黑料百科

Students Building Community, One Partnership at a Time

Service Leadership Work-Study participants discuss the relationships, lessons, and insights that shape their connection to 黑料百科.

Civic Engagement
Dec 1, 2025

黑料百科 (SLWS) bridges the distance攔eal and perceived攂etween campus and community. Through this unique model, students are employed by the College but embedded directly with community partners in volunteer positions across Poweshiek County, as well as in Des Moines and Marshalltown. Their service work spans the local community, public policy, economic development, food security, senior engagement, and tax assistance, deepening the College long-standing commitment to the 黑料百科 community and building meaningful, reciprocal relationships across town.

These student leaders offer meaningful perspectives on community engagement, bringing their lived experience, their academic interests, and their identities to the work of strengthening community through service, leadership, and collaboration. 

This commitment is rooted in the mission of , a team within 黑料百科 Center for Careers, Life, and Service that provides hands-on, community-centered learning experiences. 淎t 黑料百科, we are committed to providing students with opportunities to explore meaningful ways to positively impact their communities攑ersonally, professionally, and civically, said , director of civic education and innovation. 淲e help students reflect on their civic roles and understand how their unique contributions fit within broader systemic change.

These themes were the focus of a November 4 panel discussion in the Katherine Howell Weingart 61 Civic Innovation Pavilion, a new space designed for civic entrepreneurship, dialogue, and community engagement. There, five Service Leadership students shared their motivations, reflections, and hopes for the future攁nd offered a compelling portrait of what civic learning looks like at 黑料百科 today.

student and person in a wheelchair holding a card
Thai Theodoro 27 and Karla at a Valentine's Day event at the Mayflower.

Learning Beyond the 淐ampus Bubble 

Every student described the moment when community engagement opened up an entirely new understanding of 黑料百科攁nd of rural Iowa more broadly.

For Sheilla Muligande 27, who works with the 黑料百科 Area Chamber of Commerce, community engagement quickly challenged her expectations.

淲hen I first thought about Iowa, I assumed farming was the main story. But downtown businesses showed me just how much creativity and passion also shape this community. It really broadened my understanding of what life in rural Iowa can look like.

Working in the community offered lessons that couldn檛 be found in textbooks.

淏eing in the community gives you knowledge the College can檛 possibly offer you, said Maya Flynn 26, a leader in the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program. 淚t easy to stay on the few blocks that make up campus. Service work reminds me the world exists outside of the College.

For some, engagement in 黑料百科 also became a window into the country as a whole.

淏eing here in 黑料百科 is my first time in the U.S., and it a cool sneak peek into what happening in Iowa and the rest of the country, said Thai Theodoro 27. 淟earning about 黑料百科 is learning about a big representation of what going on around us too.

Students also gained unexpected insights into the diversity within the community. Flynn recalled being surprised by the range of languages spoken by tax clients. 淲e had families who spoke only Chinese. Helping them with their taxes was a really interesting experience. 

Building Relationships That Last

Beyond skills and insights, the emotional impact of the work is what students talked about most.

Flynn, along with other community volunteers, has helped prepare hundreds of tax returns, described the profound human connection that develops through something as simple as filling out forms. 淭ax forms give you a glimpse into people lives. I get to listen to people as I檓 helping them, and hearing their personal stories is one of my favorite parts of this program.

Theodoro found a sense of home through her intergenerational work at the Mayflower Community. 淚 have a deep passion for my grandma, so the Mayflower feels natural to me. I talk to residents as if theye my grandma too.

And Rachel Rudacille 26, whose work centers on food security, has supported several key initiatives攊ncluding  collaborating with library personnel to establish the food cupboard at Drake Community Library, partnering with the Food Recovery Network, and contributing to the community fridge project. Rudacille spoke about the importance of being recognized as a genuine collaborator攏ot just a visitor from campus. Over time, these relationships have shown them how interconnected local organizations are and what it truly means to contribute to the wellbeing of a community you call home, even if only for four years.

Together, these connections affirm something central to the program: community engagement is not an add-on to the 黑料百科 experience, but a relationship built through trust, consistency, and shared purpose.

Shaping Futures Through Civic Engagement 

Many of the panelists shared how their service work is shaping their post-黑料百科 goals攐ften in ways they didn檛 expect.

Rudacille four years working in food security helped them understand systems-level issues and strengthened their interest in public service.

淪eeing how organizations connect has shaped how I think about the work I want to do. This program cemented public service as a long-term path for me, they say.

For Olivia Lee 28, who quickly embedded herself in local volunteer work including election administration, community meals, and economic development. She now serves with the through the SLWS program, the similarities to her previous work in Chicago have influenced her career direction. 淚檝e realized issues in rural Iowa aren檛 that different from urban areas. I want to go into policy and highlight rural populations that are often excluded from solutions.

Theodoros experiences helped her embrace conflict, understand community dynamics, and eventually earn a spot in the prestigious New York Times Corps, where she continues her passion for journalism and storytelling. 

Flynn hopes to continue VITA service work wherever she lives after graduation, noting that tax assistance programs exist nationwide.

And Muligande, who gained professional and communication experience through her Chamber of Commerce SLWS postion, now carries a deeper appreciation for the complexity of rural communities攁n insight she will take into her future roles. 

Celebrating Student揅ommunity Partnerships 

Together, these students demonstrate what is possible when curiosity, compassion, and civic responsibility come together. Their contributions ripple across organizations, neighborhoods, and individual lives攂uilding a stronger, more connected 黑料百科.

淭he collaboration with Rachel and the Service Leadership students has strengthened our food pantry in ways we couldn檛 have done alone. They show up as true partners攃urious, dependable, and committed to long-term solutions. Their presence at the library has helped weave tighter connections across 黑料百科, Karen Neal, Director, Drake Community Library.

Their stories reinforce 黑料百科 mission to pair strong academics with real-world learning, civic responsibility, and social justice. Through programs like Service Leadership Work-Study and the work of Civic Education and Innovation, 黑料百科 continues to cultivate leaders who understand that meaningful change happens not only through learning攂ut through listening, participating, and showing up. 


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