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Service-Learning and Student Organizations April 25, 2011 Presenter: Barbara Jacoby, Ph.D. 1
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Overview of Agenda Service-learning and student success Fundamental principles of reflection and reciprocity How to design service-learning activities and reflection for student groups Resources 2
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Setting the Context: Service-Learning at the Intersection A.Reaffirming the public purpose of higher education B.Student engagement in learning C.Learning outcomes and assessment 3
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A. Reaffirming the Public Purpose of Higher Education Social problems are growing locally and globally Higher education—particularly research universities—are being called on to respond 4
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Center for Information and Research on Civic Engagement (CIRCLE) www.civicyouth.org Campus Compact www.compact.org 5
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B. Student Engagement in Learning High Impact Practices First-year seminars Learning communities Collaborative assignments Diversity/global learning Service-Learning Undergraduate research Capstone courses 6
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Service-Learning and Retention Direct relationship to success and graduation S-L students are more likely to re-enroll, interact with faculty, and study S-L provides sense of purpose S-L enables students to retain course content, develop the habit of critical thinking, and seek to be part of the solution to social problems 7
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C. Learning Outcomes and Assessment Learning outcomes : State what a student is expected to know or be able to do Are expressed in terms of knowledge, skills, or attitudes 8
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In service-learning, outcomes are established and assessed for communities. Intentions are not enough; results are what matters. 9
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What Service-Learning Is (and Is Not) Volunteerism – providing service, no reflection, often one time, limited benefits Community service – activities designed to meet human and community needs, usually no reflection 10
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Definition of Service-Learning “Service-learning is a form of experiential education in which students engage in activities that address human and community needs together with structured opportunities for reflection designed to achieve desired learning outcomes.” − B. Jacoby, Service-Learning in Higher Education, 1996 11
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Key Principles of Service-Learning Reflection Reciprocity 12
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Examples of Co-Curricular Service-Learning Days of service Orientation Residence halls Student groups Leadership programs Alternative breaks 13
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PARE Model Preparation Action Reflection Evaluation 14
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Preparation Establish desired outcomes for individuals, group, community Meet with community partner(s) Learn about the community and the issues Determine what tools, materials, training are needed 15
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Action Do the work! 16
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Reflection What did I learn? So what does it mean? Now what will I do about it? 17
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“The Power of One” 18
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Reflection is the hyphen: Service-Learning 19
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What is Reflection? Reflection is the process of analyzing, reconsidering, and questioning one’s experiences within a broad context of issues and content knowledge. 20
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Example of Reflection: Forced Choice Activity It’s OK to expect to get something back when you do community service. 21
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Reflection Activity Why can’t Pat read? 22
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Thank you! bjacoby@umd.edu 23
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