C2C tour brings hundreds of youth to campus

About 1,000 fifth graders from Skagit and Whatcom counties are visiting Western Washington University today, Oct. 20, to see firsthand what a university campus is like. The tour kicks off the seventh year of Compass 2 Campus, a proactive effort that sends trained WWU student mentors into schools in order to get more kids to see themselves as lifelong learners.

“Mentorship is the key. Kids who are mentored or who have a significant adult in their lives have a better chance of success. We’re reaching out to kids who may not think about graduating from high school and going on to college, encouraging them to have that vision.” said Cyndie Shepard, director of Compass 2 Campus.

To date, the innovative mentoring program has now served thousands of students from the fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, 10th and now 11thgrades in schools in Whatcom and Skagit counties. Over the past six years, Western student mentors have provided nearly 173,760 hours of mentoring service to those students.

At the tour, the fifth-graders are involved in one of 110 different tours of Western’s campus personalized to the youngsters’ interests. They will get to see the inside of real college classrooms and laboratories to glimpse what’s in store for those who are motivated to do well in school. Professors with specialties ranging from music to marine biology will open their doors to these students. A special laser show was held in the PAC in collaboration with SPIE.

The annual tour of campus is just the beginning of a long-term relationship between the fifth graders and WWU mentors.  As the fifth graders progress through middle and high school, Western Compass 2 Campus mentors continue to serve these students to offer encouragement and support to graduate from high school and pursue higher education.

More than 300 WWU students are now enrolled in the three-credit class required to become Compass 2 Campus mentors. This year, a new class, an undergraduate requirement has been added to the Compass 2 Campus course listings. Many students also have taken the continuing classes and are working on advanced projects in the schools in which they mentor students. Additional students who have already taken the class and cannot fit another into their schedule are continuing to mentor as volunteers. Mentors spend at least four hours a week in schools, engaged where teachers and administrators feel they’re needed most; some help with after-school activities while others lead small group projects or provide one-on-one academic help to struggling students.

Working with elementary through high school teachers, the WWU students learn about the students’ aspirations and talk to them about how going to college can help them reach those dreams. 

While many mentoring programs focus their efforts on youngsters who have already shown academic promise or interest, Compass 2 Campus aims to reach all youngsters – even those who may not show interest in school.

“I think we miss a lot of very bright children by just assuming that they’ll never make it because they don’t do well in school,” Cyndie Shepard said. “We typically let those kids go. We’re saying ‘We’re not letting you go.’”

District superintendents selected the schools they felt would most benefit from the program, Shepard said.

The program, launched in 2009 at Western, includes 13  area elementary schools and ten middle schools and eight high schools as well as partners from four community and technical colleges and Communities in Schools. (Participating schools are listed at the end of this release). Funding for the program primarily is from grants and private sources.

The Washington State Legislature established legislative support for the program in hopes of increasing the number of low-income students, diverse and first-generation college students in higher education.

Last year, Central Washington University opened Compass 2 Campus, encouraging their local youth to consider college in their futures, as well.  CWU partnered with Western to adopt the program.

C2C has won several prominent awards. C2C Director Cyndie Shepard was nationally recognized with a Daily Point of Light Award, which honors individuals and groups creating meaningful change in communities across America. The award was founded by former President George H. W. Bush during his presidency to engage individuals, families, businesses and groups to solve community problems through voluntary service.

The predecessor to Compass 2 Campus, Phuture Phoenix, is now in three universities in Wisconsin after starting at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. Shepard co-founded the Phuture Phoenix program several years ago at UW-Green Bay, where her husband, WWU President Bruce Shepard, was chancellor.

For more information, please visit the Compass 2 Campus Web site.

Western Today staff
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Rhys Logan / WWU
Photo by Matthew Anderson / WWU