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For Immediate Release April 8, 2008 |
Public Information Office 310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820 Asheville, NC 28804-8507 828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6677 web: http://www.unca.edu/news e-mail: pubinfo@unca.edu |
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UNC Asheville Students Volunteer in Bolivia During Spring Break;
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UNC Asheville political science major B.J. Perkins has had his
share of relaxing spring breaks, but for his senior year he decided
to use the week off from classes to help make the world a better
place. Perkins and 13 additional UNC Asheville students traveled to
South America last month to volunteer at the Highlands Bolivian
Mission (HBM). The charitable organization, based in Highlands,
N.C., operates a medical and dental clinic, foster home, house
building program, prison outreach and woodshop in Montero, Bolivia.
Students helped with all aspects of HBM's work and also provided the
first lead testing in the community.
Perkins learned some construction skills and picked up a few Spanish
phrases during the trip. He worked with a team laying bricks to
rebuild a classroom damaged by a recent flood, and helped students
in the orphanage with their English and computer classes.
Perkins had traveled to South America before for surfing and
sight-seeing but he stressed that this time he wasn't on a tourist
outing.
"This trip made me reevaluate my personal values," he said. "For
me, it was a very humbling offering of my time and energy but I
gained so much in turn. That's why this kind of volunteerism is
called 'service-learning,' because that's exactly what it is."
The trip has left a lasting impact on Perkins. After graduation next
month, he will take a year off before heading to law school. During
that time, he plans to return to HBM to continue his volunteer work.
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Perkins wasn't the only one who was deeply affected by the
experience.
Pre-med student Sarah Buchenberger applied her interest in medicine
and her knowledge of Spanish to assist with lead testing during the
trip, and was pushed beyond personal boundaries.
"The trip was a very good experience because it put me in unfamiliar
and uncomfortable situations. At times, I was deeply challenged,"
she said. "But I knew before I left home that this work would be
difficult and that's why I chose to go. It helped me measure my
reactions under stress, which is important as I prepare for medical
school."
Buchenberger joined Linda Block, UNC Asheville's Lead Poisoning
Prevention Program Coordinator, in conducting the first lead testing
in the community. On the first day of the trip, Block educated the
UNC Asheville student volunteers as well as local doctors and nurses
about potential lead sources and health effects. The next day, after
a hands-on training for nurses with the new lead-test kits, they
fanned out into the schools and homes to check blood lead levels in
children and in household items.
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The testers found some suspicious sources of lead in water
spigots, bowls and batteries. Then they were able to instruct
families on how to reduce their exposure. The time working in homes
throughout the community also provided ample opportunities to
educate parents about the dangers of lead to children. UNC Asheville
students were involved in every step of the process.
"I'm always impressed by UNC Asheville students and I am even more
so after this trip," Block said. "They were ready, willing and able
to help others and really wanted to make a difference. They tried
new things, stretched themselves and opened up to accepting
differences in the world."
The students' trip to Bolivia was funded, in part, through UNC
Asheville's new Mountains to the World Travel Fund. The Fund was
created in fall 2007 through a grant from the Community Foundation
of Western North Carolina to make international volunteerism a
reality for UNC Asheville students. The $100,000 anonymous gift
provides a stipend for travel to destinations around the globe,
allowing students to experience new cultures while volunteering to
help the neediest people in those countries.
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