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Resources
Current Issue - March 2008
Digest Homepage
Scroll down for a list of current resources related to civic engagement efforts in higher education.
General Resources
Publications
General Resources
Online Certificate of Completion: Service-Learning NEW!
March 31st – June 14
undergraduate or graduate credit
Get on board with service-learning through Portland State University in a series of online courses leading to a certificate of completion. Spring term focuses on collaboration while summer will feature youth voice.
Service-Learning Best Practice: Collaboration. Explore how to bring together
K-12 teachers with community organizations and agencies in the process of building
a partnership. Teachers will learn how organizations work, their goals, and measures of success.
Community organizations will learn about the culture of K-12 schools and the specific needs
of teachers and students. All will learn how to work together to create high-quality, high-impact
service-learning opportunities. The result: integrated learning meeting real community priorities.
Objectives:
- Teachers will learn about the “culture” of community-based organizations and agencies and how that differs from a school culture.
- Teachers and administrators will learn how to identify, recruit, and sustain effective school-community partnerships.
- School personnel will learn how community partnerships can help students meet extended application and career related learning requirements.
To register, call Cailin O’Connor, Program Manager, at 503-725-8234
or 1-800-547-8887 ext 8234 or email caoconno@pdx.edu.
For course logistics, go to: http://sesweb.ses.pdx.edu/ceed_cat/detail_large.cfm?id=45XN
For program information, go to:http://www.ceed.pdx.edu/service-learning/
iChapters "Plant a Tree" Program
iChapters offers textbooks and chapters of textbooks to students who are looking for an alternative to buying books in the campus bookstore; the company currently carries over 8,000 titles and the books are about 50% less than most bookstore pricing. Every student who makes a purchase will also receive an exclusive iChapters "I Planted a Tree" digital badge which they can put onto their profiles, websites, blogs, or Facebook pages, and which shows in real time how many trees have been planted.
The tree-planting campaign (http://www.changingthepresent.org/drives/show/1002) is a unique public-private partnership that is truly innovative, and students across the country are jumping on board to save some money while positively impacting the environment. iChapters is also revolutionizing the relationship between textbook providers and students, creating several platforms for the exchange of ideas and for updates on the campaign -- including a Facebook page (http://www.facebook.com/pages/iChapters/7061939610), widgets (http://www.guerillapr.com/ichapters/), and an electronic press kit (www.guerillapr.com/ichapters).
Moving Volunteers from Service to Civic Engagement - Online Course
Beyond project leadership, volunteers can be encouraged to move up the ladder from service to civics. In this session, you will learn to recognize your program as an avenue to get volunteers engaged in issues education and greater civic roles within their communities. Define civic engagement, explore the dimensions of civic participation, and plan how to apply civic skills. This online course was created cooperatively by the Corporation for National and Community Service, Hands On Network, and ETR Associates. Visit this link to learn more.
YSA Launches ServiceVote 2008
Youth Service America has launched this website for young people to find out what the 2008 Presidential Candidates are saying about service-learning and to have their voice heard at http://www.servicevote.org
Global Youth Connect Summer International Human Rights Training Program
Youth ages 18-30 are invited to participate in upcoming human rights delegations to Bosnia, Guatemala, Rwanda, or Venezuela. Delegations allow youth to cross cultural boundaries and learn about the daily reality of human rights as experienced in a complex and globalized world. To learn more, visit http://globalyouthconnect.org/participate.html
The International Association for Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement (IARSLCE) Seeks Graduate Students Members!
IARSLCE, launched in 2005, has grown considerably in its first year and now has over 600 members.
IARSLCE is becoming a catalyst for advancing the quality of research on service-learning, community engagement and related strategies. The next confrence will take place at Tulane University in New Orleans in October 2008. The 2009 conference will be hosted by the University of Ottawa in Ontario, Canada. Members receive advance notice of these conferences, as well as a complimentary copy of the annual service-learning volume, an edited and peer-reviewed compilation of papers submitted from the previous year's conference.
As a member of IARSLCE, graduate students will join the IARSLCE Graduate Student Network (Network). The purpose of the Network is to facilitate national and international connections among graduate students and scholars across service-learning and community engagement, as well as to support the professional development of graduate students through scholarship and workshop opportunities. IARSLCE provided 10 scholarships to assist graduate students to attend the 2007 conference, and hopes to expand this opportunity in the future.
IARSLCE Membership Privileges for GRADUATE STUDENTS include:
1. Access to IARSLCE Graduate Student Network Listserv for networking, sharing research, and announcements (e-mail to join: listproc@lists.wwu.edu) We are offering unrestricted access until March 1, 2008 with it becoming members only after this date)
2. Access to IARSLCE members only website
3. Eligible to attend the Emerging Engagement Scholars Workshop
4. Eligible for scholarship to attend IRCSLCE (the Association's conference)
5. Eligible for Graduate Student Research Award
6. Invitation to Graduate Student Reception at the conference
As a member of IARSLCE, students have the opportunity to help shape research in our field through participation on committees (such as the Graduate Student Network Advisory Board), service as a Board member (one seat is open to graduate students only), and service on the editorial board for the annual research volume. We are a new organization and want our members to step forward and help shape future directions and activities.
Membership is $50 U.S. annually for students ($80 U.S. for non-students). Visit www.researchslce.org to access and download a membership form. Upon receipt of your membership application and payment, you will receive a copy of our 2007 volume "From Passion to Objectivity: International and Cross-Disciplinary Perspectives on Service-Learning Research."
