Building Individual Reciprocity into Campus-Community Partnerships
Abstract
Extending educational experiences beyond the traditional boundaries of the classroom is an exciting yet challenging prospect. As the classroom context changes the power structure of the class is also likely to change, shifting from the instructor to students and community members. This article describes how a campus-community partnership has evolved in ways which place increased emphasis on student engagement and individual student participation. Building on a notion of individual reciprocity, a service-learning course partnered with a local arts festival has been gradually restructured to provide the opportunity and expectation for each student to bring personal skills and interests to the community, participating in much the same way as volunteer members of the community. Several strategies were employed for identifying and utilizing individual student interests, including the creation of a Community Contribution Statement. Student engagement was measured using both the Community Service Self-Efficacy Scale and tangible measures of student participation to assess whether a course designed around the notion of individual reciprocity provided improved student outcomes. Results from this study showed significantly higher self-efficacy scores than benchmark service-learning courses and yielded improved student performance.Downloads
Published
2015-09-07
Issue
Section
Articles
License
- Authors submitting articles to the Journal of Service-Learning in Higher Education are responsible for securing any permissions or licensing pertaining to the use of copyrighted materials and photographs/graphics. Authors of accepted articles assign the Journal of Service-Learning in Higher Education the right to edit, publish, and distribute their text on the Internet, to archive it, and make it permanently retrievable.
- Authors do retain their copyright, so articles may be reprinted after publication as long as the Journal of Service-Learning in Higher Education is acknowledged as the original site of publication. Articles that have already been published or are being considered for publication elsewhere are not eligible for publication in the Journal of Service-Learning in Higher Education, unless a cross-publishing arrangement has been previously negotiated.
- Opinions or points of view expressed in the publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the official position of the University of Louisiana System or institutions or organizations affiliated with the Journal of Service-Learning in Higher Education.