What Is Academic Service-Learning?

Characteristics of Academic Service-Learning

  • Community service serves as the vehicle for the achievement of specific academic goals and objectives.
  • It provides structured time for students to reflect on their service and learning experiences through a mix of writing, reading, speaking, listening, and creating in small and large groups and individual work.
  • It fosters the development of those "intangibles"- empathy, personal values, beliefs, awareness, self-esteem, self-confidence, social-responsibility, and helps to foster a sense of caring for others.
  • It is based on a reciprocal relationship in which the service reinforces and strengthens the learning, and the learning reinforces and strengthens the service.
  • Credit is awarded for learning, college-level learning, not for a requisite number of service hours.

How is Academic Service-Learning different from community service, internships, cooperative ed., etc.?

  • Academic Service-Learning uses community service as the vehicle for the attainment of students' academic goals and objectives.
  • Community service fills a need in the community through volunteer efforts. Academic Service-Learning also fills that need, but it uses that need as a foundation to examine our society, our future, and ourselves. Further, Academic Service-Learning provides students with opportunities to use newly acquired skills and knowledge in real-life situations.
  • It identifies in advance, and tracks, specific learning objectives and goals (as well as the intangible ones).
  • Students perform a valuable, significant, and necessary service that has real consequence to the community.
  • The goal of the service is to empower students and those being served.
  • The needs of the community dictate the service being provided.