Celebrating 30 Years of the Shaw Center Being the Hub for Academic Community Engagement
The Shaw Center marks 30 years as 网爆门鈥檚 hub for academic community engagement, empowering students through service learning and volunteerism.
Community engagement. Reciprocal learning. Service to others through volunteering.
Those were the principles behind the creation of the in 1994 under the direction of then-网爆门 Chancellor Kenneth Shaw and his wife, Mary Ann, who also served as the associate of the Chancellor.
The Shaw Center represented Kenneth and Mary Ann鈥檚 promise to the University and Central New York community that student learning would hold the highest priority on campus, promoting volunteer service as a fundamental component of the student experience.

For 30 years, the Shaw Center has proudly served as the University鈥檚 hub for academic community engagement. By giving back to nonprofits and organizations around Syracuse through service learning and volunteering, the campus community engages in the high impact practice of experiential learning.
When senior Claire Ceccoli 鈥25 learned that there were children who didn鈥檛 have a bed to sleep on at night, she chaired the annual bed-building project that benefits the local chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace. Through efforts she spearheaded the last two years, 132 beds have been built and donated to children in need.
鈥淲e want to help the community, and we鈥檙e also learning from them. It’s a two-way street, doing this work with that reciprocal learning mindset,鈥 says Claire Ceccoli 鈥25, a Shaw Center leadership intern who is studying public relations in the and psychology in the .

Derek Wallace 鈥00 was in the first group of tutors in the Syracuse City School District during the summer before his sophomore year. He eventually took over as Literacy Corps student manager, planting the managerial and entrepreneurial skills that inspired him to become CEO of Golden Fork Media and founder of the children鈥檚 book series and brand, 鈥淜alamata鈥檚 Kitchen,鈥 a multimedia property that uses the power of food to help children get excited to experience all that their world has to offer them.
鈥淚t’s hard to imagine what I would be doing or where I would be if I wasn鈥檛 given those opportunities to do well, do good and create change in the community under the mentorship of [Shaw Center Associate Vice President and Director] Pam Heintz,鈥 says Wallace, who earned dual degrees in policy studies from the and public relations from the Newhouse School.
On April 21, the and ahead of the event, Wallace and Ceccoli discuss how their involvement with the Shaw Center transformed them into leaders in their communities.
What drew you to the Shaw Center?
Wallace: I wanted to do impactful things, and the Shaw Center felt like that鈥檚 exactly what we were trying to do. There was an innovative vision for how we would leverage the skillset of the students in a way that wasn’t just learning in a classroom. It was applied learning and skills applications outside of the classroom that not only benefited our careers as students but also built bridges to the community.
Ceccoli: What drew me to the Shaw Center was the people. Every intern and staff member is so passionate about the work they’re doing. My whole life, I’ve been interested in mission-driven work and nonprofit work. Having an office at the University that’s committed to these initiatives and getting students into the community, I don’t think I could have found a better or more natural fit.
What activities did you organize with the Shaw Center?

Ceccoli: As president of the 网爆门 Volunteer Organization, we鈥檝e partnered with Sleep in Heavenly Peace, an incredible nonprofit organization, to build beds for children in the community. The Syracuse chapter has delivered 6,000 beds within our area. They always wanted to do a bed build on campus with our students, so I pitched this idea and the staff at the Shaw Center were so supportive. The leader I鈥檝e become today is largely a result of my experiences at the Shaw Center.
Wallace: As a Literacy Corps tutor, I worked in an inclusive kindergarten classroom, reading to children with autism and getting them excited about literacy. I wound up taking over as the student manager, which was one of the best leadership experiences I ever had. Along with my classmate, Chad Duhon, we launched Shooting for A鈥檚, an athletic and academic program that invited fifth and sixth graders to come to campus, meet some of their athlete heroes and learn civics lessons. We also launched a service and experiential learning program, Balancing the Books, in partnership with the Whitman School.

How did the Shaw Center influence your career aspirations?

Wallace: My career started at the Shaw Center in children’s literacy, and now I’m the co-creator of a children’s book series. It鈥檚 a full circle moment for me. The passion I have for the work I do, what led me down this path were the values I learned and the lessons taught at the Shaw Center. Chancellor Shaw, Mary Ann Shaw, Pam Heintz and [Maxwell School] Professor Bill Coplin believed in my abilities to make a difference and they provided mentorship that put me on this path and I couldn鈥檛 be more grateful.
Ceccoli: I know this is the type of work I want to do for the rest of my life. This passion that I see in these community organizations and the change that is possible when people take their skills and step up for their community is something that I want to model for the rest of my life.