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NEW
STUDENT TRUSTEE CONTINUES TO "EXPLORE" COMMUNITY AND PUBLIC SERVICE
When
she was 15 years old, then-Corona del Mar High School student Heather Larson
joined the Newport Beach Police Explorers program. While this is but one of
many leadership opportunities she has taken advantage of so far in her young
life, Larson said it is the one that has had the most influence in shaping her
future.
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CONTACT:
Erin Cohn
District Director,
Public Affairs
(714) 438-4605
June 24, 2004
NEWS
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“
It’s the reason I am me,” Larson said. “That program really formed me to be a
leader and to follow through on my commitments. It really makes you more
confident. You get discipline in your life. They try to promote you and commend
the positive things you’re doing.”
For
three years Larson was among 3,000 other young Explorer volunteers providing
community service and support to the Newport Beach Police Department. As part
of her duties, she often would rise at 4 or 5 a.m. on a Saturday or Sunday
morning to direct traffic and provide assistance at community events like the
Race for the Cure and the March of Dimes fundraising event.
“
You really are benefiting the community,” she said. “The experience really
shaped me and made me want to make a difference in the community. I just can’t
say enough about that program.”
Now,
all grown up and about to turn 20 years old on July 9, Larson is continuing to
make a difference. Her latest assignment is representing 60,000 community
college students as the student member of the Coast Community College District
Board of Trustees.
Larson,
who begins her second year at Orange Coast College in the fall, was selected in
May to serve as the 2004-05 student trustee by the district-wide student
council. The council includes three student representatives from each of the
three colleges in the District – Coastline Community College, Golden West
College and Orange Coast College.
Among
her duties as student trustee, Larson will meet with the district student
council on a monthly basis to discuss student issues to bring before the board.
Though the student trustee is a non-voting member of the board, Larson has all
other rights and privileges of a trustee, including the ability to make and
second motions and engage in discussions. Larson will serve a one-year term,
ending in May 2005.
Larson
lives in Newport Beach with her mother, Valerie, and her 13-year-old sister,
Jennifer. As a graduating senior at Corona del Mar High School in 2003, she was
the recipient of the OCC Emerging Leader Award, an award given to six high
school seniors each year for excellent leadership skills and service.
Graduating
from high school with more than 600 hours of community service on the books may
have had something to do with her receiving that award. In addition to the
Explorers, Larson has participated in numerous community service activities,
including volunteering at Mariners Church, representing Swedish American youth
in Southern California through the Vasa District Lodge, and participating in a
Swedish folk dancing group. At OCC, she is a member of the OCC Extended
Opportunity Programs & Services (EOPS) Honors Club and the Outdoor
Adventure Club.
Larson
also finds time between community activities to pursue her academic goals. At
OCC, she is working towards a double major in communications and public
relations and advertising. When she has completed her course work at OCC, she
plans to transfer to Chapman University in Orange, so that she can continue her
education and remain in Orange County.
During
her first year at OCC, Larson also got involved in student government. She said
the experiences co-chairing the scholarship committee and serving on the ASOCC
budget committee were different than anything she has ever done before. As a
student leader at a college, she had the sense that she was truly making
decisions that would affect the lives of other students.
“
We made decisions on a budget that was more than three-quarters of a million
dollars!” she said. “As students, we really were in control. And we were
actually helping people.”
Larson
says she became interested in serving as the District Student Trustee because
she wanted to have an impact on student life throughout the District.
“
This is an opportunity to have the colleges come together to make things happen
for students,” Larson said. “There are things we can do that can really benefit
students.”
In addition, Larson, who was officially sworn in to her new role on June 16, is
enjoying serving in this new leadership role as an adult.
“
I’m really excited about doing this job,” she said. “It’s a neat experience.
Having adults listen to someone who is a teenager is something you don’t hear
of very often.”
The Coast Community College District is the seventh largest community college
district in the nation in credit enrollment, serving 55,000 students each
semester. The district is
comprised of Coastline Community College headquartered in Fountain Valley,
Golden West College in Huntington Beach, Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa,
and KOCE-TV, the district’s public broadcasting station.
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