Abstract

Criminal justice departments recognize the value of connecting students to real-world problems through service-learning activities. Yet, challenges exist in exposing students to diverse populations. The current study stepped outside the classroom, involving an extra-curricular group of criminal justice students, in a unique service-learning project. Students from a rurally located university traveled to the most poverty-stricken area in Los Angeles, California, known as Skid Row. Students partnered with The Burrito Project, making and serving 950 burritos to people living on the streets. To assess the impact on exposure to poverty, students completed a pre and post-test utilizing the Undergraduate Perceptions of Poverty Tracking Survey. Four years later, follow-up interviews were conducted. Survey results suggest no significant changes pre/post project completion while longitudinal interviews yielded rich data on the project impact. Future directions including criminal justice students within service-learning projects are discussed, especially considering inclusion of students early within their academic careers.

Highlights

  • Experiential-learning is a broad set of pedological practices that captures a range of processes whereby students learn from connecting experience to classroom learning (Kolb, 1984; Penn, 2003)

  • Some scholars have emphasized the importance of exposing undergraduate criminal justice students to diverse populations

  • Most previous scholars have focused their projects on specific criminal justice classes, no studies could be located focusing on criminal justice majors participating in extra-curricular experiences

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Summary

Introduction

Experiential-learning is a broad set of pedological practices that captures a range of processes whereby students learn from connecting experience to classroom learning (Kolb, 1984; Penn, 2003). These processes are different than community volunteerism as reflection is key (Burke & Bush, 2013). Studies on criminal justice students involved in service-learning are not quite as prevalent (see Hirschinger-Blank & Markowitz, 2006) and many times, lacking in analysis of personal attitudinal changes. Studying longitudinal impact of service-learning is nearly absent in the literature

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