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4 Continents, one Community: Dal's Rural Studies Students!

Posted by Stephanie Rogers on May 13, 2014 in News

In many rural places in North America, roadside littering is becoming a real problem.  A new initiative, however, hopes to draw on the wisdom of youth to find solutions. Involving the young people of the East River Valley and students at Dalhousie's Agricultural Campus, this unique education, research and volunteer action project aims to help change adult littering behaviour as well as provide a potential model for future anti-littering efforts.

Changing Littering's Unkind Behaviour in the East River Valley (C.L.U.B.  E.R.V.) is the project’s name.  Led by Dr. Deborah Stiles, a humanities and rural studies professor at Dalhousie’s Faculty of Agriculture and funded by a grant from Fulbright Canada, the anti-littering initiative will involve brainstorming sessions conducted February to April with youth of the East River Valley. These gatherings will be organized to get young people’s ideas on how to address the littering issue and devise potential solutions.   

Ideas generated at the brainstorming sessions will be shared with students from the Dalhousie Agricultural Campus taking Professor Stiles’ Special Topics in Rural Studies course during May Term (May 1-31, 2014).  Students taking the course (SPEC 4009) will have the opportunity to design and conduct research, as well as gain experience in service learning through the anti-littering initiative. As part of their May term course work, they will design and conduct a research project connected in some way to rural littering and work with youth and volunteer organizations in the East River Valley. 

They will be picking up litter, but also analyzing the litter picked up as part of the research, in order to determine what’s being discarded, where, how much, along with gathering other data.  The work to combat roadside littering will also build upon what has been suggested by the youth of the East River Valley during the brainstorming sessions, and could include anything from developing unique signage, designing a social media campaign, to planning other innovative strategies to address the problem of adult roadside littering.

Update:



This anti-littering initiative brought the Dal Faculty of Agriculture students---who hailed from four continents, Africa, Asia, North America and Europe--together with several rural volunteers & groups in the East River Valley of Pictou County, Nova Scotia. Here pictured are 14 students and one community volunteer as they began their six km+ litter pick up and analysis on Saturday morning, May 10th, in Sunny Brae. The blog begun on the initiative can be found at www.nomorelittering.wordpress.com.