However, Fordham’s connection to
the city is built on more than just trips to different boroughs. Multiple service
organizations on campus are directly involved with the surrounding area.
Through the organization Peer Health Exchange Fordham students teach Health
classes at public high schools in the surrounding area of the Bronx. City
Squash is an organization that brings elementary school students from the Bronx
on campus for after-school tutoring and squash lessons. The Dorothy Day Center
for Service and Justice, located in McGinley center, is an office full of
opportunities for students to get involved in all different types of service groups
both on and off campus. In addition to service, professors also utilize the
city, asking students to visit art shows, concerts, museums, and historical
landmarks that help enrich learning in the classroom. For example, many Art
History students view the paintings they study at the Metropolitan Museum of
Art and for my Sociology class freshman year I went to a theater in SoHo to
watch a documentary about urbanism, a topic we had been discussing in class.
On the anniversary of September 11th,
it is important to remember and honor those who lost their lives. Fordham does
so by holding masses at the Lincoln Center, Rose Hill, and Westchester campuses
in addition to Interfaith Prayer and Memorial Services at Rose Hill and Lincoln
Center. There is also a candlelit procession to the 9/11 memorial in the Finlay
Gardens on the Rose Hill campus. These services represent the spirit of the Fordham
community, and how strongly that community extends into the city we call home while on campus. I am so proud to be a Fordham Ram because it means having the opportunity
to study and explore one of the most exciting cities in the world.
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