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Faculty

Oberlin Village: A Living Lab for NC State Students

Pictured from left: Sabrina Goode, executive director of Friends of Oberlin Village (FOV); Anne McLaughlin, psychology professor; and Madison Roy, industrial engineering Ph.D. candidate and student in McLaughlin's Human Factors Psychology class, walk through Oberlin Cemetery. As part of a collaboration between various NC State departments and FOV, McLaughlin and her students have designed an interactive database for the group's website.

NC State psychology faculty and students have partnered with local preservationists to develop resources that help raise public awareness and deepen understanding of Oberlin Village’s rich history while providing students with real-world skills.

Professor Anne McLaughlin and her graduate Human Factors Psychology students collaborated last semester with the nonprofit Friends of Oberlin Village (FOV). Together, they designed an interactive database for the group’s website, enabling users to search for individuals buried in the three-acre cemetery at the heart of this historic African-American neighborhood just blocks from campus.

It is the latest collaboration between McLaughlin and FOV, which descendants of Oberlin Village established to preserve this significant chapter of the city’s past. For the past five years, McLaughlin and students of human factors psychology have worked on projects ranging from reimagining the nonprofit’s website to refining its tour guidebook.

The searchable database project also builds on other NC State units’ work with FOV. They include sociology and anthropology, history and Africana studies within the College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHASS), as well as partnerships with the College of Sciences, the College of Design and the College of Engineering.

Several NC State departments have collaborated with FOV over the past several years. These partnerships have supported various projects, including scanning graves in the cemetery, reimagining the group’s website and designing signage and banners.

Through these partnerships university departments have digitally scanned the graves in the cemetery using advanced survey methods, conducted semi-annual clean-ups, lifted fallen grave markers, provided graphics, and designed signage and banners among other projects.

McLaughlin said the searchable database project, like earlier ones, is a great example of how human factors psychologists can inform useful, safe and people-centered designs. It also illustrates the college’s commitment to community engagement.

“Projects like this connect students with and embed them in the community around them, and allow the community to be part of the students’ lives and the life of the university,” she said. ”It’s a win-win situation.”

Sabrina Goode, FOV’s executive director, said her group’s collaboration with the psychology department and other NC State partners has been integral to its success. “These partnerships,” she added, “have advanced our goals by leaps and bounds, put us on a steady foundation and enabled us to present a more professional and polished appearance to the public and the community at large.”

Goode said they also provide wonderful opportunities for students to gain real-life experience, expand their knowledge, work with a diverse population and get involved in a community close to the university. 

Oberlin Village was founded in the 1850s by free Black families and grew into a large, successful community in the decades after the Civil War. It is an example of a Reconstruction-era freedman’s settlement in North Carolina and played a vital role in the history of African-American life in the region.

At its heart is Oberlin Cemetery, a significant cultural site and one of four known African-American cemeteries in Raleigh. It is where the remains of hundreds of former residents of Oberlin Village have been buried since the 1800s.

Goode said having an interactive portal on FOV’s website will allow users to discover who is interred in Oberlin Cemetery and if they have family members buried there.

To that end, psychology students last semester did a needs assessment with community members. They asked residents what they wanted to know about their ancestors, how they wished to search for that information and how they wanted to interact with the database, among other questions.

Using the information they collected the students designed an easy-to-use prototype sketch of what they think the interactive portal of the website should look like. They also tested the prototype with community members to see if improvements should be made.

Students, McLaughlin said, are gaining important skills they’ll use in their careers while at the same time making a very personal connection to this one nonprofit.

“FOV is honored to have Oberlin Village serve as a living lab for NC State students.”

Goode said the project is important to FOV because it will help fill in missing pieces of information about the people buried in the cemetery. “This will be the springboard for future generations to come back to find out about their families,” she said.

McLaughlin said the next step is for FOV to work with a computer science class at NC State”s   College of Engineering, to do the coding, making the interactive database operational.

“FOV,” said Goode, “is honored to have Oberlin Village serve as a living lab for the students of NC State.”