| Lilly Grant Supports Summer Service Jobs WHEN YOU THINK OF A college student’s 
                    typical summer job, waitressing, landscaping, and nannying 
                    might come to mind. But what about church-planting in inner-city 
                    communities, providing medical care to homeless populations, 
                    or educating low-income families about nutrition? These kinds 
                    of jobs don’t always provide the income a college student 
                    needs to help pay for next year’s tuition and books. 
                    But last summer, thanks to a grant from Lilly Endowment Inc., 
                    seven ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ students were able to sidestep 
                    funding issues and answer the call to serve. “We saw a need to help students who wanted to do mission-driven 
                    summer internship
                    projects, but couldn’t afford not to have a job during 
                    the summer months,” says Career Development Center Director 
                    Jacqui Smith-Bates. Drawing from the $500,000 Lilly grant 
                    for SPU’s SERVE (Spiritual and Education Resources for 
                    Vocational Exploration) project,
                    Smith-Bates and her staff developed the Summer Service Internship 
                    Program. Chosen from a group of 21 applicants, seven students were 
                    awarded $2,000 each for part-time, unpaid internships that 
                    ranged from working with the Tacoma Health Department’s 
                    Food Stamp Interviewer Program
                    to assisting pastors to plant churches in Boston and Chicago. Junior and premed major Rachel Ellis spent her summer working 
                    closely with a doctor
                    at Outside In, a social service agency that aids homeless 
                    youth in Portland, Oregon. There she took vital signs and 
                    obtained medical
                    histories from homeless patients, and accompanied the doctor 
                    and his outreach team as they walked through downtown Portland
                    offering free medical care to those in need. Her experience 
                    was at times raw, even heartbreaking
                    — but it was also life-changing. “I’ve created a model for myself of what kind 
                    of attitude I want to have when I start my residency,” 
                    wrote Ellis, summarizing her Lilly-funded internship. “I’ve 
                    learned to make no assumptions about anyone, and how necessary
                    it is to create a professional bubble, to triage and get the 
                    job done first (because lives are at stake) — and to 
                    save the emotional surge for the ride home.” “All of the grant winners had very rich experiences,” 
                    says Smith-Bates. “We’re seeking
                    permanent funding for this. It’s one more way we can 
                    help SPU students find their vocational calling.” Back to the topBack to Home
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