UC Merced Connect: Students take on translation for Valley Crisis Center
In the fall semester, UC Merced senior lecturer Virginia Adán-Lifante offered extra credit to students who volunteered to translate a portion of the Valley Crisis Center website into Spanish.
The opportunity reflected Adán-Lifante’s long-standing commitment to service learning. On a campus that strongly values public service, volunteers were motivated less by the classroom reward than by the chance to help the center, which advocates for change and provides services to those affected by domestic violence and sexual assault.
“I really liked the cause,” said Lourdes Diaz, a sophomore mechanical engineering major from Bakersfield. “If I can help out on a translation for a company that helps out other people, then I will do it.”
Diaz is one of seven students in Adán-Lifante’s two Spanish classes who accepted and completed the work for the Merced-based center. Adán-Lifante said she always tries to provide an opportunity for her students to connect with the community.
“I want my students to do some kind of service learning,” she said. In the past, students in her classes have worked with autistic children, spent time as tutors and helped out at the Fairmead community center.
Last summer, Adán-Lifante reached out to the Valley Crisis Center while teaching a class about domestic violence in Hispanic culture. By the fall semester, she and the center’s program director, Meghan Kehoe, had agreed on a translation project.
Kehoe said the nonprofit center is creating a Spanish-language version of its English website. It’s an important project, she said, because about 70 percent of the center’s clientele is Spanish-speaking.
Students from Adán-Lifante’s two fall classes – Hispanic cultures and Spanish linguistics – took on the task of translating the “How We Help” section of the website. In addition to Diaz, the volunteers were Rocio Medrano Calderon, Kevin Salinas, Yarikza Comparan, Mayra Reyes, Elvy Banuelos and Jessica Avalos.
Medrano, a sophomore biology major from Bakersfield, wanted to help because she understands the difficulty in comprehending the written form of another language.
“I know the struggle,” said Medrano, whose first language is Spanish.
For the project, Adán-Lifante assigned specific portions of the “How We Help” section to each student. She then reviewed their work to ensure that the translation, grammar and spelling were correct. It wasn’t a simple project.
“It was extremely difficult, because there was a lot of legal translation,” she said. “It was a very involved project.”
Kehoe said the students’ work was invaluable. Without their help, she said, staff members might have been pulled away from clients to do the work.
In addition, the project allowed for an educational opportunity and more conversation about domestic violence. Historically, she said, those discussions take place behind closed doors.
The center is continuing to work on the Spanish version of its website, Kehoe said, and she may again ask for help from UC Merced.
“I’m beyond thrilled to have this resource,” she said.
Stem cell talk in Modesto
UC Merced professor Kara E. McCloskey will speak this week about cardiovascular stem cell engineering as part of the Modesto Area Partners in Science lecture series.
The free talk will begin at 7:30 p.m. Friday in Sierra Hall 132 at the Modesto Junior College West Campus. It’s open to anyone 12 and older.
McCloskey, a founding professor in the School of Engineering, uses stem cells to cultivate cardiac and vascular tissue aimed at creating tissues that function the same as those found in the body. In Friday’s presentation, she’ll cover the work of her research team and provide background on stem cell fundamentals, cell sourcing and techniques for tissue engineering of cardiovascular materials.
“It’s exciting to share what our lab is doing and the practical applications of our research,” McCloskey said. “The field of regenerative medicine is still in its infancy and opportunities for careers in this field will continue to grow.”
UC Merced Connect is a collection of news items written by the University Communications staff. To contact them, email communications@ucmerced.edu.
This story was originally published January 29, 2015 at 7:28 PM with the headline "UC Merced Connect: Students take on translation for Valley Crisis Center."