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Developing Service Learning in Middle Level Schools

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Developing Service Learning in Middle Level Schools The What, Why, Where, When, How and Who of Service Learning Dr Dwight and Ms Rose Redmon-Holliday – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Developing Service Learning in Middle Level Schools


1
Developing Service Learning in Middle Level
Schools
  • The What, Why, Where, When, How and Who of
    Service Learning
  • Dr Dwight and Ms Rose Redmon-Holliday
  • P.O. Box 678, Murray, KY 42071

2
What is Service Learning?
  • Service learning
  • Is an instructional methodology for use with all
    students and curriculums, but especially young
    adolescents
  • Involves students in real settings where they
    apply academic knowledge and previous experiences
    to meet real needs
  • Provides concrete experiences for young people to
    learn new skills, think critically, and test new
    roles in an environment that encourages
    risk-taking and rewards competence

3
Still More What it is
  • Links service opportunities and academic learning
  • Encourages students to make contributions to the
    community
  • Constitutes an integral part in the life of a
    school and its community
  • Involves preparation for, reflection on, and the
    celebration of service
  • Stresses youth participation in all stages of
    planning

4
  • I felt really good that I did something for
    someone else instead of just thinking of me. I
    learned not to be afraid of people who are
    hungry, not to waste food, and how to cook.
  • - seventh grade student, Redlands Middle
    School, Grand Junction, Colorado

5
Four Elements of What
  • Preparation
  • Service
  • Reflection
  • Celebration

6
Preparation
  • Focuses service learning activities to specific
    learning outcomes and preparing the students to
    perform the activities.
  • You can link service learning to specific
    learning outcomes occurs in two ways
  • Start with a particular service focus or theme
    and link to specific learning outcomes, or
  • Start with a specific learning outcome and work
    to develop a complementary service activity.

7
In a Health Class
  • Students will learn the importance of a balanced
    diet
  • Students will connect diet with food availability
  • After visiting, students decide they can help the
    neighboring food shelf with a garden to provide
    fresh vegetables

8
Service
  • Service must possess two qualities
  • It MUST be challenging, engaging, and meaningful
    for the students (address intellectual
    developmental stage for young adolescents)
  • It should address a real need, so that students
    perceive the activity and their participation as
    relevant and important.
  • Service is enhanced when students take an active
    role in designing the experience. The more they
    are involved, the more ownership they take of the
    program

9
HeadlineStudent Killed in Car-Bike Accident
  • Students in a self-contained classroom lost a
    classmate when his bicycle was hit by a car.
  • In response, they propose a bicycle path to be
    constructed in his memory.
  • After struggling with the city council, theyve
    raised enough money for the construction slated
    to begin that summer.

10
Reflection
  • The third element integrates the service and the
    learning, and differentiates the experience from
    voluntarism or community service.
  • This encourages students to reflect on the
    service experience and allows them to understand
    the meaning and impact of their efforts, linking
    what they have learned with what they have done.
  • Operational definition of reflection is the
    active, persistent, and careful consideration of
    the service activity the students behavior
    practices and accomplishments. It means asking
    the basic questions What am I doing and Why?
    What am I learning?

11
I once hated to have students reflect, but now I
have choices
  • Pictures of projects hang outside the classroom
    door -- each captioned by the students within
    that class
  • Journals from student participants line the shelf
    near the door, each crammed with notes to and
    from each other
  • As part of their Lang Arts class, students write
    Letters-to-the-Editor concerning their projects
  • In a Civics class students work on their own web
    page and blog, including quotes of support from
    their Congress-people and Representatives
  • A special needs student speaks slowly into her
    tape recorder of the experience from today

12
Celebration
  • Celebration is sharing across systems and
    organizations and among individuals involved in
    service learning. The students celebrate learning
    and achievement and the acquisition of knowledge.
  • Celebrations can be on-going (incremental
    learning and service) or culminating (completion
    of units or projects) -- a book of essays,
    pictures, a party, a picnic, or youth outing.
  • Celebrations involve community recognition,
    including the school community. Since service is
    more than doing good or simply helping the needy
    it is essential that celebrations recognize what
    the students have accomplished and contributed.

