Grantee Stories
Through panels, workshops and a poster showcase, attendees of Boulder's first ever Community Engagement Week shared experiences, networked and built their knowledge and skills for conducting community engagement.
In fire-prone communities, wildfire practitioners are often the sole advocates for making adaptations and are isolated from professional peers and researchers. A community of practice—representing 82 practitioners from eight states—convened for its second workshop to learn from one another and researchers.
Boulder held its first Community Engagement Week, exploring ways to deepen, extend public outreach moving forward
AmandaGiguere, Colorado Shakespeare Festival Director of Outreach, recently traveled to Australia as a featured guestof the University of Melbourne to share research about the Shakespeare & Violence Prevention program.
A new exhibit from We Are Water at the Alamosa Public Library focuses on place-based education and storytelling to bring together multi-generational audiences to learn and share about water in their community.
The Shakespeare & Violence Prevention program (SVP), a collaboration with the Colorado Shakespeare Festival (CSF), Theatre & Dance, and the Center for the Study and Prevention of Violence, pairs Shakespeare’s plays with violence-
Designed in collaboration with the Autism Society of Boulder County, Fiske Planetarium hosts a monthly series of free sensory-friendly experiences intended for children with autism spectrum and sensory processing disorders.
Aspiring filmmaker and Boulder senior Francesca Hiatt’s short film, Cherry Yogurt, relies on subtlety to touch on grief and support, viewed through children’s eyes
Engineering students with the Science Engineering Inquiry Collaborative in Rural Colorado (SCENIC) program developed a hands-on “erosion challenge” for K-12 students to learn about the effects of flash flooding on infrastructure.
The Marshall Fire Story Project was started to preserve the stories of people affected by the 2021 fire that killed two people and destroyed over 1,000 structures. Read from experts Kathryn Goldfarb and Lucas Rozell on The Conversation.