Civic Engagement - Service-Learning Project
Learning Outcomes
Upon completion of this lesson's material, students will be able to:
- Perform a minimum of 10 hours of community service.
- Apply an understanding of course topics to an analysis of experiences within the service.
- Reflect upon personal attitudes and beliefs both prior and after the service.
- Identify personal values related to civic engagement.
- Reflect upon personal communication skills within the context of the service.
Steps in the Process
Through the class schedule you are going to engage in a number of graded and ungraded activities that will lead you through the process of developing a quality service-learning project. These steps are outlined in the Course Navigator. Descriptions of each step are also included as links in this section of the course.
The steps in the Service-Learning process are:
- Locate an organization, event, or a self-designed public education program at which you can volunteer.
- Complete the SL Proposal Quiz
- Complete your Hours (in here you will find a link to the Time Log and Supervisor Evaluation forms you need to complete to document your service.)
- Complete your SL Reflection Paper (Civic Engagement)
- Complete the following SL related forms and documentation (links and instructions are located below)
- Experience Summary Survey
- SL Time Log
- SL Supervisor Evaluation
Scroll down to see specific information related to each of these steps
Step 1: Locate an organization, event, or a self-designed public education program at which you can volunteer.
You need to document 10 hours of service in the community during the semester in which you are taking this course. The easiest way to do this is to locate an organization that already uses volunteers.
Nearly everything you can think of is probably good:
- Civic Organizations
- Political organizations
- Health Advocacy (like the Lung Association, American Cancer Society, etc.)
- Fund Raisers (schools, clubs, organizations)
- Civic Involvement (school boards, town boards, running for office)
- Church (teaching Sunday School, community work, etc.)
- Coaching
- Teaching Classes
Many people decide to work for an existing organization, or you may
already do volunteer work for an organization (churches, youth organizations,
youth sports, all the Fraternal oganizations---Jaycees, Kiwanis, Knights
of Columbus, Elks, etc.)
You can also design your own service projectionist of sitting on the couch saying that "someone should do something about...". Well, get off the couch and be the "someone"!!
It is easier to talk about what you can't do:
- You cannot do one-on-one personal care
- You cannot do work for a family member
- You cannot do work that would otherwise go to a paid employee
The KVCC Center for Civic Engagement maintains a website where opportunities are advertised. Check the graphic to visit the website!
Step 2: Complete the SL Proposal Quiz
Locate the "SL Proposal Quiz" in your course.
Answer the following questions about your proposed SL project. This quiz will remain open indefinitely so you can update it as changes happen. Each time I grade it I will leave comments. You must score a 100 on this quiz in order to have an "approved" SL project. You can take it as many times as you like.
- The name of the service you are going to
be engaged in
- Contact information for that person or organization (the person
who will be "supervising" you)
- A detailed description of what your duties/activities are going
to be
- A detailed description of how you plan on completing the required hour
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Step 3: Complete your Hours and Documentation
Volunteer at the site for the number of hours required by your instructor. Keep a journal of your
observations and experiences as this will be useful as you complete the paper for this project.
Step 4: Complete your SL Reflection Paper
The point of this paper is to get you to reflect upon your service and how it relates to you as a person, a citizen, and as a student.
Use the rubric below as a guide to writing your paper. You are encouraged to organize your paper into sections that cover each aspect of the grading rubric, but be mindful that within each section, your writing needs to be in narrative format.
Your paper should be 5-7 pages long. Include a title page (not included in the page count) and a references page (also not counted in the page count). Make sure that the title page, the paper, and the references are all ONE DIGITAL FILE...do not send separate files.
SL Reflection Paper Rubric
Title Page |
Includes name, course name, semester, date, professor's name, the name of the assignment. |
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Introduction |
Introduce your service-learning experience in a 1-paragraph summary. |
10 |
Diversity of Communities and Cultures |
Reflect upon your own attitudes and beliefs both before and after this experience. Reflect on ways these attitudes and beliefs have changed as a result of working in this diverse situation and on how you feel this change contributes to your ability to promote civic engagement to others. |
10 |
Analysis of Knowledge |
Sociology Topic Application #1:
- Topic name is in bold typeface as a title to this section
- Define the topic from a reliable source (textbook, website, journal article) and cite your source (in-text citation here and in your References section later)
- Tell a 1-paragraph story that shows how your SL experience relates to the topic. Your story must use the topic terms and definition and must clearly demonstrate your understanding of the topic
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15 |
Analysis of Knowledge |
Sociology Topic Application #2:
- Topic name is in bold typeface as a title to this section
- Define the topic from a reliable source (textbook, website, journal article) and cite your source (in-text citation here and in your References section later)
- Tell a 1-paragraph story that shows how your SL experience relates to the topic. Your story must use the topic terms and definition and must clearly demonstrate your understanding of the topic
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15 |
Analysis of Knowledge |
Sociology Topic Application #3:
- Topic name is in bold typeface as a title to this section
- Define the topic from a reliable source (textbook, website, journal article) and cite your source (in-text citation here and in your References section later)
- Tell a 1-paragraph story that shows how your SL experience relates to the topic. Your story must use the topic terms and definition and must clearly demonstrate your understanding of the topic
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15 |
Civic Role of the College Student or Future Profession |
Provide some examples of specific things you did, engaged in, or experienced that may have reinforced or clarified your personal sense of civic duty and commitment to public action.
Reflect upon your own role in your service and any leadership actions you might have engaged in (decision making, idea generation, contributions to discussions, etc.). What do you think you accomplished? |
10 |
Civic Communicaiton |
Reflect upon how you have worked with others in and around your service experience. Describe ways in which you have applied your own communication skills and/or modified your communication in order to build relationships with those individuals. |
10 |
References |
Cite all your sources in APA format. This should be the last page of your paper and should be titled "References". |
5 |
Mechanics |
Spelling, punctuation, grammar, syntax, etc. |
10 |
Step 6: Complete your SL Paperwork and Survey
Have your site supervisor complete the Supervisor Assessment Form
Complete your Service-Learning Time Log throughout your
service experience in order to document your hours and maintain a
Journal about your experiences that you can use when you write your paper
The Supervisor Assessment Form and the Service-Learning Time Log must be completed and signed by your supervisor and submitted directly to your instructor.
When you are completely done your project, please complete the
ONLINE SL Experience Summary Survey
SL Summary Survey
The SL Summary Survey link above is actually a link to an external survey managed at KVCC. You need to complete this survey to finalize the required paperwork for the SL Project.
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