Abstract

Through the use of service learning in higher education, universities hope to both provide real benefit to the partnering community and allow students to develop a greater understanding of course curriculum, their discipline, and their personal positioning within society. Through these educational activities, service learning seeks to engage students in critical thinking processes while simultaneously achieving a greater sense of civic and social responsibility through targeted participation in meaningful community service activities. However, in practice, service learning can take a variety of forms predicated on technical, cultural, societal, and political constraints. Thus, while some work shows positive effects on students’ attitudes, social behaviour, and academic performance, less research has demonstrated long-term community impact. Nor has much research shown that participation in service learning has a long-term impact on students' ethical perspectives and frameworks, and whether those ethical frames carry on to their professional careers. Moreover, as institutions partner with such humanitarian service groups as Engineers Without Borders USA, we know considerably less about the institutional cultures and climates that are developed through such partnerships and how sustainable they are, given those inherent technical, political and cultural limitations. As a first step towards these goals, this paper proposes a methodology for investigating the impacts of service learning activities on both the students and communities involved.

Highlights

  • Service learning (SL) has been one strategy used across educational institutions, with a common goal of promoting civic engagement

  • As institutions partner with such humanitarian service groups as Engineers Without Borders (EWB), we know considerably less about the institutional cultures and climates that are developed through such partnerships and how sustainable they are, given those inherent technical, political and cultural limitations

  • Service learning provides an opportunity to expose students to projects and work intended for the mutual benefit of society through the promotion of civic engagement

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Summary

Introduction

Service learning (SL) has been one strategy used across educational institutions, with a common goal of promoting civic engagement. Some examples include Engineers Without Borders (EWB) or Engineering Projects in Community Service (EPICS) (Coyle, 2005). “A course-based, credit-bearing educational experience in which the students (a) participate in an organised service activity that meets identified community needs, and (b) reflect on the service activity in such a way as to gain further understanding content, a broader appreciation of the discipline, and an enhanced sense of personal values and civic responsibility,” (Bringle and Hatcher, 2009). SL seeks to engage students in critical thinking processes while simultaneously achieving a greater sense of civic and social responsibility through targeted participation in meaningful community service activities. Given the possibility of failure, it is important to understand the impacts on the collaborating dis-

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