Archive for ‘ Social Action ’

Enthusiasm Makes the World Go Round

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Posted by Wafa K. | Posted on February 2, 2012


By far the most dangerous foe we have to fight is apathy – indifference from whatever cause, not from a lack of knowledge, but from carelessness, from absorption in other pursuits, from a contempt bred of self-satisfaction.

-William Osler

Earlier this week, a friend of mine and one of the organizers at the Tutorial Project, Hannah invited me to come to a Baltimore City school initiative. The meeting consisted of parents, teachers, social workers, and community organizers discussing the various campaigns being worked on to address the immediate needs of the BCPS system. The topic of this particular meeting was the bottle tax and property tax initiative that will help raise money in order to ameliorate the issue of crumbing and decrepit infrastructure that is a reality for the majority of schools in Baltimore City. As individuals who spend much of our time working with and for Baltimore youth, Hannah and I were moved by the dedication and passion of those at the meeting. There was a sense of objective understanding that our involvement, despite our desire to be a part of the work and movement, would be that of outsiders. Whether that was a manifestation of our own making or because seeing Hopkins students at these kinds of meeting is such an anomaly is a distinction that is up for interpretation, but it did spark a thought in my mind concerning how Hopkins students interact within our community.

Johns Hopkins’ Homewood campus can feel like an oasis of higher education in a sea of poverty. Baltimore City is not a exceedingly wealthy city, there are parts of the city where graduation rates are lower than you would conceive to be possible, and it struggles to deal with a economy that has not been allowed it to recover from a decline in industry. With all of that said, Baltimore City still stands as a testament to its citizens and its reputation as charm city. To spend four years here, or any city for that matter, and remain apathetic towards is plights is to do a disservice to the opportunities offered by the college experience.  Sitting in lecture, learning how to think, articulate, argue and fail are all important to the classroom education in college; however, I believe there are more fundamental lessons that are learned through the independence and immersion into a new community.

That community extends beyond the walkways and lecture halls of a college campus. I know this because I see it every day. I see it in the interactions between our tutors and tutees at the Tutorial project, between families that come to Kennedy Krieger to participate in research and the volunteers, between freshmen during Orientation and the areas they serve during the President’s Day of Service. I have seen in countless times during my four years at Hopkins, but I have never been able to articulate why I find it so particularly important. For the first time, this meeting allowed me the vocabulary to discuss why college students must, on the merit of necessity, be engrained and concerned about the triumphs and tribulations of their adopted city.

My family came to this country for the sole purpose of offering my sisters and myself the opportunity for an amazing education; moreover, I recognize the importance of the schooling part of education. To learn and to expand and to grow, it is all dandy and important. But, almost more consequentially, education should allow you to grow as a whole human. To expand your capability for compassion and involvement. You can gain all the skills in the world, but without the values and experience to apply them they remain stagnant and benefiting nobody. I may not remember how to solve a gravitational potential problem in ten years, but I will value the ability to integrate and contribute to issues that affect my community, wherever that may be.

So it matters to me. It matters that elementary schools in Baltimore do not have heating in the winter, that their walls are crumbling and that their funding is lacking. That is the particular issue that evokes my passions, it may not be the same for everybody, but something (ambiguity intended) should be important enough for you to care. Apathy is limiting, frustrating and fruitless. Caring about BCPS is not included in my curriculum to graduate, but it bears just as much importance to my education. Because this is now my home as well, and to remain disengaged would be an insult to the warmth, opportunities and wealth of support that this city has offered me. That is a lesson that should be taken by all college students, future and present, because the choices we make now about the value we place on issues we care about will be long-lasting and run very deep.

Little Joys

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Posted by Wafa K. | Posted on April 26, 2010


Note: This is part 2 of my blogging for the day. The two posts aren’t actually related, but this one is time relative so it is going up today as well.

Spring if nature’s way of saying ‘Let’s party!’

-Robin Williams

The weekend of Spring Fair is among the best of the year for the entire campus. The site on Friday morning of vendors lining up around the beach to unload is a sight that inspires even the most diligent of Hopkins student to look forward to setting down the books for a few days and enjoying the splendor of spring along with the Baltimore community.