13
Celebrate, Celebrate, Dance to the Music
  • A student who seldom talks has the final solution
    as to where to plant the class garden his
    grandpa says they can use his back acres
  • We finally have an appointment with the City
    Council
  • Yesterday we handed over a check for the 345.92
    we raised in our penny drive for the Food Shelf
  • We did it there is a new bridge being built to
    cross the creek at the back of the school yard
  • Notes, Pictures, Plaques, Parties, a Thank You
    they are all celebrations! Celebrate it all!!!

14
The Why Benefits
  • Adult models for young adolescent students (cross
    generations).
  • Student self-direction in applying classroom
    experience to real life.
  • Parental involvement allows parents to see their
    student in new ways.
  • Improves relationships between teachers and
    administrators as well as between students,
    teachers and parents.
  • Service to the community can build bridges
    between schools and communities.
  • Perceptions about students change as adults see
    the positive impact of adolescents.

15
The Where of Service Learning
  • Community Service Class
  • Mandatory Service
  • Collaboration with community-based
    organizations
  • Targeted Service
  • Club linked service
  • Career and vocational
    education courses
  • In-School service
  • Special Events
  • Summer
    Service

16
About that Where
  • Development of a Community Service Class where
    service is built into the class and the teacher
    makes students aware of service opportunities and
    prior to any service being performed they are
    trained in service learning protocol.
  • Mandatory Service made a requirement for
    graduation the argument for and against this type
    of service is lengthy. Some argue that it is the
    fundamental responsibility of citizenship and all
    should perform service. Others think it is
    contrary to the definition of service allowing it
    to be required.
  • A Collaboration with community-based
    organizations A school and community
    organization collaborate to meet the needs of
    that organization. The school organizes the
    service to meet those needs.

17
  • Targeted Populations Targeting under served
    populations (like mentally or physically
    handicapped). The working of mainstreamed
    students and the challenged students working hand
    and hand to accomplish a project (the service is
    infusion rather than the population themselves)
    The same with the elderly or other groups under
    served in the community.
  • Club linked service School organizations and
    clubs are required to perform community service
    and the school can assist the clubs achieve these
    requirements (food drives, clothing drives etc.).
  • Career and vocational education courses
    practicing the skills they learning various
    classes to assist the needy and less fortunate do
    work that they might be unable to (house repairs
    from Carpentry Classes or yard work with Ag
    students).

18
  • In-School service tutoring, mentoring or in
    school assistance of any kind can be considered
    service.
  • Special Events Schools participate in short term
    or seasonal projects. In response to a pressing
    need in the community (food drives at
    Thanksgiving, or Christmas, or raise funds for
    charitable groups or events). 9/11 brought a
    large number of Middle school students and groups
    to raise money for the fire fighters and
    policemen of New York City. Meets the young
    adolescent need to solve problems and give back
    to the community.
  • Summer Service many opportunities exist for
    students to work and have summer jobs which
    allows many organizations to give their permanent
    employees time off and hire the youth for the
    summer. Some organizations provide funding for
    just these types of opportunities.

19
  • The kids realized that somewhere tonight people
    are sleeping out in the rain.
  • Steve Dibb, science teacher, Waseka Middle
    School, Waseka, MN

20
The HOW of a Service Learning Program
  • Attitudes and belief are more vital than
    structural conditions.
  • Even if the structure exists,
  • nothing will occur without buy-in.

21
How?(This is the Leader Part)
  • Identify the problem/issue/concern
  • Research/Brain-Storm solutions
  • Write/Create a plan of action
  • Act, Observe, Record
  • Reflect, Revise, Recreate
  • Celebrate

22
Identify the problem/issue/concern
  • Listen to your students concerns
  • Help identify some over-riding issue
  • Attach it to curriculum and content -
  • Do you need to be interdisciplinary?
  • Will this involve other groups?

