as construction management.

Available for interview:
McKenna Hudson, team member – (206) 229-5559, kenners53@hotmail.com

Erin Madison, team member – (206) 947-3555, aneece2@msn.com

WSU Professor Kim Kidwell – (509) 335-7247, kidwell@wsu.edu

Judy Stone, Whitman County Health – (509) 397-6280, judys@co.whitman.wa.us

Karen Curry, Pullman School District nurse – (509) 332-1551, kcurry@psd267.wednet.edu

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