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Basic
Definitions
Volunteerism:
This term is typically used to describe people, who of their own free
will and without pay, perform some service or do good work. This can be
done on a regular or sporadic basis with community groups, faith organizations,
schools, or other organizations
Community
Service
Strictly defined community service simply means organized volunteering
which meets the needs of the community and is most often done through
non-profit organizations, schools, and public agencies. Often, community
service is court ordered and emanates a negative connotation towards participating
in community service.
Internship/Practicum
An internship or practicum experience is usually a capstone experience
in which the student implements material covered from a series of classes
into the field. This experience normally requires no weekly reflection
of the student, yet requires this student to cumulate the semester with
a project or research paper about the internship/practicum experience
Field
Work
The fieldwork is also a capstone experience in which a supervised clinical
experience connected to a certificate or credential program, such as nursing,
is required.
Community-Service
Learning
Community-Service Learning is an academic study linked to community service
through structured reflection so that each reinforces the other. The academic
study may be in any discipline or combination of fields. The community
service may be direct service to people in need, community outreach and
education, or policy analysis.

Service-Learning:
A Ballance Apporoach
to Experiential Education
by Andrew Furco
The Service-Learning Struggle
For over a quarter of a century, education researchers and practitioners
have struggled to determine how to best characterize service-learning.
In 1979, Robert Sigmon defined service-learning as an experiential education
approach that is premised on '~reciprocal learning" (Sigmon, 1979).
Lie suggested that because learning flows from service activities, both
those who provide service and those who receive it "learn" from
the experience. In Sigmon's view, service-learning occurs only when both
the providers and recipients of service benefit from the activities.
Today, however,
the term "service-learning" has been used to characterize a
wide array of experiential education endeavors, from volunteer and community
service projects to field studies and internship programs. By perusing
schools' service program brochures, one realizes that the definitions
for service-learning are as varied as the schools in which they operate.
While some educators view " service- learning" as a new term
that reveals a rich, innovative, pedagogical approach for more effective
teaching, others view it as simply another term for well-established experiential
education pro-grams. As Timothy Stanton of the Haas Center for Public
Service at Stanford University once asked, "What is service-learning
anyway?... How do we distinguish service-learning from cooperative education,
internship programs, field study and other forms of experiential education?"
(Stanton, 1987). The National Society for Experiential Education, which
for years has focused on various types of experiential education programs,
broadly defines service-learning as "any carefully monitored service
experience in which a student has intentional learning goals and reflects
actively on what he or she is learning throughout the experience."
(National Society for Experiential Education, 1994).
The Corporation for National Service provides a narrower definition that
sees service-learning as a "method under which students learn and
develop through active participation in thoughtfully organized service
experiences that meet actual community needs, that [are] integrated into
the students' academic curriculum or provide structured time for [reflection,
and] that enhance what is taught in school by extending student learning
beyond the classroom and into the community..." (Corporation for
National and Community Service, 1990). The confounding use of the service-learning
term may be one reason why research on the impacts of service-learning
has been difficult to conduct.
In 1989,
Honnet and Poulsen developed the Wingspread Principles of Good Practice
for Combining Service and Learning (Honnet & Poulsen, 1989, Appendix
B). While these guidelines offer a useful set of best practices for service
oriented educational programs, they are not solely germane to service-learning
and could easily serve as best practices for other types of experiential
education programs (e.g., internships or apprenticeships). Similarly,
the Association for Service-Learning in Education Reform (ASLER) has compiled
a set of common characteristics of service-learning that help program
directors determine whether their programs are meeting the overarching
service-learning goals (ASLER, 1994 Appendix A). Again, while these characteristics
are very useful in helping practitioners develop effective service-learning
pro grams, they do not provide a definitive characterization of service-learning.
ASLER characterizes service-learning as method of learning that enables
school-based and community-based professionals "to employ a variety
of effective teaching strategies that emphasize student-centered [sic.1
or youth centered [sic~, interactive, experiential education... Service
learning places curricular concepts in the context of real-life situations...
Service-learning connects young people to the community, placing them
in challenging situations (ASLER, 1994). One could easily contend that
other approaches to experiential education (i.e., internships or field
education) purport to do the same. So then, how is service-learning different
from other approaches to experiential education?
Developing a Definition
According to Sigmon "If we ate to establish cleat goals [For service-learning]
and work efficiently to meet them, we need to move toward a precise definition."
