Initiation of a Service Learning Project


"How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world."

                                                                                        

                                                                                          Anne Frank, Diary of a Young Girl, 1952


 Training Modules 

 

 

 

   

NC Social Studies Standard Course of Study  

 

 

 

 


    Introduction

 

Starting a service learning project will be uncomfortable for many social studies educators accustomed to a text based course of instruction.  The potential benefits outlined in the previous module hopefully provide an impetus for a successful service learning experience in the social studies classroom.  

 

This module intends to offer resources on how to best initiate a service learning project.   One should first envision a plan that would sustain such a project.  Rahmia Wade insists that there are common elements to an effective service project:  careful planning, curriculum integration, structured reflection, student ownership, community input, and evaluation(1).  Consider these elements in developing a strategy to begin your own social studies service project.  

 

Perhaps the next most important aspect in starting a service learning program or project is to construct community, student, and school partnerships--all of which take time to form and even longer to sustain.  Clayton and O'Steen state that "the strategies that you design for teaching with service-learning will be--must be--sensitive to the place and the people and the history that comprise your context".  To form proper relationships you must take into account who your students are and what they do or don't bring to your course and possibly to service learning, the needs of your community and the resources available in your community to help with your project, the characteristics of the population potentially benefited from the experience, who you are as a teacher and what you bring to the process, the standard course of study, and the requirements of your school and department (2). 

 

Thus, getting to know your subject, your students, your community, your school and yourself is essential to initiating a service learning project. 

 

  1. Wade, ed. "Building Bridges: Connecting Classroom and Community throught Service Learning in the Social Studies", NCSS Bulletin 1997
  2. Clayton, P. and O'Steen, B. (2003) Service-Learning in K-12 Education: Transforming Practice in Middle School, High School, and College of Education Classrooms. Chapel Hill, NC, USA: Southeastern Association of Educational Studies Conference, Mar 2003.

Essential Questions--Initiation

 


  Resource Links--Initiation

 


 

     Podcasts on Initiation

 

 


A View of Initiation

 

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 Primary Document Connection--Initiation

 

      A positive community change has rarely occured without motivated individuals who act on behalf of their beliefs.  The following primary documents demonstrate the beginnings of several movements in American history that positively transformed American society.  Service Learning requires that all stakeholders--the student, the teacher, and the community--receive a benefit from the experience.  Use the following documents to support the  NC Standard Course of Study and as a means to start your service project in the classroom.  What do these documents initiate and why?  In what ways did the authors of these documents establish guidelines that positively transformed American communities?  How was the community positively impacted?

 


  North Carolina Service Learning Social Network

 

The NC Service Learning Social Network is designed to be an online collaborative professional learning community (PLC) for integration of service learning in the social studies.  Through forum questioning, blogs, and online shared resources, the social studies section at the Department of Public Instruction hopes that social networking makes service learning a more accessible, manageable, and integral part of the North Carolina social studies classroom.

 


  Professional Development--Initiation (Available Spring 2011)