
Ruth Welch on Working With WILL Youth Outreach
June 8, 2007
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Have you
ever met an 8th grader whose knowledge of segregation
and racism stems from conversations with people who
experienced the repercussions of the1954 Brown v Board
of Education case firsthand? Have you ever encountered a
9th grader who could tell you what a genetic algorithm
is? Have you ever come across a 10th grader who could
tell you about the struggles and triumphs of the Jewish
population in his or her community? Have you ever met an
11th grader who knows that journalism is about so much
more than writing editorials or sharing the results of
the latest basketball game? If not, then you certainly
haven’t talked to the teens who have been lucky enough
to work with WILL on one or more of its numerous youth
outreach projects.
However, if you were to meet
me, an 11th grader at University Laboratory High School
who has participated in three WILL youth outreach
programs, you would be able to answer yes to all of the
above questions. In my three years working with WILL, I
have met people whose childhoods were shaped by the
outcome of the 1954 Brown v Board of Education case.
I’ve heard the stories of people who have endured
derision and ridicule because of their religious
beliefs. And I would be thrilled to tell you about the
myriad of ways in which genetic algorithms influence
your life daily. Working with my community’s public
radio station has transformed me into a more aware and
worldly individual, a transformation that many people do
not undergo prior to college.
Working with WILL has also
taught me what radio journalism is really about:
connecting with people. Of course, I have also learned
all about the technological aspects of radio journalism:
I know how to edit interviews, write scripts, and voice
programs. But the most valuable thing that my
experiences with WILL have taught me is how to connect
with people, no matter how different they may be from
me. This ability is sure to be invaluable no matter what
my future career path. I do not believe that I could
have learned this skill so thoroughly anywhere but at my
community’s public radio station.
As a junior in high school,
I’m not sure what I want to do with the rest of my life.
But working with WILL has certainly given me people
skills that I will need wherever I go. Furthermore, my
experiences at WILL have instilled in me a love of
people and their stories that may very well prompt me to
enter the field of journalism. What I have learned at my
public radio station has prepared me for whatever field
I choose to pursue, and I hope that many more high
school students will have the opportunity that I have
had. |
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