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Student Work Gallery

All work shared with student consent. Contact SAS Lab for more information. 


Henry Wallace (Environmental Studies, UG), Sara Fleming (Geography, Master’s student) & the whole Spring 2025 lab

In Spring 2025, the SAS Lab interns worked together to design a StoryMap of the state of Colorado’s Mobile Home Parks. This project was suggested by the Office of Environmental Justice in the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment to feature new laws to protect water supplies and ongoing challenges with repairing communities after climate-related disasters when residents don’t own the land beneath their homes. Henry took the lead in creating the design, researching historical archives, finding a relevant map, and more. We found out Sara Fleming, enrolled in the Foundations of Environmental Justice graduate class, already had interviews with residents and compelling research on mobile home parks in Colorado, which she kindly shared. Independently, students found SAS Lab member extraordinaire Anthony Albidrez’s photography, which we attribute and asked permission to use. Many of us connected to this story had family or ourselves had lived in a mobile home park for some time—making the work meaningful on another level as well. As affordable housing remains a challenge for most in Colorado and beyond, we all were very proud to work on this story.

 

“All Labor Involves Care”: Communicating Care. Podcast audio waves with the podcast’s icon, a brown hand holding up the earth wearing red headphones.

Anthony Albidrez (Journalism graduate student) 

The SAS Lab welcomes people just starting out, as well as experts seeking meaningful high impact learning experiences. The SAS Lab might not exist without Anthony’s extraordinary storytelling skills. Anthony joined us as someone with talents and extensive experience in journalism and photojournalism already. He has edited most of our podcasts and lead the production of most of the ArcGIS StoryMaps to date. Professor Pezzullo first met him in her graduate course on Environmental Justice Foundations in 2022. Ever since, he has shared his expertise, including a training for the SAS Lab, and, of course, his sass.

Alysia Abbas (Major: Communication Studies, Minor: Atmospheric & Oceanic Sciences) 

In Professor Pezzullo's undergraduate course on Climate Justice Storytelling, students were given an option to craft a creative extension of the Colorado Enviroscreen StoryMaps (also a SAS Lab project), Alysia Abbas (CU Boulder COMM '25), who grew up in North Denver, created a zine about noise pollution. Then, in Spring 2025, she was an intern in the SAS Lab with the support of the CU Boulder Office for Public and Community-Engaged Scholarship and created a second zine on air pollution. Both zines showcase her background in communication and environmental sciences, as well as her sassy creativity. 

Corrina Schell (Major: Environmental Studies and Economics) 

A SAS Lab intern with the support of the CU Boulder Office for Public and Community-Engaged Scholarship, as a junior, she coordinated graduate students to lead a project on environmental education, incorporating feedback from state government experts, peers, the SAS Lab Director, and elementary aged children. Under her leadership and patience, the SAS Lab was able to create educational interactive coloring and activity sheets for youth ages 5-12 years old living in Colorado. This Word Find was inspired by the San Luis Valley. We look forward to developing more environmental educational materials in the future.

This is a Word Find exercise with terms reflecting the San Luis Valley, such as Sanddunes, Acequias, water, and farm.

Nicole Sansglyph (Major: Bachelor’s of Fine Arts, Minors: Communication and Art & Art History) 

In Professor Pezzullo's undergraduate course on Climate Justice Storytelling, students were given an option to craft a creative extension of the Colorado Enviroscreen StoryMaps (also a SAS Lab project). Nicole was inspired by what she learned about North Denver and created “Desire Path” (11 pages, Acrylic on Paper, 7.75” x 11”). From her artist’s statement: "Desire Path seeks to connect the concept of desire paths to community building, a desire path emerges when people repeatedly choose to leave sidewalks in favor of more direct routes. These paths are local and organic, maintained by the collective agreement of a community seeking a better way. . . In the context of this November 2024, I am reflecting on what it means to be part of a community. By highlighting the initiatives in North Denver, I am following my own desire path—a journey of reflection and understanding the roots of social change.”