Outside-the-classroom Learning Makes a Big Difference
Putting a bunch of college students in charge of a $300,000 Dance Marathon, fundraiser surely sounds a bit risky.1 When you consider the fact that the money is supposed to be given to. Children in need of medical care, you might call the idea crazy.
Most student leaders dont want to spend a large amount of time on something they care little about, said 22-year-old University of Florida student Darren Heitner. He was the Dance Marathons operations officer for two years.
Yvonne Fangmeyer, director of the student organization office at the University of Wisconsin, conducted a survey in February of students involved in campus organizations.2 She said the desire for friendship was the most frequently cited reason for joining.
At large universities like Fangmeyers, which has more than 40,000 students, the students first of all want to find a way to belong in their own comer of campus.
Katie Rowley, a Wisconsin senior, confirms the surveys findings. I wanted to make the campus feel smaller by joining an organization where I could not only get involved on campus but also find a group of friends.
All of this talk of friendship, however, does not mean that students arent thinking about their resumes. I think that a lot of people do join to fatten up their resume, said Heitner. At the beginning of my college career, I joined a few of these organizations, hoping to get a start in my leadership roles.
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