DLE LEARNING OUTCOMES AND REQUIREMENTS
FOR SERVICE-LEARNING
(Prepared for Faculty Senate Gen Ed
Committee)
Service-learning is designed
to expose students to the needs of the larger society, engage them in
addressing those needs through community service, and connect what they learn
in the classroom to real-world conditions through faculty-directed reflection.
At its best, service-learning is a powerful teaching method that allows
students to reflect upon why such conditions exist and what their democratic
responsibilities are in addressing them.
Service-learning courses
must incorporate the following student learning goals:
The following are some
examples of potential student learning goals, many of which incorporate general
education goals:
At
the end of this course/credit experience, students will have demons
Besides student learning goals and assessment, what
are the other requirements of Service-Learning courses?
Faculty have a
responsibility to insure that students are prepared to engage successfully in service-learning;
that is, that the student has been exposed to prior knowledge and experiences
that they will need to successfully map their own learning. Similarly, while students are primarily the
ones responsible for defining the problem and engaging in problem-solving s
1. The service-learning experience must be
supervised, with on-going faculty involvement and support. While this support
may take many forms, it always includes:
2. In addition to the requirement for
reflective learning, students will be expected to produce at least one final
product as a result of the service-learning project. Examples of products
include:
·
Reflective
journal of responses to directed questions
·
Research
papers
·
Reports
·
Essays
·
Exhibits
·
Portfolios
·
Oral
presentations
·
Media
presentations
3. The expectations for student learning
must be clearly established in the syllabi or otherwise communicated to the
student in writing. The student’s work must be evaluated and a grade assigned.
The grade should be based upon what the student has learned and how well the
student has met the learning goals, not only how many hours were spent in the service
experience.
The service-learning
experience, particularly if it is integrated into a regular course, must be of
sufficient depth and complexity to be worth the assigned number of academic
credits. Students in a service-learning
course must participate in a partial or full
service experience. [1]
[1] Partial projects are those in which students participate in one or two short but intensive service projects to explore one or two key terms in the course; Full projects are semester-long projects that require students to meet regularly with the community partner to explore major terms, key theories, hallmark writings, etc.)