Abstract
The article provides a critical reflexive account of a community-based research project from the perspective of four undergraduate students and their professor. The project came out of a partnership with a local nonprofit organization that has long offered social justice-focused camps to high school-aged youth. Student-researchers conducted interviews and focus groups with former participants to better understand the camp’s potential longer-term impacts on their social justice knowledge and actions. Findings underscored the sometimes unsettling nature of social justice education as evidenced in how campers grappled with critical understandings of race, class, and gender. The paper presents student-researchers’ reflections on their own struggles in the development of critical consciousness as sociology majors. Utilizing complementary frameworks that encompass how student-researchers engage “difficult knowledge” (Britzman 1998) in the classroom and “uncomfortable reflexivity” (Pillow 2003) in their research, our account captures the sometimes messy, unfulfilled, and alternative possibilities of social justice education and community-based research.
Highlights
Focused on orienting education towards application, social impact, and student engagement, models of community-based research and learning continue to provide opportunities for academic growth and connection among students, professors, and community partners (Mayer, Blume, Black, & Stevens, 2019; Strand, Cutforth, Stoecker, Marullo, & Donohue, 2003)
In the place of teaching and assessment practices that emphasize measurable outcomes related to social justice or applied learning, our work presents a case that creates room to explore ambivalence, discomfort, and dynamic approaches to community-based research
We touch on a few broad themes that arose from our study that came to inform the student-researchers’ reflexive accounts detailed in later sections
Summary
Focused on orienting education towards application, social impact, and student engagement, models of community-based research and learning continue to provide opportunities for academic growth and connection among students, professors, and community partners (Mayer, Blume, Black, & Stevens, 2019; Strand, Cutforth, Stoecker, Marullo, & Donohue, 2003). The participants in our community-based research project all took part in our partner organization’s social justice-themed camps.
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