Information For Faculty

General Info

Two students help cordinate volunteers for service at Food for PeopleThe Service Learning Center staff can help faculty develop and implement service learning courses in a variety of ways. We can assist you in finding appropriate community partners, sustaining relationships in the community, developing reflection activities, leading classroom presentations, finding grant resources for community projects, and advising on risk management issues.

Please click here for current risk management information.

We offer ongoing campus-wide faculty development workshops. To see what opportunities are available, see our current events.

We also offer an annual Service Learning Fellows program. Once selected to participate in this prestigious program, Fellows meet as a cohort to reflect on course design and develop an understanding of the theory and practice of service learning pedagogy.

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What is Experiential Education & Service Learning?

A student volunteer loads food into a vehicle to be taken to the service siteExperiential education is any form of teaching that utilizes direct "hands-on" experience. This can range from applying skills learned in the class to tasks in the field, to applying those skills to help meet a need in the community.

Service learning is a specific type of experiential education. There are as many different definitions of service learning as there are ways to serve; however, the key elements of the service learning pedagogy can be summed up as follows:

A service learning course provides the following educational experiences:

  • That are integrated into the students' academic curriculum or provide structured time for a student to think, talk, or write about what the student did and saw during the actual service activity;
  • Under which students learn and develop through active participation in thoughtfully organized service experiences that meet actual community needs, and that are coordinated in collaboration with school and community;
  • That provide students with opportunities to use newly-acquired skills and knowledge in real-life situations in their own communities;
  • Enhance what is taught by extending student learning beyond the classroom and into the community, to help foster the development of socially and environmentally responsible citizens.

Adapted from the CSU Community Service Learning Webpage.

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Benefits of Service Learning Involvement

National studies have validated the benefits of service learning for students, demonstrating that participation in volunteer service during college has widespread positive effects on students' academic and personal development. Service participation positively affects students' commitment to: their communities, helping others with difficulties, promoting racial understanding, and influencing social values. Service participation strengthens the development of important life skills, such as leadership abilities, self-confidence, critical thinking, group problem solving, and conflict resolution. Service participation also has a unique positive effect on academic development, including grades earned, degrees sought, time devoted to academic endeavors, academic self-confidence, and students' self-assessments of knowledge gained. Furthermore, service participation can translate into career advancement regardless of discipline, as is attested by the fact that HSU graduates have ranked volunteer experience as the single most important factor in gaining employment.

Click here for a chart of High-Impact Practices and how Service Learning benefits student learning. (.pdf) Excerpt from
High-Impact Educational Practices: What They Are, Who Has Access to Them, and Why They Matter, by George D. Kuh
(AAC&U, 2008)

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Essential Elements of Service Learning

An effective and sustained program:

  • Engages people in responsible and challenging actions for the common good.
  • Provides structured opportunities for people to reflect critically on their service experience.
  • Articulates clear service and learning goals for everyone involved.
  • Allows for those with needs to define those needs.
  • Matches service providers and service needs through a process that recognizes changing circumstances.
  • Expects genuine, active, and sustained organizational commitment.
  • Includes training, supervision, monitoring, support, recognition, and evaluation to meet service and learning goals.
  • Insures that the time commitment for service and learning is flexible, appropriate, and in the best interest of all involved.
  • Is committed to program participation by and with diverse populations.

Adapted from the Wingspread Principles of Good Practice for Combining Service and Learning.

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A student volunteer helps place food into food boxes that will be handed out to those in need

Integrated Reflection

Reflection is more than just journal writing and summary reports-it is making the space to draw connections between academic learning and meaningful service. Through reflection, the knowledge inherent in practice can be exposed and make concrete. Reflection should not just be done at the end of the service, but should be an integral part of the learning process throughout the course.

Some examples of reflection activities are listed below. The Service Learning Center staff can help you identify appropriate models of reflection and assist you in implementing them in the classroom.

Speaking

Examples include class discussions, small group discussions, oral reports and presentations, testimony before policy-making bodies, teaching material to younger students, public speaking, or one-on-one meetings.

Writing

Examples include essays, research papers, journals and learning logs, guides for future volunteers and participants, self-evaluations, or published articles.

Activities

Examples include planning future projects, simulation and role playing games, recognition and celebration, recruiting peers, or training other students.

Multimedia & Performing Arts

Examples include scrap books, web pages; paintings, drawings, and collages; music, theater, and dance presentations; or photo, slide, and video essays.

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Click here for a fact sheet on Reflection in Higher Education Service Learning. Source: Kara Connors and Sarena D. Seifer, Community-Campus Partnerships for Health, September 2005.

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