The Trustee Leader Scholar program supports students who design and run civic engagement projects based on their own compelling interests. These projects are local, national, and international in scope. Every student is invited at anytime to design or join a project.
Current and Past TLS Projects


















TLS Projects go near, far, and wide! Below, find examples of past and current projects, all conceived of and completed by Bard students.
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Local
- Tutor and mentor English language learners in our local elementary school
- 20 years of offering free ESL classes several nights a week at our community center
- Support the excellent Ramapo Residential, a transitional program for neurodivergent young adults
Local
- Tutor and mentor English language learners in our local elementary school
- 20 years of offering free ESL classes several nights a week at our community center
- Support the excellent Ramapo Residential, a transitional program for neurodivergent young adults
- Run Brothers@Bard, a mentoring, tutoring and college counseling program by young men of color working with their younger peers in local high schools
- Teach graphic arts and coding to a local afterschool program for youth in need
- Organize expressive arts workshops to a wide variety of constituencies, from high functioning children to adults on the spectrum
- For over 20 years support Project Unite in Hudson, NY, a youth development program that encourages students to pursue higher education…often these students are the first in their families to attend college
- Sponsor debate classes and tournaments locally
- Built the Bard Farm
- Work together to build long lasting bridges on the trails around campus
- Run the Old Gym, the fully functionally student-run black box theater at Bard
- For 25 years offered theater, science, play workshops to children at the Astor Home, a residential school for behaviorally challenged children removed from abusive homes
- Collaborate with a local foundation to support their Youth in Democracy program, supporting high school students in the region to create community-based projects in their home towns
- Teach private music lessons to dozens of children who could not otherwise afford private instruction
- Organized theme-based conferences on the Black Body Experience
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National
- Took spring break trips to a small Appalachian town to help older people renovate their houses
- Over 700 Bard students volunteered to help clean up the Broadmoor neighborhood in New Orleans after Katrina.
- Ran summer camps in Broadmoor for many years after Katrina
National
- Took spring break trips to a small Appalachian town to help older people renovate their houses
- Over 700 Bard students volunteered to help clean up the Broadmoor neighborhood in New Orleans after Katrina.
- Ran summer camps in Broadmoor for many years after Katrina
- The Bard student who ran the summer camps later became the Director of the Broadmoor Improvement Agency
- Spent six summers interning in New Orleans with nonprofits seeking the right to vote for formerly incarcerated men and women
- Following graduation, a Bard student founded the Bard Early College in New Orleans
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International
- Fundraised and built a school in a small coastal village in Ghana, which enabled the village, for the first time, to send students to the university
- Took several trips to a community in Nepal that support people struggling with Leprosy (the student who lead this became a Watson Fellow, and is now a rural family doctor)
International
- Fundraised and built a school in a small coastal village in Ghana, which enabled the village, for the first time, to send students to the university
- Took several trips to a community in Nepal that support people struggling with Leprosy (the student who lead this became a Watson Fellow, and is now a rural family doctor)
- For over 20 years Bard students have traveled to Chacraseca, a small village in Nicaragua to run educational and arts camps for children during their winter school break
- Traveled twice to Myanmar run arts camps for children (traveled with 5 huge duffel bags of supplies)
- For a dozen years Bard students traveled to Mas’ha, a small West Bank village, to teach English, build libraries and playgrounds, run summer camps, and become intimately involved in village life…The Bard Palestinian Youth Initiative also organized the first official visit of Palestinians to Yad Vashem, the Holocaust museum in Jerusalem. (One of these students, who ran a girls theater program in Mas’ha, won the 2024 Tony for running the best regional theater in the country)
- Five Music Conservatory students spent weeks in Kenya solidifying the relationship with Ghetto Classics, a non-profit that trains kids to play instruments. Bard students give zoom music lessons to over 100 children in Nairobi and Mombasa.
- Helped establish a women’s sewing collective in Senegal
- Created an arts education program in Rohingya refugee schools in Malaysia
- Help prepare Afghan students in the diaspora to take the TOEFL exam, this project includes convincing the Educational Testing Service to offer the exams for free
TLS students are widely recognized at the college, and every year win a number of college awards for community action.
