PWSC and National Park Service collaborate to provide internships to students

by Vicki Heisser  |   

Prince William Sound College and Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve have been working together through an internship program that helps students and the community. PWSC interviewed Carrie Wittmer, the team lead for the Division of Interpretation & Education at Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve, to learn more about PWSC and NPS’s collaborative efforts.

PWSC: What do Prince William Sound College (PWSC) and Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve (NPS) do together?

Carrie: We have a Prince William Sound College/Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve Outdoor Recreation Planner Internship Program.  Every summer, a PWSC outdoor leadership student works closely with park staff learning park planning, interpretation of law and policy, and basic land management principles.  

PWSC and NPS also work together throughout the year on local community initiatives with the PWSC Copper Basin Extension Center.  The Copper Basin Extension Center convened the Copper Basin Youth Partnership Forum to assist the NPS and other community organizations with youth programming collaboration.  Both the NPS and PWSC collaborate with the Wrangell Institute for Science and the Environment (WISE), a local environmental education organization, on hosting professional storytellers, scientists, cultural experts, and historians for a lecture series about the Copper River Basin.  Additionally, both NPS and PWSC participate in a variety of other efforts to build community, provide services and resources to community members, and participate in shared stewardship of public lands. 

PWSC: Why is collaboration important?

Carrie: We all care about this amazing place we call home.  I'm constantly inspired by the beauty, wildness, wildlife, and community-oriented people who live here.  And it takes work to keep this place beautiful, wild, and thriving.  No one organization has the staff, money, or time to do everything that needs to be done.  The way we get things done is by sharing ideas, working together, and leveraging the resources we can contribute.   

PWSC: How is this collaboration beneficial to our community? 

Carrie: The end result of this collaboration, not just between PWSC and the NPS, but with local area governmental organizations, non-profits, and tribal organizations, is a series of opportunities for youth and community members.  Opportunities to learn about this place; practice customary and traditional land uses; hear stories from experts and elders; and grow into jobs and activities that contribute to sustainable stewardship of this amazing place we call home.