Title: An Overview of Service Learning: Building Bridges, Making Connections
1An Overview of Service Learning Building
Bridges, Making Connections
- Dr. Rosalyn M. King,
- Professor of Psychology and Chair,
- Center for Teaching Excellence
- Northern Virginia Community College-Loudoun
Campus
2Building Bridges, Making Connections Colleges
and Communities Uniting in Partnership
- Welcome to the Symposium on Service Learning.
- This PowerPoint presentation provides you with an
overview of the concept and structure of Service
Learning. - Please feel free to take a paper copy of this
presentation with you. You will find it on the
table with other handouts.
3What is Service Learning?
- A method by which students improve academic
learning and develop personal skills through
structured service projects that meet community
needs. - Service learning builds upon students service
activities by providing them with opportunities
to learn by preparing, leading, and reflecting
upon their service experiences.
4What is Service Learning?
- Educators facilitate learning by creating
opportunities for students to understand and
analyze their service experiences in the context
of their course work. - Reciprocal learning learning flows from
service activities those providing service and
those who receive it learn from the experience.
Student and organization benefit.
5What is Service Learning?
- Students active participation in thoughtfully
organized service experiences that meet student
needs. - Extends student learning beyond the classroom and
into the community. - Service learning is related to but does not
include cooperative education, practicum, or
internship programs.
6What is Service Learning?
- Community colleges in more than 40 states
currently offer service learning. - Service Learning enhances education and gives
students the opportunity to serve in their chosen
field of study and increase their civic
responsibility.
7Goals of Service Learning
- For students An opportunity to enrich and apply
knowledge learned in the classroom in applied
settings. - For faculty and college Move from
teacher-centered, to learning centered, to
community-centered pedagogy. - Shared Ownership Expanding the classroom into
the community and vice versa.
8Service Learning Goals and Benefits for Students
- Learn social responsibility and citizenship
skills. - Develop an ethic of service.
- Develop civic awareness.
- Apply concepts learned in classroom.
- Connect course and competencies.
- Reconnect to get people to be civic and civil.
- Develop personality. Improve self esteem.
- Gain academically.
- Gain professionally.
9Service Learning Goals and Benefits for Students
- Enriched learning
- Documented experience.
- Skilled development.
- Transferable credit.
- Establish contacts and possible future employment.
- Experience first-hand a potential major field of
study. - Gain experience which is a prerequisite for many
jobs.
10Components of .Effective Service Learning
- Sufficient Preparation.
- (Setting objectives for skills to be learned,
issues to be considered planning projects so
they contribute to learning.) - Performing the Actual Service.
- Analysis of Experience, Lessons Learned, Sharing
and Reflecting on Experience and Implications.
11Outcomes of Service Learning
- Connection of theory to practice.
- Puts concepts into concrete form and provides a
context for understanding abstract matter. - Provides an opportunity to test and refine
theories and introduce new theories.
12Outcomes of Service Learning
- Appreciation and understanding of social,
economic and environmental implications. - Appreciation and understanding of moral and
ethical ramifications of peoples actions. - Learn communication, interpersonal and technical
skills.
13Outcomes of Service Learning
- Self-directed learning inquiry, logical
thinking, relationship of ideas and experience. - Transference of learning from one context to
another which allows for the opportunity to
reflect, conceptualize and apply experience-based
knowledge.
14Outcomes of Service Learning
- Improves critical thinking, information
retrieval, technical, qualitative and
quantitative reasoning, oral written
communication skills. - Improves understanding of self and community.
15Importance of Reflection
- Distinguishes SL from other forms of experiential
education. - Links service experience to course materials,
readings and lectures.
16Reflective Tools
- Journals
- Small or large group discussions
- Portfolios
- Photographic Journals
- In-class presentations
- Symposiums
17Descriptions of Reflection
- A mirror in which you not only see yourself but
the things that surround you. - Critical thinking and introspection.
- A continuous and deliberate process involving
analysis, synthesis, disciplined thinking. - Involves turning inward, analyzing, fashioning
new behaviors, attitudes and values from
reflecting.
18Descriptions of Reflection
- Makes consistent and strong connections between
service, course topics, content, and objectives. - Makes consistent and strong connections between
service and substantial affective impact and
career understanding. - Makes consistent and strong connections between
service and understanding ones larger
responsibilities to the community, nation and
world.
19Evaluation and Assessment
- Can not be evaluated in the same manner as exams
or research papers. - Students and faculty assess the usefulness of
service learning. - Students assess how much they have learned and
how their attitudes have changed due to the
service experience.
20Evaluation and Assessment
- Relationship of setting and service to course and
content. - Skills developed from service.
- Extent of critical reflection.
- Format and presentation of final paper, project
or presentation. - Verification of time spent in setting.
21Evaluation and Assessment Products
- Case Studies
- Journals
- Portfolios
- Self-Assessment
- Team Based Learning
- Learning Communities
- Assessment from organization
22Guiding and Reflective Questions for Students
- What did you learn about the value of the service
you performed? - What community needs did your service address?
- Do you feel that your service helped or changed
anything in the community? Why or Why not?
- What have you learned about working and
collaborating with others in the community? - Do you feel your service helped or changed
anything in you? About your career aspirations? - What skills did you develop from this experience?
23Guiding and Reflective Questions for Students
- What are the implications of your experience in
this setting? Can you transfer this knowledge to
your life and other professional experiences? - What lessons did you learn? What did you
contribute to the experience? - Was service learning an effective way to make
class material more meaningful?
- What specific course content from class or your
readings relate to this service? - What particular theories or concepts from the
course apply to your service learning experience? - What was the expressed or stated impact of your
service on the organization?
24Models
- There are many models to choose from in the
Service Learning Curriculum.