- Two Episcopalian Archdiocese grants ($10,000 each)
- Six Watson Fellows
- Five Fulbrights
- 12 number of Davis Projects for Peace grants ($10,000 each)
Bard College Initiatives That Started as TLS Projects
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Now a part of Bard, these programs started as undegraduate ideas:
- Bard Prison Initiative: One of the country’s most extensive prison education programs.
- Brothers@: A highly successful region-wide program for college-aged men of color tutoring and mentoring high school students. This is a highly successful initiative that has enabled many young men to pursue higher education.
- Sister2Sister: A wonderful program for college-aged women of color to support their younger peers in the local high schools.
- La Voz: An award-winning Spanish language publication distributed widely in the Hudson Valley, La Voz is quite likely the most informed source of information for Hispanic life in the region.
I have a big idea.
Let's discuss how to make your project come to life.
We'll be in touch to schedule a meeting!
Frequently Asked Questions
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What is TLS?
What is TLS?
The Trustee Leader Scholar Program is the formal civic leadership development program for undergraduate students at Bard College. TLS supports the liberal arts mission of enlightened citizenship: personal development in the context of community building. -
Who is eligible for TLS?
Who is eligible for TLS?
Every Bard student is eligible to apply to TLS and TLS students come from every academic discipline on campus. Approximately 50 undergraduates are TLS leaders at any given time and most TLS students remain actively involved in the program throughout their college careers. -
What makes TLS special?
What makes TLS special?
Many colleges provide volunteer and community engagement opportunities. Bard is one of the few that puts substantial resources and trust behind student-led initiatives. Students must initiate the work. The fundamental criterion for accepting a project is that it must contribute positively to the world and challenge the student—organizationally, ethically, politically, and emotionally. -
What do TLS students do?
What do TLS students do?
TLS students design and implement social action projects based on their own compelling interests. TLS students write extensive proposals, budgets, and personal accounts of their activities. They meet one-on-one with program administrators and attend workshops to explore the ethics of social action, public speaking, group facilitation, and interpersonal communication. TLS students also raise their own funds and many become proficient at fundraising and campaign organizing. -
What are some key values in TLS?
What are some key values in TLS?
TLS addresses the issues of paternalism and privilege that are stirred up by the notion of “helping others.” Students are encouraged to read widely about oppression, identify their own motivations and needs, and experiment with ways of organizing that treat other people as partners, not passive recipients. We try hard to strike a balance between inward reflection, societal awareness, and compassionate action. TLS considers this life training. -
What is the ultimate goal of TLS?
What is the ultimate goal of TLS?
TLS strives to put into the world capable, sensitive adults who have the ability to generate, plan, fund, and implement large-scale projects that matter and that influence environments humanely. Many TLS students leave Bard capable of creating their own nonprofit organizations. -
How does TLS differ from similar programs?
How does TLS differ from similar programs?
TLS is leadership development, not community service. TLS students do not earn academic credit for their efforts but do receive stipends to support their work. Separating TLS work from academics allows students to design and implement ambitious civic engagement projects spanning multiple years. TLS recognizes that organizing a major project while completing Bard’s rigorous academic requirements is a demanding load and is not for everyone. It is worth noting, however, that many TLS students have said, “My project was the most important thing I did in college.” -
How do you apply to the TLS program?
How do you apply to the TLS program?
TLS applications are considered on a rolling, year-round basis. The best way to start the process is to talk with TLS staff members, who are always open to hearing the words, “I have an idea for a TLS project.” Students are encouraged to consider TLS from the moment they arrive on campus.
Contact Us
Paul Marienthal
Dean for Social Action;
Director, Trustee Leader Scholar Program
[email protected]
Lucy Huffman
Assistant Coordinator
[email protected]
Trustee Leader Scholar
Room 213, Campus Center
845-758-7056
[email protected]
Dean for Social Action;
Director, Trustee Leader Scholar Program
[email protected]
Lucy Huffman
Assistant Coordinator
[email protected]
Trustee Leader Scholar
Room 213, Campus Center
845-758-7056
[email protected]