Title: Designing an Effective Service-Learning Course and Meaningful Syllabus
1Designing an Effective Service-Learning Course
and Meaningful Syllabus
- Maureen Rubin
- California State University, Northridge
- Innovative Educators Webinar
- October 24, 2009
2Program Outline
- Is service-learning right for you?
- What do you want to accomplish?
- Plan weekly learning and service activities.
- Put them together in syllabus.
- Unique service-learning assignments
3Is Service-Learning Right for You?
- It's not for every instructor and
- it's not for every course
- Consider
- Advantages and disadvantages, challenges and
opportunities of the pedagogy, where it fits in
students academic plan.
4What Do You Want to Accomplish?
- Be very specific in identifying 1-3
student-learning outcomes you want your students
to accomplish by participating in the
service-learning portion of the class. - Make sure the service enhances the learning and
is not extraneous to your student learning
objectives.
5Some things to consider
- Developmental appropriateness
- Group or individual work?
- Who selects community partner?
- What skills do students need/have?
- Everyone at same site at same time?
- Students choose from several options?
6- 10 Sample Student Learning Outcomes
71. Help students understand course content
- Assist students in learning course content
through the practical application of concepts
learned in class Tax preparation
82. Promote social responsibility and civic
learning
- Help students understand concepts such as power
differentials or privilege Electrical
engineering (Lumens) - Encourage students to probe problems for their
symptoms or causes Environmental Health
(Healthy Homes)
93. Increase understanding of the importance of
your discipline to society
- Transmit understanding that your discipline
connects with life in the real world Interior
Design (Design jury room) - Help students to see practitioners in your
discipline as activists and contributors to the
public good Finance (Campus auxiliary investment)
104. Increase awareness of community
- Increase students knowledge of community issues,
needs, strengths, problems and resources
Sociology (gang prevention) - Identify community-based public and private
programs that provide assistance and advocacy
Sociology (Yellow pages project)
115. Enhance commitment to service
- Improve students attitude to service Genetics
(Special Olympics)
126. Promote Career Development
- Expose students to career opportunities to help
them make career decisions --Freshman seminar
137. Develop self-awareness
- Expose them to options and points of view other
than their own Journalism (Public relations
practicum)
148. Increase sensitivity to diversity
- Help students understand the wealth of diversity
in their community Art or computer programs
159. Develop communication skills
- Learn to collaborate and negotiate to resolve
conflict JusticeCorps
1610. Increase critical thinking
- Improve ability to think, apply information to
problem solving and analyze information data and
concepts Kinesiology
17- Plan Weekly Learning and Service Activities
18(No Transcript)
19Plan Community Collaboration
- All at the same site at the same time
- Students choose from limited, pre-screened list.
Community partners invited to come to first class
to recruit and answer questions. - Students select own site and write proposal.
20Successful Courses
- Blend service and academic content
- Do not treat service-learning as an add-on, but
as an integral part of each class - Cross-fertilize assignments
21Assignment and Outcomes Planner 300-level
Genetics course
Outcomes
Student Learning Objectives Service Objective What is Due Today?
Week 1 Increase awareness of community Assist population with genetic diseases
Content Lecture Topic Chromosomes Special Needs Populations Paperwork
Service Learning Lecture Link Why service-learning?
Reading Chapter 1 textbook Profiles of community sites Complete reading
Assignment Select partner Paperwork explaining partner selection
Additional Assignment
Reflection Write Journal Entry 1 and post on web Why did you pick this partner? Web journal posted and comments made
Exam
A s s I g nm e n t s
22Do the same outline for every week
- Content Lecture
- Service-Learning Link Lecture
- Readings
- Content
- Service-Learning
- Assignment(s)
- At site
- For class
- Reflection
23Syllabus Elements
- Course Information (Units, location, class
number, meeting days and times) - Instructor information (Office, phone, office
hours, email, website, emergency information) - Course Description include definition of
service-learning
24More Syllabus Elements
- Student learning objectives
- At the conclusion of this course, you will be
able to - Course content basic academic elements
- Student Performance Evaluation explain elements
that will constitute grade
25And Some More
- Grading Scale
- Daily plan
- Todays agenda
- Whats due today?
