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ServiceLearning A National Movement in Higher Education

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Title: ServiceLearning A National Movement in Higher Education


1
Service-Learning A National Movement in Higher
Education
2
  • learning is a bit more complex than learning
    by doing. It is not just learning through
    experience, but experience plus learning that is
    significant.
  • --David Kolb

3
  • My idea of citizenship has changed as a result
    of service-learning. Before this assignment, I
    believed that citizenship was only about voting
    and abiding by laws. We need to endorse our
    political efficacy A civil society lacking
    active citizens possesses no enrichment,
    diversity, or meaning.
  • service-learning student,
  • Miami-Dade College

4
Goals of Presentation
  • Create corps of s-l experts at TCC
  • Share lessons learned at MDC (help TCC avoid
    common mistakes)
  • Answer questions/dispel misconceptions
  • Challenge you to consider it in your
    teaching/increase your effectiveness
  • Support its institutionalization at TCC
  • Foster community-faculty partnerships
  • Understand ways to incorporate civic
    responsibility into syllabi

5
Self Reflection
  • Why did you become an educator?
  • Why do you work (or plan to work) in
  • service-learning?
  • Why have you integrated, or are thinking about
    integrating, service-learning into your courses
    or agency?
  • Why are you interested in civic responsibility?

6
Facts about Service-Learning
  • National movement
  • Proven effective
  • Academically rigorous
  • Tremendous benefits
  • Extensive resources available
  • Important the right thing to do
  • Not expensive

7
MDCs Story 1994-2003
  • Early Years
  • Skepticism
  • Another Fad
  • Should this be part of HE?
  • Reliance on grant funding
  • On margins of institution
  • Unfamiliarity
  • Confusion about nuts and bolts
  • No infrastructure

8
2003 Status
  • College-wide Center for Community Involvement
  • Internally funded and institutionalized (230,000
    annual budget)
  • College-wide Director and three Campus Directors
  • Four Faculty Coordinators
  • 15 Community Service FWS Student Coordinators

9
2003 Status (Continued)
  • 22,000 students since 94
  • 450,000 hours of service since 94
  • 200 faculty participants since 94
  • Tremendous support from all stakeholders
  • Hallmark program of the college
  • Faculty rewarded and encouraged to participate
  • College-wide, all six campuses
  • AmeriCorpsVISTA program

10
  • What is
  • Service-Learning?

11
  • Tell me and Ill forget.
  • Show me and I may not remember.
  • Involve me and Ill understand.

12
  • SERVICE-LEARNING IS
  • The process of integrating thoughtfully
    organized service experiences with guided
    reflection to enhance student learning of course
    materials.

13
  • Service-learning is the combination of community
    service and classroom instruction, with a focus
    on critical, reflective thinking as well as
    personal and civic responsibility.
  • --American Association of Community Colleges

14
  • Service-Learning
  • Like Learning to Ride a Bike!
  • --Richard Battistoni

15
Why Service-Learning?
  • How can we enhance student learning of course
    material?
  • How can we serve collaborate with our
    community?
  • How can we foster our students sense of civic
    responsibility commitment to the common good?
  • How can we reinvigorate teaching?
  • How can we fulfill our mission?

16
KEY CHARACTERISTICS OF SERVICE-LEARNING
  • Students are involved in course-relevant service
    which benefits the community
  • Offers a continuum of possibilities -- from
    single day service events to several hours a week
    for an entire semester

17
  • Structured opportunities are provided for
    students to reflect critically on their
    experience through a mix of writing, reading,
    speaking, listening, and group discussions

18
  • Service-learning gives academic credit for
    demonstrating learning achieved through the
    service, not just for putting in hours.
  • Encourages a greater understanding of social
    issues, civic responsibility, and a sense of
    caring for others

19
Best Practices for Service-Learning
  • Academic credit is for learning, not for service
  • Do not compromise academic rigor
  • Establish learning objectives
  • Establish criteria for selecting service
    placements
  • --Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning,
    Summer 2002

20
Best Practices for Service-Learning
  • Provide educationally-sound learning strategies
  • Prepare students for learning from the community
  • Minimize distinction between the students
    community learning and classroom learning roles
  • --Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning,
    Summer 2002

21
Best Practices for Service-Learning
  • Rethink the faculty instructional role
  • Be prepared for variation in student learning
    outcomes
  • Maximize the community responsibility aspect of
    the course
  • --Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning,
    Summer 2002

22
Goals
  • To enhance student learning of existing course
    competencies
  • To meet community needs
  • To foster civic responsibility

23
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24
Academic Service-Learning
  • Relevant, meaningful service
  • Enhanced academic learning
  • Purposeful civic learning
  • --Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning,
    Summer 2002

25
  • How is service-learning different from
    volunteerism, internships, community service.?

