Abstract

Entering university students (N = 178) were surveyed in the fall of 2013 to learn about their attitudes toward college and civic engagement. As with students beginning study at the same university five to seven years earlier, participants felt positive about the institution’s public service graduation requirement and indicated plans to engage in substantial service during college. Their civic attitudes were as or slightly more positive than those of students surveyed earlier, but they were less positive in their self-reported knowledge of the community. Students’ reports of family orientation toward community service predicted their views of the graduation requirement, as well as their civic attitudes (i.e., civic responsibility, value placed on community service, and social justice). Replicating earlier research, students’ pre-college community service, especially their reported enjoyment of service activities, predicted attitudes toward the graduation requirement and civic attitudes. A mediation model showed that the effects of family orientation on civic attitudes were partially mediated by students’ involvement in service during secondary school years. The authors discuss the implications of these findings for K-12 and college programming.

Highlights

  • Entering university students (N = 178) were surveyed in the fall of 2013 to learn about their attitudes toward college and civic engagement

  • College admissions offices are well aware of the importance of students’ pre-college experiences, service-learning programming is often based on the assumption that students enter college with minimally formed attitudes related to civic engagement

  • In a survey of the same students after they had completed two years of college, we found that these indices of pre-college community service continued to predict students’ perspectives and plans concerning the graduation requirement (Moely & Ilustre, 2013)

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Summary

Introduction

As with students beginning study at the same university five to seven years earlier, participants felt positive about the institution’s public service graduation requirement and indicated plans to engage in substantial service during college Their civic attitudes were as or slightly more positive than those of students surveyed earlier, but they were less positive in their self-reported knowledge of the community. Important increases in cognitive skills during adolescence provide individuals with a strong basis for growth in and refinement of their conceptualizations of civic engagement, citizenship, and the role of the individual as citizen (Baxter-Magolda, 2001; McIntosh, Hart, & Youniss, 2007; Steinberg, 2005) These changes make it possible for influences from the family and the young person’s broadening social environment to impact conceptual and emotional development. Recent studies of youth civic development have identified important mechanisms through which families may influence young learners; in particular, parents may serve as models of attitudes and behaviors and share their conceptualizations of the world

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