No lectern, no laptop? No problem for Trojans and their teachers hiking on SoCal’s scenic trails
Ask the average college student: “What’s your best memory involving a professor?”
“Sitting near a waterfall munching on trail mix” probably won’t be the common response.
But for a growing number of Trojans, it could well be something along those lines. Some 800 have hiked Southern California’s scenic canyons and mountain trails alongside faculty thanks to a student-run program called Peaks and Professors.
Billed as the nation’s first organization dedicated to fostering relationships between students and academics in the great outdoors, the club dovetails with USC’s increasing focus on residential life — specifically, the idea that a great deal of learning takes place through interactions not involving a lectern or a laptop.
“USC is not just about being in a classroom and only focused on curriculum,” said Darren Ruddell, assistant professor of spatial sciences at USC Dornsife, who headed up two Peaks and Professors hikes last year. “It’s also about relationship-building, friendships, mentor-mentee relationships, getting input on anything, free time to bounce ideas off each other.”
Happy trails and fresh air
The format is simple: One professor and up to a dozen students spend the better part of a Saturday or Sunday rambling along a trail, filling their lungs with fresh air, talking about whatever comes to mind. No syllabus. No grades. No pressure.
With 83 hikes completed — nine of them overnight camping trips — it’s hard to believe this club has only been around three years.
Students make their way across Solstice Canyon.
Peaks and Professors recently reached a new pinnacle when it received the Tommy’s Award as 2015–16 Student Organization of the Year at a ceremony hosted by the Division of Student Affairs.
The award came as club founders Allegra Bishop, Adrienne Visani and Jack Koppa themselves prepared to hit the trail. All three graduated in May — Bishop and Visani from USC Dornsife and Koppa from USC School of Cinematic Arts.
A hiker’s guide to college
Peaks and Professors was the brainchild of Bishop. A human biology major and lifelong hiker, she was looking for a way to connect with her professors outside lectures, labs and office hours.
“It can be kind of hard to open that door, both figuratively and literally,” said the Trustee Scholar from Montana.
She dreamed up the idea of inviting professors along on hikes. The “aha moment” happened while hiking in Alaska with her dad the summer after her freshman year. A month later, Bishop recruited Visani and Koppa as co-founders. Peaks and Professors launched in fall 2013 with four student trip leaders and four hikes offered that first semester.
In three years, the pool of certified trip leads has grown to 24, and the number of trips they organize has mushroomed to 34 per semester — as many as five on some weekends.
What hasn’t grown is the size of the actual hiking groups. Each is still restricted to 10 students, one or two trip leads and a professor. Participants share the cost of gas, which usually runs $5 and $8 per person. No membership is required. Sign-ups are first-come, first-served, and demand is extremely high.
“When we open new trips on the website, they fill up within the first couple of minutes,” Visani said.
Participating professors have included Jesse Unruh Institute of Politics Director Dan Schnur, entrepreneurship expert Adlai Wertman and anthropology power-couple Erin Moore and Craig Stanford.
“We never really have to push professors to come on trips,” Bishop said. “They always seem happy to be chosen.”
Big fans
Administrators like Ainsley Carry, vice president of student affairs, Erin Quinn, USC Dornsife associate dean for science and health, and Visions and Voices Director Daria Yudacufski have also headlined recent trips.
USC Dornsife’s Rebecca Broyer and Brett Sheehan are among Peaks and Professors’ biggest fans. Both have been the club’s faculty advisers since its inception and have gone on multiple hikes.
Broyer, assistant professor who teaches high-demand courses like general and organic chemistry, really appreciates the casual back-and-forth with students. “In my lectures we don’t get a chance to do that because of the large size of the classes,” she said.
Sheehan, professor of history and East Asian languages and cultures, finds that hiking is conducive to conversations about the “big, exciting, important things,” but he added, “I’m open to any topic that a student wants to talk about.”
Ruddell, an expert in geospatial technologies, liked his first day-hike to Will Rogers State Park in 2015 so much that he signed up for an overnighter to Devil’s Punchbowl in the Angeles National Forest the following November.
“We had a great time,” he said. “We got some exercise and also some appreciation for where we live. All those things make Peaks and Professors really nice.”
Though the group’s three founders are graduating, incoming club president Thomas Donovan, a business administration major, plans to continue growing Peaks and Professors with more trip leads and more hikes.