New Issue of Participant Asks: What Does Community Engagement Look Like?

The fall 2024 magazine celebrates the work of several Pitzer people and organizations, past and present

Fall magazine issue cover sits on a desk with a cup of coffee and plant

As Annie Voss ’26 declares in the new fall issue of Participant magazine, community engagement is so central to Pitzer College’s identity that the student experience would be incomplete without it.

That is why this new issue takes a close look at the engagement pillar of the College’s core values and how it’s visible on campus today. The greatest takeaway here might be the simplest: At Pitzer, community engagement has many faces.

Some of our central players include the Robert Redford Conservancy for Southern California Sustainability, and the Community Engagement Center and CASA Pitzer, both of which are celebrating their 25th anniversaries this year.

But there are additional programs and organizations that are having a real impact on surrounding communities. These include the Justice Education Initiative. We offer a profile of Romarilyn Ralston ’14, who took the helm of the Justice Education Center as senior director earlier this year.

In the new issue, we also look at the efforts of Micah Huang ’13, who is responding to Asian hate crimes through music and as director this summer of the Los Angeles Hungry Ghost Festival. Professor of Asian American Studies Kathy Yep shows us how she introduces students to the ancient Chinese practice of Qì gōng, which lays a critical foundation for building community. Kelly Heimdahl ’20 describes her effort to start a partnership with Claremont-based ConductAbility after enrolling at Pitzer as a New Resources student. 

While Voss, Alex Wise ’24, and Andrea Robinowitz ’25 describe the inspiring, unexpected impact of getting involved in community work, our profiles of Isa Iqbal ’26 and Sammy Basa ’25 demonstrate how some students are taking Pitzer’s spirit of community engagement to other parts of the world.

At Pitzer, there isn’t a single way to conduct community engagement. We hope this issue serves as a starting point for your exploration of the College’s many groups and organizations that are helping students put their social justice values into action.

Read the fall 2024 issue of Participant magazine

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