Service Learning • Mendoza • Notre Dame 
What Is Service Learning?
 
Service-learning is a pedagogy that allows students to develop professional and academic skills in the context of meaningful, applied work with a community service organization.

 

Definitions
Experiential education refers to learning activities that engage the learner directly in the phenomena being studied.
 
Service-learning is a method under which students or participants learn and develop through active participation in thoughtfully organized service that is conducted in and meets the needs of a community and is coordinated with an institution of higher education or community service program, and with the community: helps foster civic responsibility; is integrated into and enhances the academic curriculum of the students or the educational components of the community service program in which the participants are enrolled; and includes structured time for the students and participants to reflect on the service experience.
 

Community-based learning is a type of experiential learning in which the student:

  • Provides some meaningful work (service)
  • Meets a need or a goal
  • Engages with the community
  • Performs work that stems from course objectives
  • Is integrated into the course by means of assignments that require some form of reflection on the work in light of the course objectives
  • Is assessed/evaluated accordingly (Kathleen Maas Weigert, Ph.D.)
 
Learning Outcomes
 

Research has shown that students who participate in service-learning experience positive learning outcomes, including:

  • Increased motivation
  • A deeper understanding of subject matter and the ability to apply classroom material to real-world situations
  • Increased capacity for retention of classroom material
  • Increased analytical skills
WHY Community-Based Learning (CBL) in a business school?
 

CBL is relevant and integral to the success of business education.

 

CBL, integral to the mission of many universities including Notre Dame since inception, increasingly merits attention:

  • Colleges and universities are increasingly charged with illustrating commitment to values and mission
  • Colleges and universities are increasingly making explicit their commitment to ethics and social responsibility
  • Colleges and universities are increasingly charged with developing meaningful campus-community partnerships
  • The nonprofit sector context (proliferation of organizations, increased need for accountability, metrics and performance) demands strategic partnership and capacity development
  • The job market demands that students differentiate and demonstrate abilities and capacity for success

CBL meets multiple goals of business education.

 

The Mendoza College of Business aims to "prepare men and women for careers in business and meaningful, productive lives in service to others." CBL is a mechanism to fulfill the MCOB mission of "academic excellence, implementation effectiveness, and a commitment to integrity and community. Our purpose here is not only to build careers, but to build lives rooted in purpose and faith."  

 

Mendoza 's commitment to community-based learning is a hallmark of the program. 

  • Since 2000, over thirty Mendoza faculty have incorporated community-based learning projects in their courses; Mendoza offers 8-14 CBL courses each semester.
  • Mendoza was ranked #5 worldwide on the Aspen Institute/World Resources Institute "Beyond Grey Pinstripes" report of MBA programs and their commitment to social and environmental stewardship; Mendoza 's significant number of CBL courses was noted in the award
  • "Giving Back is an Expectation" was the featured headline as Mendoza was ranked the #3 business school in the U.S. (BusinessWeek, 2006)
 
Benefits for Students:
 
  • Enhanced academic experience through application of classroom skills in a real-world setting
  • Opportunity to apply theoretical concepts to practical experience
  • Positive impact on students' cognitive, social and personal outcomes
  • Enhanced interaction between students and faculty
  • Emphasized relevancy of education to students living in a real world
  • Teaching of positive values, leadership, citizenship, and personal responsibility
  • Empowerment of students as learners, teachers, achievers, and leaders
  • Invitation of students to become members of their own community
  • Fostering of job readiness and pre-employment skills
 
Benefits for Faculty:
 
  • Allows faculty to be innovative and creative in their teaching approach
  • Contributes to faculty's engagement in the local community, the state, and beyond
  • Potential to add to the faculty research agenda
  • Opportunity to work closely with students and empower them with applied learning
 
Benefits for the Community:
 
  • Provides access to the university network and the language and logistics of partnership
  • Increases campus-community collaboration and partnerships
  • Contributes thousands of hours of [meaningful, useful] service to local communities and the organizations that serve its members
 
 

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Site Maintained By•Jessica McManus-Warnell & Soo Jin Kim | Last Modified:• July 30, 2009