Faculty Resources

Involvement in Service-Learning

Service-learning is more than an opportunity for students to experience a community. It is a pedagogy which ties student experiences in communities with their academic course work. [Formal description of service-learning here.] Like any instructional approach, it will only be as strong as a professor makes it. Many faculty members offer a JEP service-learning component in their classroom and treat the community experience as an add-on to a relatively traditional lecture and readings course.

The staff at the Joint Educational Project works hard to help students get the maximum value out of their experiences but the lack of connection between the community experience and the rest of the course and the community experience frequently results in lost learning opportunities.

We try to help mitigate that lack by working closely with professors as they design their course syllabi as well as offer direction to other established resources both online and in published books.

We like to think of students' experiences in the community as yet one more text for the classroom, a text which both faculty members and students make reference to, compare with other sources of information, and document in making an argument. For this to happen, faculty members must have an intentional design to the course and be aware of how the students' experiences are likely to relate to the course. In our opinion, the best place to develop this design is the course service-learning syllabus.

The following pages includes a sample course syllabus, some different models of service-learning, and a link to resources on discipline-based service learning approaches.

Grant Opportunities

Frequently, grants are made available to faculty to assist in the process of curriculum development and a variety of workshops, conferences and institutes are available to assist in better understanding the pedagogy of service-learning. The best single source of information is the national office of Campus Compact. On campus, the Center for Excellence in Teaching’s Fund for Innovative Undergraduate Teaching often awards grants to faculty who develop service-learning projects for their courses.

Other resources include:

The primary difficulty with research in these areas is the fundamental messiness of research designs when so many different players and agendas are considered. Service-learning, by its very nature, involves faculty members and classrooms, students, community agencies and directors, service recipients and community members. The work that students do varies widely from project to project, the support provided varies from campus to campus and classroom to classroom and it is simply very difficult to develop a clean design. These chalenges are not insurmountable, however, and we are eager to grapple with research designs with you.

Other Resources

Newsletter (pdf):
2005 Spring
2005 Fall
2006 Spring
2006 Fall
2007 Spring

If you also feel you would like to join in as a volunteer with our community schools we do have a program called the Literacy Project that is open to faculty.