26
Distinctions Among Service Programs
  • Who is the primary intended beneficiary?
  • The service recipient or the person providing the
    service?
  • Volunteerism vs. Internships

27
Distinctions Among Service Programs
  • Is the focus on service or on learning?
  • Volunteerism vs. Internships

28
Service-Learning
  • An experiential education teaching strategy where
    ...
  • SERVICE-LEARNING - service learning goals of
    equal weight and each enhances the other.

29
Service-Learning Examples
  • Marketing students create and implement a marking
    plan for a non-profit
  • Accounting students serve in the business offices
    of non-profits
  • Business students study minority entrepreneurs,
    create a publication and coloring book, and
    present to low-income school children
  • History students complete oral histories with
    senior citizens, create booklet, and hold event
    to celebrate the participants

30
Service-Learning Examples (cont.)
  • English composition students help non-profit
    write manuals/brochures organize writing contest
    on civic responsibility for high school students
    chose an issue, serve, and do all their writing
    about that issue and their service
  • Nursing students adopt a homeless shelter and
    provide health care services once a week, every
    week
  • Environmental Science students teach school
    children lessons about protecting the
    environment.
  • Intro to Computers students help teach at a local
    technology center

31
Making the Case for Service-Learning
32
  • We higher education educate a large
    proportion of the citizens who bother to vote,
    not to mention most of the politicians,
    journalists, and news commentators. We also
    educate all the school administrators and
    teachers, who in turn educate everyone at the
    pre-college level. And we do much to shape the
    pre-college curriculum through what we require of
    our college applicants. In short, not only have
    we helped create the problems that plague
    American democracy, but we are also in a position
    to begin doing something about them. If higher
    education doesnt start giving citizenship and
    democracy much greater priority, who will?
  • --Alexander Astin, 1995

33
  • Too many of us have become passive and
    disengaged. Too many of us lack confidence in
    our capacity to make basic moral and civic
    judgments, to join with our neighbors to do the
    work of community, to make a difference. Never
    have we had so many opportunities for
    participation, yet rarely have we felt so
    powerless. In a time that cries out for civic
    action, we are in danger of becoming a nation of
    spectators.
  • --National Commission on Civic Renewal, 1998

34
  • Service is something we owe to ourselves or
    to that part of ourselves that is embedded in the
    civic community. It assumes that our rights and
    liberties are not acquired for free that unless
    we assume the responsibilities of citizens, we
    will not be able to preserve the liberties they
    entail Where students use experience in the
    community as a basis for critical reflection in
    the classroom, and turn classroom reflection into
    a tool to examine the nature of democratic
    communities and the role of the citizen in them,
    there is an opportunity to teach liberty, to
    uncover the interdependence of self and other, to
    expose the intimate linkage between rights and
    responsibilities.
  • --Benjamin Barber, 1992

35
  • Why is it, in spite of the fact that teaching by
    pouring in, learning by passive absorption, are
    universally condemned, that they are still
    entrenched in practice.
  • --John Dewey, 1916

36
  • Citizens must be engaged in both thought and
    action
  • Education is the key to civic engagement
  • Institutions of learning must prepare students
    for such activities
  • --John Dewey, 1916

37
  • We challenge you to assure that the next years
    entering students will graduate as individuals of
    character more sensitive to the needs of
    community, more competent to contribute to
    society, and more civil in habits of thought,
    speech, and action.
  • --Wingspread Group Report on Higher Education,
    1993

38
  • If there is a crisis in education in the United
    States today, it is less that test scores have
    declined than it is that we have failed to
    provide the education for citizenship that is
    still the most significant responsibility of the
    nations schools and colleges.
  • --Frank Newman, 1985. Higher Education and the
    American Resurgence

39
  • .the theme of civic responsibility/civic
    participation/citizenship is the most frequently
    articulated intended student outcome on the
    national level In contrast, college students,
    faculty, staff, and administrators barely
    mentioned notions of citizenship in describing
    the outcomes of service-learning projects.
  •   
  • Community Service-Learning Striking the Chord of
    Citizenship
  • Marilyn Smith
  • Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning,
    Fall 1994

40
  • Service, Service-learning, and
  • Social Justice

41
What is Good Citizenship?
  • Constitutional Citizenship
  • Communitarianism
  • Participatory Democracy
  • Public Work
  • Social Capital
  • --Civic Engagement Across the Curriculum, Richard
    Battistoni, Ph.D.

