 The main thing, the most important thing for successful outreach anywhere is to ask the partner what they would like you to do. And then you say, well here's the kind of stuff that we can do with that and you begin a dialogue and you co-create the project that's going to happen. But it all comes from asking the partner what they want instead of saying, I'm teaching social justice and I want to come in and save your world. Which is, again, accidentally coming in as the oppressor, which I have done enough times that I feel strongly saying don't do that because I've learned the hard way. There are effective in the definition of what works really well and the Motley Crew, which stands for Multicultural Outreach Tour because it's been going on for 17 years. The Motley Crew is the annual tour that takes a collection of stories from around the world based on a theme for that year and tours to between 19 to 21 different elementary schools in Whatcom and Skagit County during spring quarter. And that's a really effective outreach because it only costs the amount of gas in the education system. And that's what we do a lot of outreach with. The funding isn't there, but the need is greater than ever. The funding is less than it ever has been. The need is greater than it ever has been. So the key with this community outreach is to be very clear that this is about the process. But our community outreach is very much based on service learning because it's with my students. So they are learning not just about the organizations we partner with, but they're learning how to do this kind of work with the population. And there have been many different kinds of communities that we've worked with. Some have been very successful. Some have not been. And the key is to pick yourself up and keep asking what is needed.