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YSA Semester of Service

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Title: YSA Semester of Service


1
Learning Through ServiceTeaching and Engaging
for Student Success
Susan A. Abravanel, YSAPete Ready, ODE
2009 Superintendents Summer Institute
2
Improving communities by increasing the number
and the diversity of young people, ages 5-25,
serving in substantive roles.
3
Engaging young people in substantive roles
solving authentic problems leads to
Student Achievement
Workforce Readiness
Stronger Communities
4
Engaging
5
The Dropout Problem
  • Percentage reporting that their schools
    graduation rates were 90 or higher . . .

Teachers 48
Principals 55
6
The Dropout Problem
  • Average on-time national graduation rate was
    between 68 and 75 at the time of the survey

7
Activity
  • As a pair, develop a written, verbal, artistic,
    or other picture of a disengaged student.
  • How you can tell that the young person is
    disengaged, using at least some of the senses?
    (what does the person look like? what does the
    person sound like? how does the person feel?)
  • What are the key cues to notice?

8
Student Engagement
  • Over 1/3rd of students do not take school
    seriously and get through the day by fooling
    around with classmates
  • 1/2 said their classes were boring
  • 2/3rds say they cheated on a school test
  • 90 copied homework from someone else
  • 80 say it is not important to get good grades
    in school
  • 20 say they do not try hard in school because
    they are worried what their friends may think
  • 20 say disengagement is a result of confusion
    or difficulty of subject matter, particularly
    in math and science.

9
Engagement Research
  • Researchers (Brewster Fager, 20007) recommend
  • Ensure course materials relate to students lives
    and highlight ways learning can be applied in
    real-life situations (Lumsden, 1994 Skinner and
    Belmont, 1991)
  • Help students feel that schoolwork is
    significant, valuable, and worthy of their
    efforts (Policy Studies Associates, 1995)
  • Allow students to have some degree of control
    over learning (Brooks, et. al., 1998)

10
Engagement Research
  • Assign challenging but achievable tasks for all
    students. Tasks that seem impossible and those
    that are rote and repetitive discourage learners
    (Dev, 1997 Policy Studies Associates, 1995)
  • Stimulate students curiosity about the topic
    being studied (Strong, Silver, and Robinson,
    1995)

11
Engagement Research
  • Design projects that allow students to share new
    knowledge with others. Projects are more
    engaging when students share what they are
    learning in reciprocal relationships, as in
    collaborative projects where each students
    knowledge is needed by others in the group to
    complete an assignment (Strong, Silver, and
    Robinson, 1995)
  • Develop caring and trust between teachers and
    students (Nodding, 2000 36).

12
The Dropout Problem
  • Teachers and principals know students who were
    capable of graduating but failed to complete high
    school.

77 percent of teachers and 71 percent of
principals strongly favored alternative learning
environments to reduce the dropout rate.
13
Service-Learning . . .
a teaching and learning strategy integrating
meaningful community service with academic
study and reflective practice to enrich
learning,build civic engagement, and strengthen
communities.
14
Service-learning is not
An episodic volunteer program
An add-on to an existing curriculum
Completing minimum service hours tosatisfy a
class or graduation requirement
Service assigned as a form of punishment
One-sided benefiting onlystudents or only the
community
15
Service-Learning is . . .
Real service
Real learning
16
K-12 Service-Learning Standards for Quality
Practice
17
Meaningful Service
  • Service-learning actively engages participants in
    meaningful and personally relevant service
    activities.

18
  • School is kind of boring warm-up, lectures,
    PowerPoint's and videos. It is not very often
    that we get a class like this where we learn and
    do real sciencewe can help the community if our
    teachers show us how.

19
Link to Curriculum
  • Service-learning is intentionally used as an
    instructional strategy to meet learning goals
    and/or content standards.

20
  • Service-learning is doing something for your
    community but at the same time learning about
    something school-related like horticulture,
    science or math. You learn a lot more because you
    connect with your teacher and meet people who
    care about youyou never would have met them
    if it wasnt for service-learning.

21
Reflection
  • Service-learning incorporates multiple
    challenging reflection activities that are
    ongoing and that prompt deep thinking and
    analysis about oneself and ones relationship to
    society.

22
Diversity
  • Service-learning promotes understanding of
    diversity and mutual respect among all
    participants.

23
Youth Voice
  • Service-learning provides youth with a strong
    voice in planning, implementing, and evaluating
    service-learning experiences with guidance from
    adults.

24
Partnership
  • Service-learning partnerships are collaborative,
    mutually beneficial, and address community needs.

25
  • Service-learning is used to help the community
    through partnerships with other peoplewhen you
    have a happier community your friends and family
    are happierit will be a better placeto live.

26
Progress Monitoring
  • Service-learning engages participants in an
    ongoing process to assess the quality of
    implementation and progress toward meeting
    specified goals, and uses results for
    improvement and sustainability.

27
Duration and Intensity
  • Service-learning has sufficient duration and
    intensity to address community needs and meet
    specified outcomes.

28
S-L at Lincoln K-8Title1, 6-8 Blend, 28 ELs,
45 at Risk
  • Essential Question How can we maximize
    survivability of Kincaids Lupine and Nelsons
    Checkermallow in the school greenhouse?

