Showing posts with label cute kitten. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cute kitten. Show all posts

01 April 2015

"FURRI" Friends on Campus

Kittens for All First-Year Students





1st year student Emily Hobbes and Lucy Lou



This fall, Schenectady County Community College students will get more than their textbooks and ID's on their first day. They’ll get kittens.


SCCC is proud to announce the Feline-Undergraduate Relationship for Retention Initiative, or FURRI. This innovative approach – the first of its kind in the nation – seeks to help each first-year student adjust to college life with the help of a furry friend.


“We encourage our incoming students to care about our campus, the community around us, and each other. Adding cats to the mix will simply enhance the expectation of civility, a sense of community and shared responsibility,” says Robyn King, Acting Director of Wellness and Support Services. 

“Also, research has shown that caring for an animal helps to reduce blood-pressure, stress how often one gets sick and increases focus and concentration."  All positive benefits for a college student.


King says she is excited to implement FURRI alongside the existing slate of new-student support programs.


"We seek to start our new students off strong at SCCC," King says."We have programs in place to ease the transition into college life, and the FURRI program provides a strong complement to those programs."


Kitten distribution will be seamlessly integrated into New Student Orientation. First-years will choose their new kittens in the Activity Forum in Elston Hall, which will be fully converted into the permanent home for the FURRI Program.
2nd year student Caitlin Garfield 
with Mister Wuffles




Students will select among a variety of kitten options, such as tabbies, torties and tigers. Thanks to a generous collaboration with the Animal Protective Foundation in Scotia, kittens as young as 8 weeks old will be available, as well as older cats for students who wish for a more mature feline companion.


For students unable to pick up their kittens during the FURRI office hours, the College store has graciously offered to combine kitten distribution with their textbook pick-up service.

For first-years who are allergic to cats or otherwise averse to kitten ownership, FURRI will offer hedgehogs, geckos and teacup pigs as pet alternatives.

“Whatever a student’s kitten or small-animal-related need, we'll meet it,” says Tom Katzen, volunteer FURRI program coordinator. “Our staff is prepared to answer questions, offer support and seek solutions.”


In conjunction with the FURRI program, staff from the SCCC Institutional Research office have spent the past year studying the effects of cat ownership on well-being, positive social behaviors and civility on campus. Their results so far indicate that kittens rank extremely high on the happiness to civility matrix .

To prepare for the full FURRI launch, a select group of SCCC students has been testing the kitten-ownership plan since Fall 2014.


“Having Mister Wuffles in my life has dramatically enhanced my college experience,” says Caitlin Garfield, a second year Paralegal student from Albany who lives in the Stockade. “I take him to basketball games, we hang out in the main lounge, we do everything together. Except for chemistry lab.”

Spader
(photo by Heathcliff Mew)

Heathcliff Meo of the Bronx, says caring for his grey tiger, Spader, has made his first year at the SCCC a success.


“Leaving home was a huge deal for me, and I had to leave my cat Sylvester behind. I wasn’t sure I was ready and was homesick from the first day here,” Meo says. “But once I got Spader, everything changed. SCCC feels more like home now.  I think this program is really great.”

Robyn King is eager to use the next few Fall semesters to gather more data regarding the well-being of student cat owners and their graduation rates compared to previous students who did not own a pet.  She plans to write a book based on her findings.

"I'm so excited about this venture.  The working title for my book is April Fools!" 



Gotcha.

 

 

Source:  http://www.uidaho.edu/newsevents/features/kittens-for-all
(c) Copyright 2015 Robyn M. King. All Rights Reserved.

02 June 2014

June is National Adopt-A-Cat Month

 WARNING!  
CUTE KITTEN ALERT!
CUTE KITTEN ALERT!
[Don't say I didn't warn you...]




Each spring during “kitten season,” thousands of newborn kittens join the millions of cats already in shelters across the country. That means your local shelter has tons of cute, cuddly newborns, in addition to all the mellow, older cats and everything in between. And the shelter staff are ready to help you adopt your very first cat — or to bring home a friend for another beloved cat!

Humans reap huge health benefits from owning a cat (or other companion pet).  The Center for Disease Control confirms this.  They state:
Pets can decrease your: 
Blood pressure
Cholesterol levels
Triglyceride levels
Feelings of loneliness
 
Pets can increase your:
Opportunities for exercise and outdoor activities
Opportunities for socialization
 

Here's some advice on how to prepare to bring a new pet into your home.



CHECKLIST FOR ADOPTING A CAT:

  1. If you're thinking about adopting a cat, consider taking home two.  Cats aren't meant to be solitary critters.
  2. Find a cat whose personality compliments yours.
  3. Pick out a veterinarian ahead of time and schedule a visit within the first few days following the adoption.
  4. Make sure everyone in the house is prepared to have a cat before it comes home.
  5. Budget for the short- and long-term costs of a cat.
  6. Stock up on supplies before the cat arrives.
  7. Cat-proof your home.
  8. Go slowly when introducing your cat to new friends and family.
  9. Be sure to include your new pet in your family’s emergency plan.
  10. If you’re considering giving a cat as a gift, make sure the recipient is an active participant in the adoption process.


So...what are you waiting for????????  :)

PS:  Please send in photos of your adopted cats, and I'll make them available for all to see.


Source:  http://www.americanhumane.org/animals/programs/special-initiatives/adopt-a-cat-month/
(c) Copyright 2014 Robyn M. King. All Rights Reserved.


(c) Copyright 2014 Robyn King. All Rights Reserved