42
  • Double-Dipping Case Study
  • (student takes two courses that offer
    service-learning)

43
Double-Dipping Case Study(student takes two
courses that offer service-learning)
  • Communications (20 hrs)
  • Intro to Education (25 hrs)
  • Placement at elementary school
  • Instructors -- no double-dipping...cant count
    hours for two classes..
  • Should the student be able to use one placement
    (25 hours) for both classes?

44
  • EMPHASIS ON LEARNING, NOT HOURS
  • Academic credit for demonstrating learning
    achieved through the service, not just for
    putting in hours.
  • Learning assessed through reflective assignments
    -- journals, papers, learning objectives,
    presentations, portfolios, etc....
  • Examining one service experience from multiple
    perspectives is ideal.

45
DEP 2000, Human Growth Development
  • 25 hours of service
  • Reflective Journal
  • Portfolio
  • 5 minute class presentation

46
Journal Entry Guidelines
  • Perspectives on human development according to
    psychoanalytic, learning, cognitive, and
    humanistic theories
  • Experiences or incidents that support or refute
    these theories
  • Pre, peri and post natal risk factors and how
    they effect development

47
CGS 1060, Intro To Microcomputers
  • 20 hours of computer related service
  • (Microsoft Office, Lotus 1-2-3, dBASE, DOS,
    intro to a programming language)
  • On-going learning objectives
  • Journal, class presentation

48
Service-Learning Benefits
  • Students
  • Faculty
  • Community/Agency/Clients
  • College

49
Benefits to Students
  • Enhance learning
  • Connect theory to practice
  • Promote critical thinking
  • Provide experience
  • Explore majors careers
  • Foster civic responsibility
  • Encourage life-long commitment to service
  • Enhance employability
  • Break down barriers/promote understanding
  • Job offers, scholarships, self-esteem,....

50
Benefits for Faculty
  • Enhanced student learning (more engaged students)
  • Reinvigorated teaching
  • Improved relationships with students
  • Professional development
  • Research/publishing opportunities
  • Sense of making a difference

51
Benefits to the Community
  • Infusion of people power to help
  • Client/agency needs met
  • More informed/involved citizenry
  • New ideas and energy
  • New employees
  • Access to college resources
  • Reinvigorate supervisors/staff

52
Benefits to the College
  • Fulfillment of mission
  • True partnership with tangible results
  • Higher quality graduates
  • Increased community support
  • Public relations/publicity
  • Improved learning
  • Benefit all stakeholders

53
  • WHAT IS REFLECTION?

54
Reflection 4 Cs
  • Continuous
  • Connected to objectives
  • Challenging
  • Contextualized course specific

55
WHAT IS REFLECTION?
  • The process of deriving meaning from experience
  • Reflection engages students in conscious,
    intentional, and critical thinking for the
    examination of their service experience
  • Reflection is what makes service SERVICE-LEARNING

56
REFLECTION TECHNIQUES
  • Journals (highlighted, double entry, key
    phrase..)
  • Reflective essays
  • Directed writing
  • Experiential research paper
  • Directed readings
  • Group discussion
  • Etc..

57
  • Today I got to the nursing home at 200. Talked
    to some ladies. Passed out popcorn at the movie.
    Went home at 400.
  • From a students journal

58
  • Working at the Homeless Shelter was one of the
    most memorable experiences I have had in college.
    I only hope my children will have the same
    opportunity.
  • From a students journal

59
  • What can the agency supervisor do to help
    students reflect/learn?