(Sigmon, 1979). Recently, Sigmon attempted to provide a more precise definition
of service-learning through a typology that compares different programs
that combine service and learning. This typology broadened his earlier
"reciprocal learning" definition to include the notion that
"service-learning" occurs when there is a balance between learning
goals and service outcomes. Herein lies the key to establishing a universal
definition for service-learning (see Figure 1).
In this comparative
form, the typology is helpful not only in establishing criteria for distinguishing
service-learning from other types of service programs but also in providing
a basis for clarifying distinctions among different types of service-oriented
experiential
Education programs (e.g.; school volunteer, community service, field education,
and internship programs).
Distinguishing Among Service Programs
To represent the distinctions among various types of service programs,
a pictorial is offered that presents an experiential education continuum
upon which various service programs might lie. The pictorial is based
on both Sigmon's earlier "reciprocal learning" principles and
his most recent typology'. Where each service program lies on the continuum
is determined by its primary intended beneficiary and its overall balance
between service and learning (see Figure 2).
As the pictorial
suggests, different types of service pro-grams can be distinguished by
their primary intended purpose and focus. Each program type is defined
by the intended beneficiary of the service activity and its degree of
emphasis on service and/or learning. Rather than being located at a single
point each program type occupies a range of points on the continuum. Where
one type begins and another ends is not as important as the idea that
each service program type has unique characteristics that distinguish
it from other types. It is that ability to distinguish among these service
program types that allows us to move closer toward a universal definition
of service-learning.
Using the pictorial as a foundation, the following definitions are offered
for five types of service programs
Volunteerism
Volunteerism is the engagement of students in activities where the
primary empha5 5 is on the service being provided and the primary intended
beneficiary is clearly the service recipient.
According
to James and Pamela Toole, the term volunteerism refers to people who
perform some service or good work of their own free will and without pay"
(Toole & Toole, 1992). The inherent altruistic nature of volunteer
programs renders them as service focused, designed to benefit the service
recipient. A prime example is a school-based program in which strident-volunteers
occasionally or regularly visit the local hospital to sit with Alzheimer
patients who need some company. The primary intended beneficiaries of
the service are the Alzheimer patients (the service recipients), and the
focus of the activity is on providing a service to them. Although the
student-volunteers may receive some benefits from the experience (e.g.,
feeling pleased with themselves) as well as learn something in the process
these outcomes are clearly serendipitous and unintentional. As the hospital
visits of the student volunteers become more regular, and as the students
begin focusing more on learning about Alzheimers disease, the program
moves toward the center of the continuum to become more like community
service (or even service-learning).
Community Service
Community service is the engagement of students in activities that
primarily focus on the service being provided as well as the benefits
the service activities have on the recipients (e.g., providing food to
the homeless during the holidays). The students receive some benefits
by learning more about how their service makes a difference in the lives
of the service recipients.
As with volunteer
programs, community service programs imply altruism and charity. However,
community service programs involve more structure and student commitment
than do volunteer programs. School-based community service programs might
include semester-long or year-long activities in which students dedicate
themselves to addressing a cause that meets a local community (or global)
need. Recycling, hunger
awareness, and environmental improvements are all forms of community service
cause around which students have formed organizations to formally and
actively address the issue. While the students primary purpose for
engaging in the service activity is to advance the cause, their engagement
allows them to learn more about the cause and what is needed to be done
to ensure the cause is dealt with effectively. As the service activities
become more integrated with the academic course work of the students,
and as the students begin to engage in formal intellectual discourse around
the various issues relevant to the cause, the community service program
move closer to the center of the continuum to become more like service-learning.
On the opposite side of the continuum lie internship programs.
Internships
Internships programs engage students in service activities primarily
for the purpose of providing students with hands-on experiences that enhance
their learning or understanding of issues relevant to a particular area
of study.
Clearly,
in internship programs, the students are the primary intended beneficiaries
and the focus of the service activity is on student learning. Students
are placed in internships to acquire skills and knowledge that will enhance
their academic learning and/or vocational development. For many students,
internships are performed in addition to regular course work often after
a sequence of courses has been taken. Internships may be paid or unpaid
and take place in either for-profit or nonprofit organizations. For example,
a political science major might engage in an unpaid summer internship
at a city hall to learn more about how local government works. Although
the student is providing a service to the city hall office, the student
engages in the internship primarily for his/her benefit and primarily
for learning (rather than service) purposes. Similarly, a legal studies
strident may have a paid summer internship that allows that strident to
learn more about how a law firm operates. The student's primary motivations
for partaking in the program-to learn legal skills and make some money-are
clearly intended to benefit himself/ herself. As both these students place
greater emphasis on the service being provided and the ways in which the
service recipients are benefiting, the closer the internship program moves
toward the center of the continuum and becomes more like field education
(and service-learning).