And by enjoy, I mean indulge in all the horribly wonderful things that characterize Spring fair: the food (funnel cake, fried oreos, chicken on a stick, thai food, gyros, turkey legs, cotton candy, smoothies, ice cold lemonade), the vendors, the Beer Garden, the carnival rides, the company of friends and the lack of (or at least reduction in) stress level.


This Spring Fair also marked one of my first training days as Student Director for the Tutorial Project for Tuesday/Thursday for next year. Emma, my better-half at Tutorial who will be the SD for the Monday/Wednesday program, and I basically spent Thursday and Friday in a frenzy making sure we had permission slips, confirmations from tutors, organizing jobs/schedules for our organizers, coordinating, stressing, etc. We were in Levering until 10 at night Thursday night during Kick Off for Spring Fair matching tutors and kids, which included Emma rushing out to see the fireworks that signal the beginning of Spring Fair weekend and texting me a picture in consolation to me staying indoors to finish my work.


Friday’s Spring Fair consisted the Tutorial kids coming to the Hopkins campus and being able to hang out with their tutors while riding all the carnival rides, eating sugary food, getting a free book, and generally having an excellent time. Having the Tutorial kids mark the beginning of my Spring Fair experience for the past two years has been a tradition that I adore because it really puts me in a state of mind to enjoy all the little joys this weekend offers.

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In addition to Spring Fair fare, my parents and younger sister also came up to see me today and take me out to lunch. My little sister won a First Place Gavel Award at a Model UN, so this was also a celebratory event. In addition to this lovely lunch of sorts, my parents also brought enough groceries from Trader Joe’s to make me a happy camper at least until finals.

Basically, this weekend gets an A+ in my book and at Hopkins that truly means something. All the best!

The JHU Tutorial Project

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Posted by Wafa K. | Posted on January 19, 2010


Student Organization Name: The JHU Tutorial Project

Category of Group: Community Service

Year Founded: 1958

Your Name: Wafa K

Your Year: Class of 2012

Your Position: Organizer

Website: http://www.jhu.edu/csc/tutorialproject.shtml

Trevor, Malik and Malik

One of the most meaningful and fulfilling activities that I participate in at Hopkins is the Johns Hopkins Tutorial Project. The Johns Hopkins Tutorial Project is an “after-school tutoring program for elementary school children in Baltimore City” and is one of the most inspiring activities I have been a part of ever, and that I get to witness twice a week. The Tutorial Project was founded in 1958, making it the longest-running program of its kind in Baltimore, and since its inception has served more than 5,000 kids.


Leverin2 I choose to become involved in the Tutorial Project because it was one of the many things that initially attracted me to coming to Hopkins in the first place. Having an organization of this nature that runs for over fifty years requires dedication and passion that is synonymous with the Hopkins student population. Further, it is the founding block for the Center for Social Concern where many of the socially and community-minded organizations at Hopkins find their home.

The Tutorial Project encompasses approximately 100 children that come to the Homewood campus twice a week either by bus or by their families, and each child has their own tutor.  The tutors, who are trained at the beginning of each semester, offer individual help in reading, math, science, geography etc. The tutors plan an hour of activities and educational games based on their unique child, based on assessments conducted at the beginning of the semester.

The people that conduct those assessments, and who are imperative to the smooth operation of the Tutorial Project, are organizers. Being an Organizer, which I am, requires one to be in charge of between four to six pairs of tutee-tutor, including training of the tutor, testing at the beginning and end of the semester of each tutee, and checking on the pairs every session, as well as dealing with making snack, riding the bus, special activities, behavior problems, monitoring play time at the end of every session, etc.

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In addition to the elementary school children, this past fall semester, the Tutorial Project also began its first semester of a sister program called LEAD, which is catered to middle school kids. Instead of traditional tutoring, these students are paired with a graduate student and spend the semester developing projects in areas of academia that are of interest to them.

All Hopkins students are encouraged to become tutors. Nobody is turned away, because every additional Hopkins student we get to be a tutor means we get to say yes to another Baltimore family that wants their children in the program.

The Tutorial Project is so amazing because it epitomizes all the best things about Hopkins: encouraging academic pursuits, helping one another out, inspiring children, and giving back to the community in a touching and significant way.

Many children in the program come from tough family situations and even tougher neighborhoods, and it is the height of their week coming to the Homewood campus to interact and learn with Hopkins students. Being a part of that experience, and seeing it constantly, is indescribable and something I plan to be a part of for the rest of my time at Hopkins.

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