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.What is Service-Learning? |
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Service-learning is a form of experiential education which links academic
study to real world experiences in community settings. It fosters civic
responsibility by focusing on critical, reflective thinking and an appreciation
of larger social issues inherent in a democracy. Training, supervision
and evaluation are provided by supervisors at community-based organizations,
in collaboration with the MSU Service-Learning Program and its faculty
partners. Service-learning activities enhance academic learning, build
maturity and insight, and they prepare students for active citizenship
and lifelong learning.
Approved Definition from Montclair State University Senate: The Experiential Education Committee of the Faculty Senate proposed the following definition of service-learning which was approved by MSU's University Senate in May, 1998: Service-learning is a course-based, credit bearing educational experience in which students participate in an organized community-based service activity. This activity meets identified community needs, and provides a student with sufficient time to reflect on the service activity in such a way as to gain a greater understanding of course content and an enhanced sense of civic responsibility. A Service-Learning course must:
Benefits of Service-Learning: There are a number of perspectives one could take in order to evaluate the benefits of service-learning. Typically, we look variously at the benefits yielded by our students, our faculty and the community. While our faculty benefit generally by enhancing their scholarship, students benefit by building citizenship skills and experience, the community benefits by having a committed rotation of students and university knowledge and resources, there is a grand benefit that our entire society yields as service-learning continues to grow nationwide. When we work, as our mission states, to foster the development of informed and involved citizens through the integration of service to the community with academic course work, we are at once creating civic infrastructure through campus-community partnerships and teaching tomorrow’s leaders the invaluable skills of citizenship. Service-Learning is therefore an exercise in participatory democracy. Benefits to Students: The mission of the Service-Learning Program at MSU is aimed at our number one goal: to foster the development of informed and involved citizens through the integration of service to the community with academic course work. Commensurately, the Service-Learning program hopes to cultivate this student progress as its primary benefit to our students and to our greater society. We hope to achieve our goals with students by providing such benefits as:
Benefits to Faculty: As stated in our program goals, Service-Learning works to benefit faculty by creating and supporting a soundly coordinated program support infrastructure and by supporting their scholarship, teaching and application in ways that support retention, promotion and tenure in the following ways:
In addition to fostering the development of leadership skills and a sense of civic responsibility in students, service-learning offers significant advantages to agencies. The major benefit of service-learning is to work in collaboration with others in order to achieve together what could not be achieved alone. Additional benefits of service-learning in the community include:
To learn more about how
other institutions of higher education define http://csf.colorado.edu/sl/what-is-sl.html http://www.nslexchange.org/exchange/whatissl.cfm |
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