Drexel’s New UConnect Initiative Connects West Philadelphia Residents with Essential Social Services
- Drexel Exhibition Reveals What Students Keep in Their Dorms
- Playing 鈥楽kyscraper Games鈥 at Cira Centre to Celebrate Semiquincentennial and Philly Tech Week
- Biochemist and Nobel Laureate to Address College of Medicine Class of 2026
- Rain Barrels and Other Household Stormwater Strategies Are Working 鈥 For Now.
While Philadelphia is plagued by a 26 percent poverty rate, it is also home to hundreds of programs, agencies and organizations that exist to help low-income and marginalized people find housing assistance, job training, legal help, food access, college planning and more. Accessing these resources and opportunities, however, can be a challenge, due to the complexity of the social service landscape.
A new initiative from 91制片厂鈥檚 and the will address this issue through a service called UConnect, which will train members of the Drexel community to act as navigators, helping local residents get connected with a range of services and opportunities.
Based at the (35th and Spring Garden Streets), UConnect will serve Drexel鈥檚 neighboring 鈥淧romise Zone鈥 communities of West Philadelphia.
A launch event will be held Tuesday, Jan. 5 at 5 p.m. at the Dornsife Center. The event will include remarks from Cicely Peterson-Mangum, the executive director for the Dornsife Center, and Donna Murasko, PhD, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, as well as a ribbon-cutting ceremony and tours of the space.
Following the event, attendees will be encouraged to attend the Dornsife Center鈥檚 monthly community dinner beginning at 6 p.m., which is free and open to the public.
鈥淐reating and cultivating interpersonal connections is in many ways at the heart of how we approach civic engagement at Drexel,鈥 said Peterson-Mangum. 鈥淭he UConnect model lets our students, faculty and staff work in collaboration with residents to facilitate access to important resources, and it gives members of the Drexel community an opportunity to act as advocates for our neighbors. This direct, personal connection can deepen our own sense of citizenship and our roles as agents of change in our communities.鈥
The urban extension center will function as a navigational referral system. Students and other trained volunteers will meet with community members one-on-one to assess needs, set goals 鈥 from finding employment to housing and education 鈥 and then connect them with vital community resources. But the service won鈥檛 stop there 鈥 the navigators will continue to track clients鈥 progress until their needs have been met.
The outcomes of the program will be measured and evaluated to provide evidence for grants and support. The effort will track the program鈥檚 effectiveness, including the number and quality of referrals as well as progress toward achieving community members鈥 goals. It will also glean community member and partner feedback to continually monitor and improve UConnect鈥檚 services.
The backbone of staffing for the center will be provided by students from the criminal justice course 鈥淛ustice in our Community,鈥 a that will be offered each term in the College of Arts and Sciences. The class will be taught by Cyndi Rickards, EdD, senior assistant dean for community engagement and assistant teaching professor of in the Department of Criminology & Justice Studies.
鈥淭he College鈥檚 community-based-learning courses are the perfect vehicle for helping to address the issues that impact our local communities,鈥 said Dean Murasko. 鈥淏y training our students to work proactively with our neighbors who are facing these issues, students learn not only the theoretical principles underlying social change, but also the practical skills needed to make these changes and, importantly, the equally powerful skills of empathy and understanding.鈥
Gina Gendusa, former program director for LIFT Philadelphia, who will serve as associate director in the Lindy Center, will oversee UConnect鈥檚 community programmatic elements, while Rickards will direct the academic components.
鈥淲hile there are many other programs in the city that connect people with social services, UConnect is unique for so many reasons,鈥 said Gendusa. 鈥淥ur place-based model allows us to meet with our neighbors and get involved with them in a meaningful way. We are really supporting people and helping them to establish pathways to essential services like employment, healthcare and housing.鈥
The program will be equally beneficial to the students involved.
鈥淏y supporting their neighbors in navigating the complex landscape of opportunities, students will learn first-hand, in a very personal and human way, about knowledge application and real and pervasive issues of social justice,鈥 said Rickards. 鈥We hope that students will take the UConnect experience with them back into their homes, classrooms and professional lives, becoming the civically engaged change agents our communities need.鈥
In addition to students from Rickards鈥 recurring 鈥淛ustice in our Community鈥 course, additional students, faculty, staff and alumni from Drexel are also encouraged to participate. Volunteers will be required to fulfill an application process and eligibility requirements, as well attend an intensive training program.
Spring term classes that have already signed on to be involved include a 鈥淣onprofit PR鈥 course taught by Danielle Greenwell, which will create social media campaigns, brochures and other promotional materials for UConnect; the anthropology course 鈥淐ommunity Engagement,鈥 taught by Jenna Musket, which will create evaluations for the program; and the side-by-side course 鈥淗istory of Philadelphia,鈥 taught by Scott Knowles, PhD, in which students will create a place-based history that can be used for grants and funding opportunities.
UConnect is intended to be a replicable model so it can be adapted and implemented at institutions within communities nationwide.
For more information or to make an appointment, please call 215.571.4860.
In This Article
Contact
Drexel News is produced by
University Marketing and Communications.