This guide provides insight into service learning including the benefits of using it in the classroom, ideas for implementation, and sample assignments.
An academic course that involves community engagement — more widely known as service learning or community-based learning — is “an approach to teaching and learning in which students use academic knowledge and skills to address genuine community needs.” This type of civic engagement aligns closely with Boston University’s core institutional values. As the BU Mission Statement emphasizes, “We remain dedicated to our founding principles: that higher education should be accessible to all and that research, scholarship, artistic creation, and professional practice should be conducted in the service of the wider community — local and international.”
Note: In its focus on addressing real-world issues, service learning is often seen as a kind of experiential learning. Consult CTL’s guide on experiential learning to learn more.
Multiple researchers have found that engaging in service learning helps students develop leadership skills, strengthen their sense of belonging at their home institution, cultivate personal values, and embrace self-efficacy (Eyler & Giles, 1999). Furthermore, such experiences increase student commitment to promoting racial understanding, commitment to activism, and the likelihood of pursuing a career in medicine, education, or another service-related profession (Astin et. al, 2000).
In order to harness these benefits, students must engage in meaningful reflection to help them process and make sense of their service learning experience. Reflection prompts students to assume an active role in the meaning-making process by “direc[ting] the student’s attention to new interpretations of events” (Eyler & Giles, 1999) as well as inviting them to consider how their beliefs and identities (as well as others’) are informed by social, economic, and other structural forces.
Dr. Sheila Cordner, Lecturer of Humanities at BU, recommends the following steps for incorporating service learning into your course:
A key difference between “community service” and “service learning” is that in the case of service learning, students are expected to reflect on how their experience partnering with a community organization impacts their learning of course material.
One effective way to evaluate students’ service learning is to develop a writing assignment with a reflection component, which specifically requires students to connect their service experience with course themes, questions, and texts. One popular method is the “What? So What? Now What?” model, which aligns with the different stages of Kolb’s experiential learning cycle (see figure below) and can be easily adapted to reflective journal writing.
Agreeing that guided reflection is essential to the service learning experience, many educators have turned to Kolb’s (1984) experiential learning cycle. This process depicts the relationship between community engagement and critical reflection.
Here, after completing an aspect of their service learning experience (Step 1), students move through three phases to make sense of their experience. These include reflecting on the experience itself (Step 2: reflective observation), drawing conclusions from this reflection (Step 3: abstract conceptualization), and then planning for the future or trying out new ideas (Step 4: active experimentation). This cyclical process thus includes the integration of:
Other examples of reflective writing can be found here and here.
Additional means of evaluation often include an oral presentation, or a digital project. For instance, Digication, a free ePortfolio platform supported by BU, can be used to help students showcase and reflect on their cocurricular learning experience.
Here are some sample rubrics for specific types of assessments:
Astin, Alexander & J. Vogelgesang, Lori & K. Ikeda, Elaine & A. Yee, Jennifer. (2000). How Service Learning Affects Students. Higher Education Research Institute. University of California, Los Angeles.
Eyler, Janet; Giles, Dwight E. Jr.; and Gray, Charlene J., “At A Glance: What We Know about The Effects of Service-Learning on Students, Faculty, Institutions and Communities, 1993-1999” (1999). Bibliographies . 5. https://digitalcommons.unomaha.edu/slcebibliography/5
Eyler, Janet, and D.E. Giles. (1996). A Practitioners Guide to Reflection in Service-Learning . Nashville: Vanderbilt University Press.
Jacoby, Barbara. (2015). Service-Learning Essentials: Questions, Answers, and Lessons Learned. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Sheila Cordner , co-author of this guide, would be happy to be in touch with faculty interested in pursuing service learning in their courses: scordner@bu.edu .
Prepared by Sheila Cordner and the Center for Teaching and Learning at Boston University
Experiential Learning at Boston University “Experiential learning” is often used at Boston University as an umbrella term, along with subcategories.
Background Experiential learning is an engaged learning process whereby students “learn by doing” and by reflecting on the experience. Experiential.
Why Reflect on Experiential Learning (EL)? Reflection is a versatile tool that helps students make the most of EL. By.
Defining assessment When students and educators hear the word “assessment,” they tend to think of tests, portfolios, final papers, and.
Showcase on Graduate Experiential Learning College of Communication Boston University College of Communication offers several experiential learning opportunities through labs.
Guidelines for Faculty for Assessment As with any type of assessment, assessment of experiential learning activities should always be conducted.
What is an EL partnership? A partnership is a formalized and mutually beneficial relationship between a university group/course/class and an.
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