If you would like more information, please contact info@researchslce.org.
Listserv for Community Partners
Are you a community member, community partner or community-academic liaison interested in connecting with your peers to build greater capacity, support each other in your work, and strengthen the collective network of community partners engaging in community-higher education partnerships? If so, consider joining the Community Partner Listserv and/or Community Partner Workgroups, established as a direct result of the Wingspread Community Partner Summit (CPS) convened in 2006.
This electronic discussion group focuses on issues specific to the community partner perspective when engaged in community-higher education partnerships. The listserv aims to support conversations emerging among community partners engaged in community-higher education partnerships who are seeking to achieve sustainable and systemic change through their work.
Visit the Community Partner Summit webpage at http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/cps.html#Join
Publications
New Study Released On Youth From Low-Incomes And Civic Education NEW!
A new study by the Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning & Engagement (CIRCLE) found that youth from low-incomes are far less likely than their peers to learn about politics and citizenship in school. To learn more, visit http://www.civicyouth.org/PopUps/WorkingPapers/WP59Kahne.pdf
Work-Based Learning: Bridging Knowledge and Action in the Workplace
New and Revised by Joseph A. Raelin
Jossey-Bass
Work-based learning is Joe Raelin's unique way of incorporating a number of action strategies such as action learning, action science, and communities of practice into a comprehensive framework to help people learn collectively with others. In this thoroughly updated and revised edition, he demonstrates how to engage our reflective powers to challenge those taken-for-granted assumptions that unwittingly hold us back from questioning standard ways of operating. A well-known popular author, Joe is an avid student of the many traditions that support work-based learning, so he presents an inclusive model that has wide appeal across disciplines and occupations. He provides readers with the most recent updates in the field, such as his coverage of virtual team learning, portfolios, multisource feedback, critical and global action learning, and changes in educational policy. Whether you're an organizational or college educator, this book will help you make learning accessible to everyoneand even contagious within your organization!
Order through the CCPH website and receive a 15% discount:
http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/books.html
Achieving the Promise of Authentic Community-Higher Academic Partnerships:
Community Partners Speak Out!
This report higlights community partner perspectives on community-higher education partnerships. The report is one of many outcomes of the Community Partner Summit that brought together experienced community partners from across the U.S. at the Wingspread Conference Center in Racine, Wisconsin in April 2006. In addition to offering key ingredients and a framework for authentic community-higher education partnerships, the report details a vision for these partnerships articulated by the Summit's community partner participants, along with strategies and recommendations on how to achieve this vision. The report also describes the work that has been done by these community partners and CCPH since the Summit in the areas of peer mentoring, policy development and advocacy.
The report is available as a PDF document on the Community Partner Summit webpage at http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/cps-summit.html#Products (while you're on the site, check out the other Summit publications and resources)
Learn more about the work that's continued since the Summit, including opportunities to get involved, at http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/cps.html.
Educating for Democracy
Anne Colby, Elizabeth Beaumont, Thomas Ehrlich,and Josh Corngold
In this book, coauthors show that education for political development can increase students' political understanding, skill, motivation, and involvement whilecontributing to many aspects of general academic learning.Go to http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-0787985546.html for excerpts and the Table of Contents.Get a 15% discount on the book when ordered through the Community-Campus Partnerships for Health website at http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/books.html.
Creating, Running and Sustaining Campus-Community Service-Learning Partnerships:
Lessons from Practitioners
Created by the Campus Compacts of Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont, this online handbook shares the voices and wisdom of individuals from colleges and universities and from community organizations in northern New England who have been involved in service-learning partnerships for several years or more. These partnership practitioners describe how they build, operate and sustain effective campus-community partnerships. Authored by Richard Schramm of the University of Vermont, this collection of campus-community partnership best practices is an outcome of important partnership work undertaken by campuses and community partners in Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont as part of a Learn and Serve Higher Education grant from the Corporation for National and Community Service. Although the voices represented and the practices presented represent only a small percentage of the deep and meaningful relationships that we know exist, we hope that you will find these practices helpful. We invite you to read and use this collection. We hope it will generate further conversations and ideas related to creating, running and sustaining campus-community service-learning partnerships.
This publication was supported by a Learn and Serve America Higher Education grant from the Corporation for National and Community Service.
To access this handbook, please visit: http://www.vtcampuscompact.org/downloadable_documents/VCC%20Partnership.pdf
Other Recommended Books from Stylus Publishing
http://www.styluspub.com/books/Books.aspx?type=topic&ID=334
Gender Identity, Equity, and Violence: Multidisciplinary Perspectives Through Service Learning
Edited by Geraldine B. Stahly
May 2007
In Safe Hands: A Global Concept of Service Learning in Higher Education
Edited by Jean Clarkson
January 2008
A New Weave of Power, People, and Politics: The Action Guide for Advocacy and Citizen Participation
Lisa VeneKlasen, Valerie Miller
April 2007
Race, Poverty, and Social Justice: Multidisciplinary Perspectives through Service Learning
Edited by José Z. Calderón
June 2007
Promoting Health and Wellness in Underserved Communities: Multidisciplinary Perspectives through Service Learning
Edited by Anabel Pelham, Elizabeth Sills
June 2008
Research, Advocacy, and Political Engagement: Multidisciplinary Perspectives through Service Learning
Edited by Sally Tannenbaum
June 2007
Digest Homepage and Table of Contents
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