Field Education
Field Education on programs provides students with co-curricular service
opportunities that are related, but not fully integrated, with their formal
academic studies. Students per form the service as part of a program that
is designed primarily to enhance students' understanding of a field of
study, while also providing substantial emphasis on the service being
provided.
Field education
plays an important role in many service oriented professional programs
such as Social Welfare, Education, and Public Health. In some of the programs,
students may spend up to two years providing a service to a social service
agency, a school, or health agency. While strong intentions to benefit
the recipients of the service are evident, the focus of field education
programs tends to he on maximizing the student's learning of a field of
study. For example, students in Education programs may spend tip to one
year as strident teachers to hone their teaching skills and learn more
about the teaching process. Because of their long-term commitment to the
service field, students do consciously consider how their service benefits
those who receive it. However, the program's primary focus is still on
the student teachers' learning and their overall benefit.
Service-Learning
Service-learning programs are distinguished from other approaches to
experiential education by their intention to equally benefit the provider
and the recipient of the service as well as to ensure equal focus on both
the service being provided and the learning that is occurring.
To do this,
service-learning programs must have some academic context and be designed
in such a way that ensures that both the service enhances the learning
and the learning enhances the service. Unlike a field education program
in which the service is performed in addition to a student's courses,
a service-learning program integrates service into the course(s). For
example, a pre-med student in a course on the Physiology of the Aging
might apply the theories and skills learned in that course to providing
mobility assistance to seniors at the local senior citizen center. While
the program is intended to provide a much needed service to the seniors,
the program is also intended to help the student better understand how
men and women age differently, how the physical aging of the body affects
mobility, and how seniors can learn to deal with diminishing range of
motion and mobility. In such a program, the focus is both on providing
a much-needed service and on student learning. Consequently, the program
intentionally benefits both the student who provides the service and the
senior for whom the service is provided. It is this balance that distinguishes
service-learning from all other experiential education programs.
Conclusion
While conceptually, this pictorial can assist in bringing us closer to
a more precise definition of service-learning, it is obvious that many
gray areas still exist. What about the field education program or community
service project that is located near the center of the experiential education
continuum? How might we distinguish these programs from service-learning?
I might argue that no experiential education approach is static; that
is, throughout its life, every experiential education program moves, to
some degree, along the continuum. Thus, at a particular point in time,
a community service program may be farther left of center appearing to
have greater focus on the service and its benefit to the recipient. At
another point in time, the same program might appear to have an equal
emphasis on service and learning, providing benefits to both the recipients
and providers of the service. It is this mobility within program types
that suggests that to fully distinguish service-learning programs from
other forms of experiential education approaches, one must first determine
a program's intended focus(es) and beneficiary(ies). From there, every
service program's continuum range can be gauged to determine where it
falls among the myriad of experiential education endeavors,
References
Alliance for Service Leaning in Education Reform
(ASLER). Feb. 1994. Standards of Quality for
School-Based and Community-Based Service-Learning.
Corporation
for National and Community Service. 1990. National and Community Service
Act of 1990.
Honnet, Ellen
P and Susan J. Potilsen. 1989. Principles
of Cood Practice for Combining Service and Learning.
Wingspread Special Report. Racine, Wisconsin: The
Johnson Foundation, Inc.
National
Society for Experiential Education. 1994.
Partial List of Experiential Learning Terms and Their
Definitions, Raleigh, North Carolina.
Sigmon, Robert
L. 1994. Serving to Learn, Learning to
Serve. Linking Service with Learning. Council for
Independent College Report.
Sigmon, Robert
L. Spring 1979. Service-learning: Three
Principles. Synergist. National Center for
Service-Learning, ACTION, 8(1): 9-1 1.
Stanton,
Timothy. Jan.-Feb. 1987. Service Learning:
Groping Toward a Definition. Experiential Education.
National Society of Experiential Education, 12(1):2-4.
Toole, James
and Pamela Toole. 1992. Key Definitions:
Commonly Used Terms in the Youth Service Field.
Roseville, Minnesota: National Youth Leadership
Council.
Andrew Furco.
Service-Learning: a Balanced
Approach to Experiential Education. Expanding
Boundaries: Serving and Learning. Washington, DC:
Corporation for National Service, 1996. 2-6.

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