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Liles is among the nine students from the University of Central Florida who have spent part of the summer studying technology, business and medicine in St. Kitts and Nevis.

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The trip to the West Indies was part of the President 麻豆精品 S檚 Scholars Program, which provides a study-abroad experience to students in UCF 麻豆精品 S檚 Burnett Honors College. The college has partnered with Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College in St. Kitts for more than six years for the program, which started in 2004. It was initially focused on European culture and history but evolved into a two-week trip to St. Kitts and Nevis in which students tackle service-learning and interdisciplinarity head-on.

The trip followed five weeks of lectures at UCF that focused on the challenges small island nations face.

In St. Kitts and Nevis, students built solar panels to power a hydroponics facility, developed the design for an organoponics shadehouse, led a hybridponics entrepreneurship workshop for students and completed other projects. Students also made trips to the rainforest and explored colonial-era relics in addition to presenting their work to a government panel and being featured on local television news.

For junior Lucien Charland, who is majoring in international and global studies and economics, the trip was an opportunity to take his studies outside of the classroom and apply what he 麻豆精品 S檚 learned to a real-world setting.

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In May, two alumnae of the President 麻豆精品 S檚 Scholars Program returned to Nevis with UCF professor Kevin Meehan to present their work on sustainable agriculture at the UNESCO Conference on Environmental Policy Formulation and Planning in the Caribbean Region.

Charlene Kormondy and Jessica Gottsleben presented on sustainable farming and the businesses of hydroponics, respectively, based on the research they had completed with faculty and students at Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College.

Meehan has led the President 麻豆精品 S檚 Scholars trips for the past five summers, helping students research hydroponic, organic and hybridponic agriculture and develop and install sustainable agriculture systems.

The partnership with Clarence Fitzroy Bryant College has attracted attention across the Caribbean, which Meehan says will pave the way for future UCF students to get involved with service-learning.

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