23
Research/Brain-Storm solutions
  • Do the research first. They cant provide
    solutions to things they know little about.
  • Involve outside agencies/groups as much and often
    as needed
  • Provide several possible service scenarios

24
Write/Create a plan of action
  • Identify the problem and the proposed solution
  • Identify the Why!, How!, Who! of the project
  • Student roles are important but each student
    manages their own set of notes class notes are
    kept safe and updated

25
Act, Observe, Record
  • Implement your students plan
  • Observe and discuss progress
  • Record progress and problems include
    discussions and possible adjustments

26
Reflect, Revise, Recreate
  • Create reflection models (written, visual, et al)
  • - students reflect individually, based not only
    on their observations, but also class discussions
  • Is there a need to revise the plan?
  • - use discussions to change as needed

27
Celebrate
  • the big things the little things
  • every step every group
  • Watch for the hidden contributors those in
    the shadows student or community
  • Celebrate not only the service but the
    learning
  • Celebrate successes, learn from failures!

28
Questions to ask as teacher-leader
  • Are academic goals clearly tied to service
    learning?
  • Is academic achievement clearly tied to service
    learning?
  • Do I need to provide more education about a
    specific issue?
  • Are all students engaged and challenged?

29
  • It teaches the special kids what its like to be
    givers rather than receivers of services.
  • -- Jill Eisner, special education teacher,
    Harpers Choice Middle School, Columbia, Maryland

30
Core Program Elements
  • Orientation and Training
  • Meaningful Service
  • Structured Reflection
  • From the work of Mark Langseth,
    Service-Learning Core Elements,
  • The
    Generator (Spring, 1990), NYLC

31
Orientation and Training
  • Responsibilities / how to perform the actual
    service work
  • Information on the individuals intended to be
    served
  • Information about social/contextual issues
    related to the service
  • Information about the service site (agency or
    schools purpose, functions)
  • Problem-solving around difficult situations that
    may arise
  • Group-building among participants

32
Meaningful Service
  • Is the program designed around a real community
    need?
  • Are the students and the school/agency placement
    contact people significantly involved in defining
    and designing the service experience?
  • Are the school/agency placements committed to the
    program goals and willing to work in partnership
    to achieve them?
  • Is the service engaging, challenging and
    meaningful to the student?
  • Do the school/agency contact people work
    effectively with students?

33
Structured Reflection
  • Guard against reinforcing inaccurate perceptions
    and biases
  • Assist in problem-solving specific situations,
    issues, etc.
  • Provide on-going education on general issues
    related to the service (family, socioeconomic,
    cross-cultural, developmental issues in cross-age
    programs)
  • Help with values clarification as students
    confront new situations
  • Integration of service and related learning with
    the rest of ones life
  • Community building among participants

34
The Who
  • EVERYONE!

35
Why everyone?
  • Every student, every adult, every person can both
    give and receive a service.
  • Your aim should be to mesh the giver and the
    recipient so that both develop an increased sense
    of self-esteem, of personal worth, of competence,
    and of confidence.
  • In giving we grow in receiving we assist in
    growth and thereby grow ourselves.
  • Increased interactions can increase the ability
    to work cooperatively with and to trust others.

36
Everyone Benefits
  • The more outside the realm of comfort we can push
    our students the more positive their attitudes
    toward living and working with people of diverse
    backgrounds can become.
  • The more our students become involved with their
    community the more likely they are to continue to
    be active in that community.
  • The more experiences students can gain the more
    realistic become their ideas about the world of
    work.

37
Principles of Good Practice
  • Reward learning NOT service
  • Maintain academic rigor
  • Set specific learning goals for students
  • Establish criteria for selection of the activity
  • Provide educationally sound measurements of
    learning
  • Minimize the distinction between community
    learning and classroom learning
  • Be prepared for uncertainty and variation within
    student outcomes
  • Maximize the community links

38
My Fav Four Resources
  • Growing Hope A sourcebook on integrating youth
    service into the school curriculum. National
    Youth Leadership Council (NYLC), 1910 West County
    Road B, Minneapolis, MN 55413
  • Route to Reform K-8 service-learning curriculum
    ideas. NYLC, 1910 West County Road B,
    Minneapolis, MN 55413
  • The Complete Guide to Learning Through Community
    Service (Grades K9). Allyn and Bacon, 160 Gould
    Street, Needham Heights, MA 02194
  • Youth Service A guidebook for developing and
    operating effective programs. Independent
    Sector, 1828 L Street NW, Washington, DC 2003

39
  • Service Learning is as Simple
  • (And Complex)
  • As that
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