The Service Learning Leadership Minor helps you develop advanced knowledge and skills in service learning leadership, preparing you to work as a leader in the growing field of service learning. As this field grows, so does the need for well trained service learning professionals, capable of creating and implementing partnership programs between educational institutions and communities. After completing this minor, you will be able to take a position as a leader in the field of service learning and community service, both locally and at the state and national levels.
This Minor combines a focus on experiential learning with a grounding in theories of service and social justice. It gives you a strong foundation in the design and delivery of service learning experiences, understanding of community and social change processes, and perspectives in service and social justice. In addition, you integrate this knowledge in the form of a Senior Capstone service learning project, designed and carried out collaboratively with a community organization.
Complete all of the following courses:
Complete one of the following courses:
Students know the theoretical roots and various approaches to service learning and experiential education pedagogy; have a working understanding of empirical research in service learning, focusing on cognitive and effective outcomes for student learning and development as well as community development; facilitate service learning and practical experiences, and identify and assess critical components of effective service learning; and assess community service learning as a strategy for (a) creating more just communities, and (b) preparing students for lifelong community participation.
Students understand theories and issues of social justice, including oppression (and its manifestations at various levels), liberation, coalitions and alliances; identify and analyze systemic elements that perpetuate injustice in communities; recognize diverse traditions of service and historical service movements, and analyze their relation to the current service movement; and critically analyze the linkages between service and social justice.
Students know various models for grassroots social change, including direct action, policy initiatives, and systemic change; understand communities and how they function, make decisions and acquire and expend resources; analyze the network of influences and forces (local, regional, national and global) that affect community life; and engage in effective practices in community building and processes that connect people across differences.
Students articulate the linkages between service, social justice, and their chosen field of study; complete a Senior Capstone project that is responsive to community-identified needs; gather knowledge with a community and provide information to it in a way that enhances community capacities; and understand their own capacity for service and social justice as individuals working in their chosen field of study.