60
Reflection Ideas for Agency Supervisors
  • Mission statement
  • Learning objectives/goals
  • Articles about your agency/clients/social
    problems
  • Exit interviews/questionnaires
  • Mini research project
  • Processing meetings
  • Written reflective assignments
  • Critical thinking questions

61
  • Over the course of this semester I have become a
    citizen of New Brunswick. It could be argued
    that I was a citizen here well before registering
    for the course, but I did not feel as if I were
    one. Having taken the course, I now know why I
    felt as I did. A citizen must play an active
    role in his or her community. A citizen must
    work for change, and never accept the status
    quo--things can always be better. I am now aware
    of what is happening around me...I now see the
    city differently. I'm no longer scared walking
    to my service site --far from it. I feel like
    I know that small portion of the city now. Now
    when I pass people on the street, some say hello
    to me, and call me by name. Through my work I've
    gotten to know individual people, and they've
    gotten to know me. I enjoy my community service.
    It has opened my eyes as to the role I play as a
    citizen in my community.
  • --Rutgers University service-learning student

62
Student Impact
  • What are your reactions to this quotation?
  • What do you think contributed to the student
    changing his views and attitudes towards
    community and citizenship?
  • What can you and your other agency personnel do
    to contribute to a students experience so that
    he/she will demonstrate a similar shift in
    his/her thinking?

63
Great American Clean-up Case Study
  • How could this event have been more successful?
  • What could each participant have done differently
    from the standpoint of learning and reflection?
  • Faculty
  • Agency (Great American Cleanup Inc.)
  • Student
  • Service-Learning Center

64
Agencies and the Students
  • Why do you want to do your service here?
  • What class are you doing this for?
  • May I see your syllabus?
  • Why did you choose this option?

65
Agency Responsibilities
  • Orientation
  • Training/Preparation
  • Supervision
  • Reflection
  • Communication with faculty
  • Recognition
  • Evaluation

66
  • Turning Challenges into Solutions

67
  • Recognizing
  • Service-Learners

68
  • Create
  • your own
  • Agency
  • Action Plan

69
  • Snowflakes are one of natures most fragile
    things, but just look at what they can do when
    they stick together. Unknown

70
  • How do you define civic responsibility?

71
  • Definition of Civic Responsibility
  • Active participation in the public life of a
    community in an informed, committed, and
    constructive manner, with a focus on the common
    good

72
Civic Responsibility Exercises
  • Option One Questions about Teaching (Page 52)
  • Option Two Appendix C-5 (Page 78)
  • Faculty Case Study
  • Option Three Questions about Service Learning
    (Page 52)
  • Option Four Questions for Faculty (Page 63)
  • Option Five Higher Educations Role in Promoting
    Citizenship (Page 34)

73
Questions about Teaching (Page 52)
  • How does your teaching affect your students
    ability to become responsibly engaged in their
    community?
  • What ethical standards guide your profession or
    discipline, and how are they related to civic
    responsibility?
  • What can you change in your teaching to promote
    civic responsibility?
  • Should civic responsibility be tied to your
    course at all?

74
Appendix C-5 (Page 78) Faculty Case Study
  • Are there certain costs associated with
    controversial or loaded civic engagement at
    your institution?
  • How do you model democratic decision making and
    participation for your students when a conflict
    arises?
  • How can you encourage students to become
    civically involved without prescribing particular
    positions or viewpoints?

75
Questions about Service Learning (Page 52)
  • To what extent does service learning increase
    students awareness of their civic
    responsibility?
  • How effective are the colleges partnerships
    with community agencies and other service sites?
  • In what ways could partnerships be enhanced?
  • How can faculty involvement strengthen these
    partnerships?

76
Questions for Faculty (Page 63)
  • What is the mission of your course?
  • What are the learning objectives? How do they
    relate to civic responsibility?
  • What changes do you need to make to incorporate
    civic responsibility into both the mission and
    the learning objectives?
  • What are some of the challenges you think you
    will face as you integrate civic responsibility
    into your curriculum?

77
Exercise 3.9 (Page 34)Higher Educations Role in
Promoting CitizenshipReflection Questions
  • Do you think that our educational institutions
    are preparing students for a life of engaged,
    democratic citizenship?
  • How does service learning play a role in giving
    citizenship and democracy greater priority?
  • What specifically can higher education do to
    give citizenship and democracy greater priority?
  • Will involvement in service learning necessarily
    foster civic responsibility in students?
  • How can we create a culture of civic engagement
    that results in a more humane and just society?

