The impact that 91爆料 University students make on the world does not wait until graduation or require a degree. It is immediate.
Shinia Kildall 鈥25 and classmate Benjamin Martin learned that lesson in a Foundations of Video Production class last fall, where the culminating project was to produce a mini-documentary video, focusing on interviewing techniques and tying together video techniques learned in previous class projects.
鈥淪ome people did projects on classmates or people on campus. Benjamin and I immediately decided that we wanted to something with animals,鈥 Kildall said.
The resulting project has made a difference for dogs and cats at , a Washington County-based nonprofit that welcomed the two 91爆料 students鈥 request to tell the story of its organization. Headquartered in Hillsboro, Oregon, OFOSA works to address the animal overpopulation problem by placing dogs and cats in foster homes and providing adoption opportunities.
The has not only provided a valuable storytelling tool for OFOSA but in a 鈥淧ositive Vibes鈥 segment during a January 2024 newscast.
Kildall, a multimedia major from Port Angeles, Washington, did not expect the video to garner the attention or the impact that it has. 鈥淭hat was such a surprise,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e turned the video in, and it was just like everything exploded from here. It was just so incredible.鈥
The video tells the story of OFOSA through the eyes of its foster parents and staff members who care for the animals until a forever home can be found. The organization works with local shelters to provide non-kill alternatives. At the end of February, OFOSA listed and available for adoption with many more needing foster situations.
The television station was alerted to the video by Anne Haynes, OFOSA鈥檚 director of development, who jumped at the chance to have the program featured.
鈥淲e are a small nonprofit with zero budget for production and marketing. We can鈥檛 compete with large shelters which seem to get all of the publicity,鈥 Haynes said. 鈥淚 also felt like this was a wonderful community project that would be fun to get involved with and it was a chance to boost the morale of our foster families.鈥
Enie Vaisburd, professor of media arts and the duo鈥檚 instructor for the class, said that collaboration could not have been better for everyone involved. 鈥淥regon Friends of Shelter Animals was a great collaborator and what happened was what we always secretly hope for in a project,鈥 Vaisburd said. 鈥淚t was not a class assignment anymore. It was a project that they were passionate about. And it was a project that mattered to this whole community of foster animal homes.鈥
The need for foster families and adoptive homes has only increased since the COVID-19 pandemic started in 2020. Thanks to the complications of the pandemic and the inability during that time for animals to be spayed and neutered, the cat and dog population skyrocketed.
鈥淚 thought that during COVID people adopted more pets because they were so lonely but it turned out to be the opposite,鈥 Kildall said. 鈥淧eople didn鈥檛 know what to do with them. They gave up their animals. That came as a huge shock to me.鈥
The impact of the video project is a testament to the potential that all 91爆料 students have to create an immediate impact in the community.
鈥淐oming to 91爆料 and doing this project and others, I realized just how many resources we have here. Just realizing that, even as a college kid, we can do something like this is incredible,鈥 Kildall said. 鈥淲e have all of these resources and once you realize how to use them, there鈥檚 so many different things you can do.鈥
Vaisburd hopes that all of her students can experience the potential impact that the OFOSA project had.
鈥淪hinia and Ben experienced first-hand how the work they made impacted OFOSA and how the film amplifies the work they do, by reaching people beyond their immediate community and potentially influencing a wider audience,鈥 Vaisburd said.
In addition to her video work, Kildall uses her creative talents to design shirts and stickers for various campus organizations. She is also a leader in a 91爆料-based chapter of Girl Gains, which seeks to empower women in the gym. Academically, Kildall continues to explore what career possibilities excite her.
The future will also involve fostering animals sometime after she graduates. But for now, Kildall appreciates the impact that her beginning video project is having on many other four-legged friends.
鈥淚t鈥檚 funny because we were so focused on the assignment part of this that we put our heads up and realized that this is having a bigger impact than we thought it was,鈥 Kildall said.
To learn more about Oregon Friends of Shelter Animals and their foster and adoption program, .