Teaching Your Service Learning Course Online
Last updated October 19, 2020Course Length
55m
Last Updated
October 19, 2020
Teaching Your Service Learning Course Online
Last updated October 19, 2020Table of Contents
Adapt your service learning courses to the online environment for a dynamic and meaningful experience.
Overview
We know that high-impact practices support profound learning by promoting student engagement and real-world experience. Among those high-impact practices, service learning courses help students achieve a deeper understanding of course content. They can also shape their personal values and civic responsibility through reflection and participation in an organized service activity that serves community needs (Bringle, Hatcher, McIntosh, 2006).
For these compelling reasons, many faculty members, divisions, and entire institutions had plans to offer robust service learning courses only to be disrupted by the global pandemic. However, it is still possible to teach service learning courses that are just as impactful in the online environment.
Join us for this webcast, where our expert speaker—who has over a decade of experience teaching service learning courses online—will share example-based best practices to help you keep students engaged, serve community partners, and ultimately create dynamic learning experiences.
Who should attend?
If you teach service learning courses or support service-learning efforts at your institution and want to learn how to effectively deliver a service learning course in the online environment, this program is for you. Faculty, Directors of Experiential & Service Learning, and academic leaders seeking ways to increase student engagement will benefit as well.
Agenda
During this program, our speaker will focus on the following three strategies for success:
Part 1: Prepare Students, Faculty, and Community Partners for Success in a Virtual Environment
- Identify campus resources to support your online teaching strategy
- Create flexible and frequent connection points with students
- Establish strategies to engage community partners and meet their needs virtually
Part 2: Structure Your Course and Assignment Design to Promote Engaged Learning
Encourage and develop practical thinking and problem-solving skills in alignment with service-learning standards to:
- Promote diversity
- Provide meaningful service
- Create clear connections to the curriculum
- Build reciprocal partnerships
- Center youth voice
- Actively monitor progress
- Facilitate reflection
Part 3: Assess Student Learning
- Transparently establish learning goals
- Design measures such as rubrics to help students understand and attain learning outcomes
Tagged In
$450
Dr. Christina Hicks-Goldston
Associate Professor and Graduate Coordinator, Austin Peay State University