Double Jeopardy!
Fenders Blue Butterfly
Kincaids Lupine
29
  • Week 1 Institute for Applied Ecology visits
    schools and explains problem with growing plants.
    Asks students for help.
  • Week 2 Discuss research question for work
    sample plant lupine and checkermallow seeds
  • Week 3 Plant lupine/checkermallow seeds in
    greenhouse, discuss final product of S-L project
    such as presentations, Youth Summit, and peer
    involvement
  • Week 4 Plan and implement question
  • Week 5-7 Implement project
  • Week 8 Field trip for site-prep and
    examination of future planting site.
  • Week 9 4-H Wildlife Stewards Conference, ODFW,
    and school wide assembly to recruit students to
    help plant the seedlings at the field site.
  • Week 10 Planting at field site
  • Years to come Monitor, survival rates, refine
    previous years hypotheses and keep growing
    plants!

30
Link to the Curriculum
  • 90 of students received a score of 4 or higher
    for 3 of the 4 Scientific Inquiry assessment
    areas.
  • Success was driven by long-term goals, time to
    complete project, authentic learning objectives,
    student engagement, and student accountability to
    their community.

31
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34
Connections To the Oregon Diploma
  • Learn Serve Grant (09-12)
  • Implementation Districts
  • Sustainability Districts
  • Professional Development Tracks
  • Priority Categories Include
  • The Oregon Diploma Inquiry-Based Science
  • Essential Skills Strategic Partnerships
  • Credit for Proficiency Civic Engagement
  • Career Technical Education

35
S-L Connections To Other Initiatives
Content Standards
Oregon Diploma Essential Skills
Career Technical Education
Character Education
Safe/Drug-Free Schools
Community Education Title IV-B Afterschool
Education Plan Profile
Comprehensive Guidance Counseling -- Youth
Development
School to Work, Youth Pre-Apprenticeship
YSA, AmeriCorps
Title Programs
36
Service-LearningProject Examples
  • ODE 2006-9 Service-Learning Grants
  • K-12 schools Astoria, Canby, Cascade,
    Corvallis, David Douglas, Lane ESD, Oregon City,
    Pendleton, Rainier, St. Helens, SOLV, Tillamook,
    WESD Robert Farrell.

37
S-L Oregon Examples
Relief Nursery (35 HS Lit) Child Abuse
Welfare), Pediatric Cancer (35 HS Lit), Food for
Lane County (15 HS Lit.) Students studied Lane
Co. hunger poverty, engaged in an extended
learning project, toured Lane Co. Food Bank,
worked at local Food for Lane County farm 2
hrs/wk for 7 weeks. Art in Motion (15 HS Adv
Video Students work with Teachers make many Lrng
Art project Packets for teacher use Older
students teach younger students), Diversity
Circles (30 HS after 3 days of training Lead
Groups _at_ HS MS ES) Field/stream testing Wet
Well (Science classes, District-Wide EWEB
grant) Down by the Riverside 350 students ES
(45) MS (175) HS (95) - 4 env. projects across
multiple days trail construction, invasive
species, pond rehabilitation projects.
38
S-L Oregon Examples
Classes using S-L Spanish ELL Buddy Program (35
AP Spanish 3) Students help high-need ES MS as
mentors buddies) Give Take Theater Project
(25 HS writing Theater project for ES perform
for ES) Veterans Projects (160 HS 11-12th
Global Realities Class interviewed vets, wrote
reflection papers, exhibits w/ photos
transcripts) U.S. Military Hero (45 Sr. Engl.
Interviewed military or family, built sent care
boxes overseas. Unit formal letter-writing.
Elder Memory Books (15 Sp Ed HS interviewed
seniors about their lives, researched their
period of time found graphics for seniors. Super
responses. Community 101 - Awarded 5,000 to
non-profits to respond to child abuse in the
community.
39
S-L Oregon Examples
SPS High School 650 students participated in
S-L activities, engaging in a total of 5,600 hrs
of Preparation and/or Reflection and 6,100 hours
of Service. One Literature project implemented a
Service-Learning project related to childrens
literacy.
40
S-L Oregon Examples
Students engaged in multiple activities
including researching literacy
statisticslearning why literacy is important for
brain developmenteducational progress and
economic survival. They received reading
training from school district Reading Trainers.
They also completed literacy training and
mentoring for preschool and early ES children.
41
S-L Oregon Examples
Students used their literacy skills to organize
and conduct a book drive, write press releases to
publicize the event and its success. They wrote a
brochure explaining why reading to children is
important and they wrote a childrens book.
Students from this class have engaged in
presentations at the school, district and the
state level.
42
Connections To Graduation Standards
  • Learn and Serve-funded Oregon Resource Districts
    will work with interested Districts in
    understanding and implementing service-learning
    as an effective strategy to embed The Oregon
    Diploma graduation standards in district plans.

43
More Information / Resources
  • Oregon Department of Education
  • www.ode.state.or.us/go/servicelearning
  • Learn and Serve America
  • www.learnandserve.gov
  • Learn and Serve Americas National
    Service-Learning Clearinghouse
  • www.servicelearning.org
  • Youth Service America
  • www.ysa.org

44
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