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E-grāmata: Creating Our Identities in Service-Learning and Community Engagement

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In this volume in the IAP series on Advances in Service-Learning Research, top researchers present recent work studying aspects of program development, student and community outcomes, and future research directions in the field of service-learning and community engagement. These chapters, selected through a rigorous peer review process, are based on papers presented at the annual meeting of the International Research Conference on Service-Learning and Community Engagement, held in October, 2008, in New Orleans.

This volume emphasizes efforts in higher education to support engaged scholarship, with chapters describing faculty development for service-learning and the ways in which engaged campuses are promoting engaged scholarship, thereby moving toward a coherent institutional identity. Models of effective partnerships between institutions of higher education and their community partners are developed in chapters looking at relationships between campus and community in terms of partnership identity or in terms of shared understanding by campus and community partners. Outcomes for K-12 and college students engaged in service learning are the focus of several studies. The impact of high-quality service-learning on K-12 student achievement and school-related behaviors is described. Racial identity theory provides a useful frame for understanding developing student conceptualizations, while another chapter emphasizes aspects of self-exploration and relationship building as bases for gains in student attitudes and skills. In a final section, chapters deal with service-learning and community engagement as a coherent research field with a distinct identity, reviewing current work and proposing directions for future research.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
Barbara E. Moely
Shelley H. Billig
Barbara A. Holland
PART I BUILDING INSTITUTIONAL IDENTITIES IN SUPPORT OF SERVICE-LEARNING AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
1 The Institutional Home for Faculty Engagement: An Investigation of Reward Policies at Engaged Campuses
3(28)
John Saltmarsh
Dwight E. Giles Jr.
Kerry Ann O'Meara
Lorilee Sandmann
Elaine Ward
Suzanne M. Buglione
2 Making Engagement Count: Toward a Model System of Support for Engaged Scholarship at a Research-Extensive University
31(22)
Judith Jetson
Rohan Jeremiah
3 Faculty Learning Around Reflection: A Collaborative Faculty Development Project
53(22)
Lisa McGuire
David Strong
Kathy Lay
Enrica Ardemagni
Patricia Wittberg
Patti Clayton
PART II DEVELOPING CAMPUS-COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS AND PARTNERSHIP IDENTITIES
4 Defining Characteristics of Partnership Identity in Faculty-Community Partnerships
75(28)
Emily M. Janke
5 Two-Dimensional Approach for Assessing Transformative Campus/Community Service-Learning Partnerships
103(28)
Jason T. Phillips
Cynthia V. L. Ward
PART III SERVICE-LEARNING STUDENTS' ACADEMIC, PERSONAL, INTERPERSONAL, AND CIVIC OUTCOMES
6 Does Quality Really Matter? Testing the New K-12 Service-Learning Standards for Quality Practice
131(28)
Shelley H. Billig
7 Reciprocal Benefits of Mentoring: Results of a Middle School-University Collaboration
159(30)
Angela M. Harwood
Sara A. Radoff
8 An Exploration of the Value of Cultural-Based Service-Learning for Student and Community Participants
189(28)
Lori Simons
Nancy Blank
Brittany Russell
Elizabeth Williams
Kimyette Willis
PART IV RESEARCH PERSPECTIVES: IDENTITY, CHALLENGES, AND NEW DIRECTIONS
9 Service-Learning and Interdisciplinarity: A Library Science Perspective
217(20)
Liberty Smith
Heather J. Martin
Jason Burrage
Megan E. Standridge
Sarah Ragland
Martina Bailey
10 Civic Engagement and Service-Learning: The Challenge and Promise of Research
237(14)
Lori J. Vogelgesang
11 Research for What? New Directions and Strategies for Community Engaged Scholarship: International Perspectives
251(14)
Sherril Gelmon
Tim Stanton
Cobie Rudd
Diana Pacheco-Pinzon
12 Research Informing Practice: Developing Practice Standards and Guidelines for Improving Service-Learning and Community Engagement
265(20)
Shelley H. Billig
Barbara E. Moely
Barbara A. Holland
About the Authors 285