社区园林学生志愿者理想类型的形成

Joseph Benjamin
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摘要

社区花园(CG)是社区成员聚集在一起种植植物(通常是食物)的一块土地。从历史上看,美国的园艺项目一直是对经济冲击的回应,通过种植自己的食物来强调个人责任,以克服经济问题。通常,它们的目的包括创造社会资本和更可持续的食物选择,并在健康、教育、价值形成和经济收益等方面带来许多其他附带效益。志愿者是实现这一目标的必要条件。然而,学生志愿服务在CG中有许多挑战。大学城,包括佛罗里达州的盖恩斯维尔,有很大比例的临时大学适龄居民,因为大学在这个城市占有主导地位。这些志愿者是临时的,可能不会为社区建设做出贡献,也不会从社区建设中受益。这种情况由于城市与大学之间长期存在的紧张关系而加剧。本文从位于大学城的社区花园的实地记录和非正式访谈中得出这些问题。构建了学生志愿者的韦伯理想类型模型,确定了四个关键特征:一致性、学习意愿、社会能力和自给自足。然后,将这种理想类型的模型与花园中的现实进行比较,从而深入了解为什么大学应该培养学生志愿者,以最大限度地发挥影响,弥合城市与学位之间的鸿沟。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Student Volunteer Ideal Type Formation in Community Gardens
A community garden (CG) is a piece of land in which community members come together to grow plants, often food. Historically, gardening programs in the United States have been a response to economic shocks, emphasizing personal responsibility by growing one’s own food to overcome economic issues. Frequently, their purposes include creating social capital and more sustainable food options, with many other ancillary benefits in health, education, value formation, and financial gain. Volunteers are necessary to achieve this. However, student volunteerism in a CG carries many challenges. College towns, including Gainesville, Florida, have a large proportion of transient college-aged residents because of the dominant role that a university holds in that city. These volunteers, being transient, may not contribute to or benefit from the community building central to a CG’s purpose. This is exacerbated by a town-gown divide, the long-standing tensions between the university and the rest of a city. This paper draws from field notes and informal interviews in a community garden located in a college town to investigate these issues. A Weberian ideal type model for student volunteers is constructed, identifying four key characteristics: consistency, willingness to learn, social competency, and self-sufficiency. This ideal type model is then compared to reality in the garden, providing insight into why universities should prepare student volunteers to maximize impact and bridge the town-gown divide.
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