- Whats going to be due next week?
- Attendance policy
- Legal/ethical statements (Students with
disabilities, plagiarism warning, tentative
nature of syllabus).
26Under Course Description
- The purpose of this course is to
- Match with University mission
- Meeting accreditation standards
- Build resumes
- Departmental curriculum goals
- Spell out learning objectives and how they are
critical elements of college education
27Definition of service-Learning
- A course-based, credit-bearing educational
experience in which students participate in an
organized service-learning activity that meets
identified community needs and reflect on the
service activity in such a way as to gain further
understanding of course content, a broader
appreciation of the discipline and an enhanced
sense of civic responsibility. Bringle and
Hatcher
28Example - Grading
- Sample Elements
- Lecture/discussion exams and quizzes
- Attendance in class and at community site
- Community partners evaluation
- Peer evaluations
- Content papers
- Service-Learning journals
- Deliverable
- Oral presentation
29Unique service-learning elements - Reflection
30What Is Reflection?
- Planned activities designed to help students
process their service experience in a thoughtful
manner - Integrate service into the heart of the course to
promote desired learning outcomes - The glue that ties the learning to the service
- Dynamic process that involves critical thinking,
analysis, evaluation, problem solving, mediation
and reasoning
31What Does Current Research Say about It?
- The instructors ability to connect the
community-based service experience to classroom
activities and other graded assignments is the
most important variable for successful
service-learning. - Intentional structured activities that offer
students opportunities to examine and analyze
their cognitive and affective learning
(individually and/or in groups) are key.
32What are the Essential Elements? The 5 Cs
- Connection feeling and thinking learning is
not compartmentalized into college and community. - Continuity- must occur before, during and after
the service experience. - Context should be used to solve problems with
the tools, concepts and facts of the particular
situation. - Challenge - current perspectives must be examined
and conflicts resolved. - Coaching Students need emotional support, need
to feel safe develop alternative explanations
for experience and observations and question
their original interpretations. -
Eyler Giles (1999)
33How Is It Done?
- Through specific activities designed to assist
the student in processing the service-learning
experience - Many, many paths
- Journals
- Think pieces and creative expression
- Role playing
- Writing assignments
34Structured Reflection Journals
- Journals that pose different questions throughout
the semester (Eyler 2001) - Journals that pose the same questions after each
session - Journals mixed with mini-analysis papers
(Azusa-Pacific University, 1999) - Three-part journals (observe, feel, connect)
- Journals tied to lecture and reading
- Interactive web- based journals with classmates
or community partners
35Think Pieces and Creative Expression
- Write a play
- Write a letter to yourself, seal it, leave it
with instructor. At semesters end reread it and
write about change - Make a video
- Write a poem or song
- Compose a travelogue
- Write a letter to the editor, government agency,
etc. - Take photos
- Draw or paint a scene
36Role Play
- Bring a community partner to class and have them
create or reenact a typical or challenging
service experience - Divide students into groups and have each one act
out a different roles played by various
populations involved in service experience (i.e.
service-recipients, agency staff, professor,
government agency, student, etc.)
37Writing Assignments
- Interpret quotes
- A cynical young person is almost the saddest
sight to see because it means that he or she has
gone from knowing nothing to believing in
nothing. - --Maya Angelou
- Community commentary
- Describe a scene in the community
- What story does it tell?
- What does it say about the community?
- What does this scene mean to you and why?
- If the scene were a painting, what title would
you give it?
38Bibliography
- Seifer, Serene and Connors, Kara,
Community-Campus Partnerships for Health for
Learn and Serve Americas National
Service-Learning Clearinghouse Faculty Toolkit
for Service-Learning in Higher Education. - National Service Learning Clearinghouse