78
Table 2 (Page 48)Service Learning Activities
  • Service activities that address community needs
  • Related courses
  • Reflection components
  • Activities that foster civic responsibility
    skills

79
Civic Responsibility Case Study
  • A faculty member has done a good job
  • of incorporating civic responsibility into
  • her courses. She has come to you because she
  • is concerned about her evaluation methods.
  • She is unsure how to measure civic
  • engagement.
  • How can you help her?

80
  • Assessing Civic Responsibility
  • Chapter 4
  • (Pages 51-60)

81
  • Create
  • your own
  • civic responsibility
  • action plan

82
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Which course learning objectives are related to
    service?
  • What do you want your students to gain from the
    experience?

83
Learning Objectives
  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Results oriented
  • Timely

84
  • Establishing Academic Learning Objectives

85
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Action what types of service are appropriate
    for your course?

86
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Preparation how will you prepare your students
    for the s-l experience?

87
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Reflection what techniques will you use to
    guide/ensure student learning and successful
    service?

88
Reflective Assignments
  • Have students do a research paper on civic
    responsibility.
  • Have students research the characteristics of a
    good citizen.
  • Have students identify someone who is a good
    citizen and write an essay that describes the
    skills, attitudes, knowledge and behaviors that
    makes this person a good citizen.
  • Have students interview a servant leader in the
    community and write a report/essay on that.
  • Have students write about the connection between
    service, civic responsibility, and living in a
    democratic society.
  • Have students do a report/paper on the issue that
    their service project addresses.

89
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Course Integration required, option, extra
    credit, number of hours, etc

90
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Assessment how will you evaluate/ assess/grade
    service-learning?
  • Assess learning demonstrated NOT
  • service completed

91
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Civic Responsibility how will you ensure that
    students can articulate and understand civic
    responsibility, and develop the skills necessary
    to be a good citizen

92
Exercise 4.1 (Page 53)Syllabus Analysis
  • What specific course material relates to CR?
  • Which learning outcomes directly relate to CR?
    Are they explicit in the syllabus?
  • Does the syllabus include a description of
    service learning projects and their relation to
    CR?
  • What are the specific opportunities for
    deliberate connections among your academic
    content, the value of CR, and community-based
    service experience?
  • How will the service experience be assessed? How
    will it relate to the learning of course material?

93
S-L Course Development Worksheet
  • Recognition how will you recognize and
    celebrate your students?

94
Best Practices/Lessons Learned
  • Gain administrative and faculty support
  • Encourage faculty leadership (faculty
    coordinator)
  • Emphasize academic rigor
  • Create infrastructure with space staff
  • Provide on-going training of faculty and agency
    partners
  • Emphasize quality over quantity
  • Promote student leadership (FWS student
    ambassadors)
  • Encourage partnership model rather than
    clearinghouse model

95
Best Practices (Continued)
  • Gather and disseminate data
  • Recognize all participants
  • Place with Academic Affairs partner with
    Student Affairs
  • Utilize Community Service FWS students to help
    staff program
  • Market and publicize achievements
  • Mobilize campus around service (e.g., Taste of
    Service events)
  • Offer mini-grants at beginning?

96
  • Additional Information
  • Gail Robinson, Coordinator of Service Learning
  • American Association of Community Colleges
  • One Dupont Circle, NW, Suite 410
  • Washington, DC 20036-1176
  • Phone 202/728-0200 ext. 254
  • Fax 202/728-2965
  • E-mail grobinson_at_aacc.nche.edu
  • Web www.aacc.nche.edu/servicelearning

97
  • Order additional copies of the Guide from
  • Community College Press
  • 800/250-6557
  • aaccpub_at_pmds.com

98
Electronic Resources
  • The S-L Home Page
  • csf.colorado.edu/sl
  • Campus Compact
  • www.compact.org
  • National Service-Learning Clearinghouse
  • www.servicelearning.org
  • National Service-Learning Exchange
  • www.nslexchange.org
  • American Association for Higher Education
  • www.aahe.org/service/srv-lrn.htm

99
  • Ossie Hanauer
  • Miami-Dade College
  • Center for Community Involvement
  • 11011 SW 104 Street, Rm 6219
  • Miami, FL 33176
  • Ph 305-237-70631/Fax 237-2843
  • E-mail ohanauer_at_mdcc.edu
  • www.mdcc.edu/cci

100
  • Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
  • committed citizens can change the world
  • indeed, its the only thing that ever has.
  • --Margaret Mead
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