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Engagement and Service-Learning: Benefits and Essential Strategies

Engagement and Service-Learning: Benefits and Essential Strategies. Barbara A. Holland, Ph.D. Senior Scholar, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. Successful 21 st Century Institutions must be:. Intentional Coherent Focused Integrated Responsive

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Engagement and Service-Learning: Benefits and Essential Strategies

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  1. Engagement and Service-Learning: Benefits and Essential Strategies Barbara A. Holland, Ph.D. Senior Scholar, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis

  2. Successful 21st Century Institutions must be: • Intentional • Coherent • Focused • Integrated • Responsive • Autonomous in a context of mission-based accountability • Driven by shared governance across stakeholders – more democratic

  3. Engagement and Higher Education • Engagement aligns the intellectual assets (knowledge generation and dissemination) of the institution with public issues and questions as a way of strengthening teaching/research and the community’s capacity. • Recognizes interdependent knowledge relationships – The nexus of intellectual, political, social, cultural, economic needs and assets

  4. The Benefits of Engagement • Response to accountability pressures • Counteract the overly-vocational focus of students • Improve town-gown relations • Improve shared governance • Recruitment, retention of faculty and students • Better learning; needs of contemporary students • New forms and modes of research including undergraduate research • New streams of revenue; donor involvement

  5. Incentives and Reputational Factors are Changing • Incorporation of engagement into regional accreditation processes • Federal research funding criteria • Potential for state support (e.g.,VA, KY) • Introduction into classifications/rankings-Carnegie and US News & World Report • International commitment to engagement • Student demand for service-learning • Evidence of impact on student outcomes

  6. Higher Ed Service-Learning Stats • More than a third of postsecondary instit. • Half of all community colleges • 29% of students in SL (Compact members) • Most SL focuses on tutoring/mentoring youth, health, environment, social issues • Most partnerships are with non-profit organizations or schools

  7. SL in Schools • 69% of schools engaged students in service • Approx 15 million students involved in SL • Profound impact on academic achievement, school climate, student engagement • Effects greater for students from low SES • Maryland requires SL in all schools • HS graduates look for SL in college

  8. International Service-learning • South Africa, India, Phillipines, Australia, South Korea, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Canada, UK, Germany, Spain, Italy, Norway…. • 9 nations at SL Research Conference • Greater emphasis on student voice • Similar goals to US, plus nation-bldg, development of philanthropy, service, NGO sector, cross-cultural understanding

  9. Overall Impacts of Engagement • Service-Learning is spreading across K-20 • Engagement is diversifying postsecondary institutions • Global interest is making engagement a core element of research excellence and institutional reputation/prestige • Engaged learning matches the “new student” • Engagement is building awareness of the role of higher education in creating “public good” • Challenges of quality design and practice remain!

  10. Service-Learning: Combines service activities and learning objectives with the intent that the activity benefit both the recipient and the provider. This is accomplished by linking learning to community-based tasks supported by structured reflections and guided explorations of related aspects of knowledge, skills and values.

  11. Service-Learning Quality • Academic credit for learning, not service • Rigorous and specific learning objectives • Structured reflection on both learning and service outcomes • Thorough orientation of students • Community involvement in design; clear roles and responsibilities • A collaborative approach to teaching

  12. Service-Learning Challenges • Definitions, stereotypes, perceptions – The problem with the “S” word • Setting clear and specific goals • For student learning • For community benefit • Coherence across curricular and co-curricular service-learning; logic of the learning experience • How much? Where in curr? To what end? • Documentation/measurement of impacts • Visibility – internal and external

  13. K12 SL Research Findings • More control group studies • Measurement of elements of SL on outcomes • #1 Duration – at least a semester • #2 Directness of community involvement • #3 Cognitively challenging activity and reflection • The more responsibility, autonomy and choice students have – the greater the effects (Billig, 2005)

  14. Higher Ed SL Research Findings • Increases retention and progress-to-degree; aligns with needs of the “new” student body • Makes learning relevant, effective, transforming • Influences career and course of study • Develops social responsibility, multicultural understanding and leadership • Encourages students to be active in campus and community life • Must be integrated into courses, major/gen ed

  15. Other Research Findings • Improved higher order thinking skills; analysis, understanding complex problems • Civic responsibility, citizenship • Commitment to service • Career awareness/skills – awareness of options, clarity of choice, technical skills • Personal outcomes – self-esteem, empowerment • Social outcomes – pro-social behaviors, reduction of risky behaviors

  16. Summary of SL Effects on Learning Mediating Factors Self-esteem Empowerment Prosocial behaviors Motivation Engagement Academic Outcomes Service- Learning Clearly defined programmatic features

  17. Successful Strategies • Discuss graduate attributes and learning objectives • Create a plan or pathway for service-learning • Invest in faculty development; incentives • Recognize diverse approaches; start with trial courses and interested faculty • Create supportive infrastructure • Sustain partnerships relationships • Document and evaluate process and outcomes • Collaborate with other institutions; peer exchange; build on existing good practices and literature

  18. Trends in Service-Learning • Attention to explicit learning goals • Service-learning and diversity • Greater involvement of partners as teachers • International service-learning – here and abroad • Service-learning in teacher preparation • Graduate service-learning • Service-learning capstones, minors, 1st Yr. • SL and undergraduate research

  19. Students and Engaged Research • Duke: “Research service-learning” courses involve students and faculty in research on community-identified needs. • Similar programs: Brown Cornell Georgetown Harvard Princeton Minnesota Michigan Wisconsin

  20. Resources • Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning (umich.edu/~mjcsl) • SL Course Design Workbook • Campus Compact Introduction to SL Toolkit (Compact.org) • Community-Campus Partnerships for Health • International Service-Learning Research Conference • International Partnership for Service-Learning • American Association of Community Colleges – Horizons • American Association of State Colleges and Universities – American Democracy Project; Stewardship of Place • Conference on Service-Learning at Faith-based Colleges and Universities (messiah.edu) • National Service-Learning Clearinghouse (servicelearning.org)

  21. Contact Information Barbara A. Holland, Ph.D. Senior Scholar Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis Phone: 503-638-9424 E-mail:barbarah@etr.org www.servicelearning.org

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