Nebraskaland

July 2024 Nebraskaland

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: http://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1523285

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July 2024 • Nebraskaland 47 Instagram. "I had the idea, the vision, that I'm creating this stuff so other kids who look like me are able to see someone that's in the industry and doing it, and they feel comfortable and confident to go out and do it themselves," he said. However, Riley had little engagement to his videos. So, in 2023 he pivoted to hands- on education. Riley and other members of the Minorities in Agriculture, Natural Resources and Related Sciences club at UNL had worked with the Malone Community Center in Lincoln on a series of educational sessions, including wildlife identification and calls, ecosystems and agriculture. Staff asked if they could do more, and when Riley returned from studying abroad in Costa Rica in 2023, he developed an eight-week summer program. With the help of friends and Malone staff, kids learned about wildlife, the food chain, ecosystems in Nebraska and conservation storytelling. They learned about camping and took a field trip to set up tents, build a fire and make s'mores. They helped clean up trash around Holmes Lake. And they learned about fishing, later taking another field trip to a private pond near Lincoln where every kid who went caught a fish. During the spring semester, he worked with the Lincoln Community Learning Center to put on after-school programs at three Lincoln schools. Riley is working with the Malone Center again this summer. "We have a lot of kids who love going outside and love being outdoors but don't really have the education or the parental guidance to learn or experience what is right in their backyard of Lincoln," said Cristian Clinton, youth supervisor at the center. "Elijah loves doing what he does. He does great with the kids. He takes his time with the lesson plans, so being able to see that and then see the kids gravitate toward the lessons and the things that he's teaching them is just something that we loved and want to continue doing here at the Malone Center. He's left a lasting impression on some of our kids for sure." Next Steps Riley is working to establish a nonprofit through which he will deliver these environmental education programs, and he has even grander aspirations. He hopes within three years he can have the program in every elementary, middle and high school in Lincoln, and that some of the younger students who participate will become mentors when they get older. From there, he hopes to expand to schools in Omaha and beyond. Eventually, he hopes the program will grow to the point that it can be his full-time job — his career. His enjoyment of the outdoors and the pleasure of seeing kids enjoy his programs are what drives him. That was evident during a fishing trip he took with the Malone Center students last summer, when all 14 kids caught a fish, most of them their first. Riley, with the help of fellow UNL students, managed the chaos with patience and ease. "It was just so much fun to see their excitement," Riley said. "That right there reminded me of all those times when I was a kid, catching fish with my dad and just being on the highest level, on cloud nine, just excited. And seeing those kids go through that same thing re-sparked those emotions, and it makes me happy." N Riley and Kyndall Hudson help Jeremiah Davis and Monnie and Adonis Garrett and other students set up a tent during an after-school program at Everett Elementary School in Lincoln. A Lasting Impact Hunters and anglers are predominantly white, making up more than 77 and 75 percent of the participants, respectively. African Americans make up 11 percent of hunters and anglers nationally. Just 4 percent of African Americans hunt and 12 percent fish, compared to 6 percent and 17 percent of whites. Participation among Hispanics also trails whites, while a greater proportion of Asian Americans hunt and fish. Elijah Riley's work could help change those numbers in Nebraska. But even if it doesn't, it will make a lasting impact for those he's teaching and mentoring.

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