uw service learning

It’s No Secret: Service-Learning Rocks

Posted on by Jeanie Lindsay. This entry was posted in Volunteerism and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink.

Volunteerism is one of The Whole U’s six pillars, and we organize ways to make a difference at local non-profits such as FareStart all year long. Another way that faculty are making an exponential impact is by incorporating service-learning into their courses. Service-learning classes are just like other courses, but with an additional requirement of performing a certain number of service hours in the community over the duration of the quarter. Some professors like to let students replace quizzes, exams, or papers with volunteer hours in order to balance their workload for students, while some prefer to implement service into their curriculum and simply have less textbook work from the get-go.

As a student at UW who is passionate about service, I wanted to get to know some professors behind this philanthropic trend and hear what they have to say about it. Here’s an inside look at a few service-learning courses. I bet you’ll be inspired, whether or not you have a classroom of your own.

Senior Lecturer Susan Pitchford – Sociology

Susan Pitchford

How many service-learning courses can one teacher manage? Thanks to the Carlson Center, which offers support, Susan Pitchford has the capacity to offer a service element in all of her classes. That means she offers service-learning four times a year with additional programs abroad.

Service abroad is a bit more challenging to facilitate since there isn’t a Carlson Center to help manage the volunteers and their service sites. Susan had to set aside hours to ensure everything was processed correctly for a program she coordinates in Rome.

“It draws a lot of people,” Susan said of the Rome opportunity. “They have an interest in immigration or some kind of ‘helping’ field in the future, so they may not be that interested in the topic of the program, but they’re really interested in service-learning.”

Her other courses give students an outlet for making change as well. In her Comparative Social Problems course, Susan and her students discuss genocide, epidemics, and slavery, but the service-learning element gives students a place to do more than just talk about these harsh realities.

“There’s just a lot of really emotional material, and bringing service-learning into that course has really helped a lot, because they feel like ‘Okay, I’m making some kind of contribution,’” she said. “They don’t want to sit there and just hear about horrible things happening to people.”

Susan thinks education is starting to move away from a “sage on the stage” format, with students being more eager to apply what they learn in the real world. She’s trying to further integrate what students experience at their service site to academia. I had the chance to look at one of the assignments she is currently drafting up, and I think I just might have to take one of her classes before I graduate.

Professor Nancy Kenney – Psychology & Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies

Nancy Kenney uw

Nancy Kenney teaches Psychobiology of Women, and although she offers service-learning as a part of the curriculum, it’s not quite like other service-learning classes. It’s a 200-person lecture course, so it took some serious logistical planning before she agreed to implement service into her curriculum, though she told me she loved the idea of it from day one.

The main obstacle was that her class is less “volunteer organization specific” than many. Because the psychobiology of women starts at conception and ends with menopause, it’s impossible for any service organization to match up with all or most of the course topic.

“My course is a life-span course, unlike early childhood education or an international course, where you could identify certain community organizations that really are tightly connected to the topic of the course,” Kenney explained. “There is no such thing for psychobiology of women, because organizations are not life-span organizations.”

One of the key features of the service in her class is that it’s optional. She doesn’t require everyone who enrolls to take part, because she understands that not all of her students have the time and energy for service on top of their regular homework. Still, about a third of those who enroll in her class each quarter also register for service.

While that may seem like a high average for college kids signing up to commit extra time to school, Nancy’s goal is to get students out into organizations where they have opportunities to engage with more than just other students, and she believes her class acts as an extra nudge they’re already looking for.

“I think students want to be involved in the community but they’re busy, and they need permission,” she said. “If it’s a part of a course, it’s permission.”

Professor Kathie Friedman – International Studies

Kathie Friedman uw

 

Every year, Kathie Friedman offers service-learning courses regarding displaced peoples, but it wasn’t always that way. Kathie started out teaching for UW on the Tacoma campus, which at the time didn’t offer service-learning due to its small size. When Kathie was offered a position on the Seattle campus, she jumped at the chance to offer a class paired with service.

“It never made any sense to me to teach about immigrants and refugees theoretically,” she said. “Students deserve to learn who’s living in their communities, and what organizations are working in them.”

Kathie is a sociologist, too, so she explained that it’s especially important to be involved with service for the communities who participate in interviews for her research.

“I think students should get used to that idea,” she said. “You don’t just get your degree without giving back — that’s just a part of it with social research.”

Kathie finds it inspiring how students perceive their experiences after engaging in service, as well. To them, the only difference between the displaced people they serve and themselves is time and place, and she appreciates the fact that they make that connection.

“That’s been an interesting kind of feedback from the students,” she said. “We’re all human beings in this together and it’s just random. It could have been the other way around.”

While she was in college, service helped Kathie discover and be drawn towards her line of work. Now that she’s teaching courses that feature a service element, the same is true for those who take her courses. Some of her past students now work for refugee resettlement organizations, and oftentimes they are connections for new students who are just beginning their professional journey.

Professor Enrique Bonus – American Ethnic Studies

 Enrique Bonus uw

“American Ethnic Studies is founded on community service,” said Rick Bonus, a professor in the AES department, who offers service-learning in two of his courses.

For Rick, it just made sense to offer service-learning because students were so involved in getting AES started as an official discipline at the university.

“It came out of student activism, and questioning this relationship between the university and the community it serves,” Rick said. “A lot of student activists in the late ‘60s demanded for fields of study that would be relevant to who they are and the communities they came from.”

Rick has been teaching service-learning courses since he landed at the UW, and before the Carlson Center streamlined and organized the process, he coordinated it himself. Maintaining service-learning in his classes has made him the teacher he is today.

“Students find ways to make connections that sometimes I didn’t expect or think about,” he said. “There are multiple centers [of knowledge] in the classroom, and service-learning makes me even more of a believer in that philosophy.”

In his free time, Rick has worked with some of the organizations his students volunteer with. He gives supplemental information to his students to make sure they can choose an organization they feel the best about.

Rick has had his fair share of pleasant surprises as a service-learning instructor. One year, a student independently made a presentation to help her service organization gain additional funding, and since then, he’s encouraged other students to follow in similar footsteps.

“The organization’s director wrote to me and said, ‘This was a wonderful gift we received from your student and we would just like to thank you for encouraging them.’ And I thought to myself, ‘I wasn’t,” Rick said. “But after that, I started telling students, ‘You know, if you want to give something of yourself besides time and service to your organization, this is one idea.’”

Although service-learning usually pairs with social science courses, Rick thinks that any instructor who is considering adding a service element should just do it.

“Oftentimes, anything you add to the syllabus can be irritable — you have to adjust and do all of these things, and students have to adjust — but if it really doesn’t fit, the students will tell you,” he said. “Try it out and see what they say.”

 

Whether it’s creating a culture of “giving back”, making even more connections between the real world and academia, or becoming a more thoughtful instructor, service-learning is a powerful tool. If you’d like more information about incorporating service-learning into your courses, check out the Carlson Center. If you’d like ways to give back personally, check out our archive of articles on volunteerism.

Thanks to all four educators for taking the time to speak with me!