1 / 18

The Nuts and Bolts of Creating and Maintaining Service-Learning Residential Communities

The Nuts and Bolts of Creating and Maintaining Service-Learning Residential Communities. Brian Collins, Kathleen Edwards, and Chrissy Orangio. Here’s what we hope to discuss today:. What does a Service Learning Community look like? Its purpose, the students, the support

lucien
Download Presentation

The Nuts and Bolts of Creating and Maintaining Service-Learning Residential Communities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Nuts and Bolts of Creating and Maintaining Service-Learning Residential Communities Brian Collins, Kathleen Edwards, and Chrissy Orangio

  2. Here’s what we hope to discuss today: • What does a Service Learning Community look like? Its purpose, the students, the support • Various roles for students – participants and leaders • Relationship with Residence Life and other areas of the university • The advantages and disadvantages of a learning community • Some resources, problem-solving and ideas sharing between institutions on the call.

  3. The Service Learning Community (SLC) at Elon University Purpose: • Introduction to service done the Elon way • Leadership training ground for the Kernodle Center • Intentional living learning environment that increases student engagement, academic success, and connection to the university

  4. The Numbers • 12 first year students, selected through application process • 3 sophomore Service Learning Leaders (SLLs) who live on the floor • 1 senior SLC Director • 1 advisor • 25 hours of service p/person, p/semester • 3-4 service themes a semester • 17 SLC Corps members • 2 academic courses • 3 day orientation before school begins • 1 overnight retreat in the spring semester • Weekly meetings – SLC members, SLLs, SLC-D • 4 social issues dinners a year

  5. SLC History • SLC began in fall 1994; 1st LC at Elon • SLC members – anywhere between 12-50 • Service Learning Leaders – between 3-8 • Has rarely looked the same from year to year • Service weekends, one service project a semester • Committees for the participants, no committees • SLLs SLMs SLLs • Two serious conversations in the past five years about whether or not to continue

  6. Benefits of SLC For the students: For the University • Currently 25 of the 80 Kernodle Center’s student leaders were/are members of the SLC • Recognition in US News & World Report, Presidential Honor Roll, etc. • Strong retention tool • Curricular/co-curricular hybrid • Decrease in high risk behavior - In 2007 44.4% of LC students reported having an average of zero drinks p/wk, while only 11.7% of non-LC students reported zero drinks. (2007 CORE results) • Higher GPA - In 2007 average GPA of LC student was 3.29; non-LC average was 3.18 (internal research) • 100% of SLC members said that they would recommend a LC to a friend (RL survey) • Leadership experience • Core social group

  7. Challenges of the SLC For the students For the university • Time consuming investment for advisor • Expensive • Recruitment • Accountability Time consuming investment for student leaders Recruitment Accountability Isolation, perception on campus Higher standards of behavior Disengaged students No common space

  8. Levels of Student Involvement:Service Learning Community Members • Roles • Attend weekly meetings • Perform 25 hours of service , 10 individual • Apply knowledge to courses: call to service, global • Develop personal philosophy of service • Creates core social group important for first year students

  9. Levels of Student Involvement:Service Learning Leaders (SLLs) • Training • Service planning, group dynamics, diversity, time management, growth and development, calendar planning, SLC orientation planning • Responsibilities • Service coordinating: structure, theme choice, PARE • Meetings: SLL, SLC • Residential: consistent interactions, high availability, positive reinforcement, building and maintaining trust

  10. Assessment of Student Leadership:Learning Outcomes • Group Development • Giving & receiving feedback, strategic planning, goal setting & shared ownership, teambuilding, trust building, support + challenge, effective collaboration, seeking diversity • Individual Development • Effective communication, self-awareness, problem-solving, time management, PARE, program management, volunteer coordination, defining a personal ethic of service • Community Engagement • Valuing and seeking multiple perspectives, promoting a participatory democracy, ethical decision-making, programmatic sustainability

  11. Levels of Student Involvement:Service Learning Community Director • Responsibilities • Fall and Spring training • Weekly meetings • Monthly feedback sessions • Conflict resolution workshops • Semesterly evaluations • Learning outcomes • Leadership model • Experience/training for future • Develop and implement training sessions

  12. Levels of Student Involvement:Service Learning Community Corps • Purpose: maintain involvement in SLC • Pros • Service projects • Social events • SLC alumni projects • Cons • Communication errors • Two separate organizations to manage • Competitive levels of ownership (with SLLs) • Future: stay connected with SLC alumni even post graduation, possibility for various leadership roles

  13. Assessment of Student Leadership:Values and Challenges Values: • The Legacy • Post graduate service • Ownership over LC • Strong leadership development Challenges • Time consuming for leaders and advisor • Hard to see immediate effect of commitment • Time Management • Higher standards of behavior

  14. Residence Life and Learning Communities at Elon University • Key Concepts • Structure and Components • Lessons learned Residential Learning Community – (noun) a cohort of students residing in the same residential area, interacting together and with faculty through a shared class, academic major, or intellectual interest.

  15. Key Concepts Community and Collaboration Advisor’s job: (1) assist students in getting to know each other, you, and other faculty – particularly in your field/discipline (2) create unique opportunities for students to collaboratively practice/engage in your academic discipline or intellectual theme Connection to Elon’s mission: Engaged learning, intentionality, seamless in/out of classroom learning

  16. Structure and Components • Faculty Advisors and departmental support • Syllabus, money, Service credit • LC Leadership Group • Overall direction of LCs, training, budget • Residence Life support • Staff, housing, programming • Other • Faculty fellow, LC Challenge, LC Council, ACUHO-I

  17. Lessons Clearly defined roles- advisors and Res Life staff Departmental support- financial, time Clear syllabus – goals, learning outcomes Assessment- demonstrate benefits to institution Growing pains- 2-3 years to success Faculty engagement- monthly contact Collaboration- faculty and Res Life Student buy-in-program planning, decision-making Streamlined finances- make it easy to spend money

  18. Resources • Elon’s Residence Life webpage – look at different learning communities, link is on right hand side of page www.elon.edu/residencelife • ACUHO-I – Annual Living Learning Programs Conference • National Study of Living Learning Programs – www.livinglearningstudy.net • Smith, B., MacGregor, J., Matthews, R., Gabelnick, F. Learning Communities: Reforming undergraduate education. 2004. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. • Laufgraben, J. & Shapiro, N. Sustaining and improving learning communities. 2004. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. • Levine, J. & Shapiro, N. Creating learning communities. 1999. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

More Related