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contents:   

Spartina Invasion
...
Breaking Down
Cultural Barriers

...
Washington Experience
...
Have Broadband,
Will Travel

...
4-H Volunteers
say Thanks

...
Kids, Most Important
Part of Livestock
Programs

...
Future Cougars
...
Master Gardeners
Celebrate Three
Decades

...
Small Farms
Field Day

...
Urban Forest Project
...
Homeland Security
...
West Nile Virus
Site Launched

...
Name Change
...
Necessity Is
the Mother of Invention


Other Editions

 
Service Learning:
an Emerging Partnership
 
 

It began with informal conversations and hallway meetings well over a year ago. It took a step forward at the university's administrative retreat in Pullman last October when Extension volunteered to put energy into helping establish new service learning opportunities across the state.

The concept is gelling this fall as the first formal pilot service learning collaboration between Extension and a campus-based department is in full swing.

Lisa Shipley, associate professor of natural resource sciences, is having students in her introductory wildlife management course (Natural Resource Science 280) visit with private landowners around the state to learn about the wildlife management issues they face daily. Assisted by Extension Coordinator Janean Creighton, and county Extension faculty in Stevens, Kitsap and Whitman counties, Shipley has arranged visits with forest, shore and range landowners. Students will interview the owners, observe conditions and identify a topic to develop into an Extension bulletin.

Helping support this service learning project is a $25,000 grant from the office of the provost to enhance undergraduate teaching and learning. The grant application, written by Melanie Brown, director of WSU's Community Service Learning Center, will be used to offset some of the costs of developing and implementing new course initiatives involving service learning.

Brown, along with several other colleagues from across the institution, have been meeting for the past five months to plan the implementation of this project. They already are looking for additional grant opportunities that would enable an expansion of service learning in WSU's undergraduate curriculum.

Just what is Service Learning?
Melanie Brown offers this definition: "Service learning is a type of experiential learning with both short- and long-term goals. In the short term, service learning aims to enhance learning by engaging students in meaningful and academically relevant community-based projects.

"The vision or long-term goal of service learning is to equip graduates, as community citizens, with the tools to address the pressing issues of our society."

The service learning movement has grown exponentially over the past two decades, according to Brown. In 1985, four universities joined together to form Campus Compact, a national coalition of university presidents committed to the civic purposes of higher education. Service learning is one manifestation of this commitment. Today Campus Compact boasts a membership of more than 900 institutions.

MELANIE BROWN
Melanie Brown, director of WSU's Community Service Learning Center defines service learning as, 'a type of experiential learning with both short- and long-term goals.'

What has motivated Extension to become involved with this movement?
Linda Kirk Fox, associate dean and associate director of Extension at WSU explained: 'As part of our strategic plan, operationalizing the concept of university-wide extension is a key element. Creating programmatic partnerships between county extension educators and campus-based departments is one very obvious and powerful way to bring the resources of the university to every county of the state.'

For the concept to be successful and sustainable, it has to be a win-win-win situation. Students must have an engaging opportunity to serve, their instructors must value the kind of learning such an opportunity will bring, and the county offices must feel that participating will help them meet the programmatic objectives they have for their counties.

Certainly, for campus faculty who wish to enhance their curriculum with a service learning component, the opportunity to move beyond Pullman to become involved in service learning projects expands the options significantly.

'Including service learning in my NATRS 280 course provides me with a richer and more rewarding teaching experience," said Lisa Shipley. 'In addition, I strongly believe that the opportunity to work with the public enhances my students' professional preparation."

In Colville, where the first visits are taking place, Extension Educator Peter Griessmann is knee-deep in the process. Throughout his Extension career, he said he has been motivated to "do the right thing," and to me "this just feels right."

He noted that many young people from Stevens County who go off to college come back to live in the area at some point in their lives. He feels that the service learning visits he has arranged will help students make a strong link between the theory they learn in the classroom and the real issues landowners must grapple with every day.

"The more people who understand the natural resource issues from many perspectives, the easier time we will have moving forward toward common goals." Next spring, in collaboration with Extension's Master Gardener program, students in Landscape Architecture 363 may have an opportunity to participate in design of a community garden for individuals with disabilities.

The future of Extension's involvement with service learning is indeed growing.

Cliff Moore,
Extension Program Leader



4H in PULLMAN
Twenty 4-H'ers from Washington and Idaho picked up trash and pulled weeds along a highway outside Pullman as part of a joint service learning project in June.
 


Service Learning a Cornerstone of 4-H

Dressed in jeans and T-shirts, 20 teenagers trudged along Davis Way on the west edge of Pullman collecting trash and pulling weeds. The young people came from all over the state, more than a few from Idaho. On the same warm June afternoon, another group of teenagers entertained residents at Good Samaritan Village in Moscow, Idaho, while others read to children at WSU's Children's Center. The teenagers were among more than 400 Washington and Idaho 4-H'ers who spent an afternoon working side-by-side on a dozen community service learning projects in Pullman and Moscow.

'Service learning is community service with a twist,' said Jennifer Hope, WSU extension adolescent coordinator. 'It is based on the traditional concept of community service, but within the experience, there is learning for the participants.

'One of our groups cleared a nature trail for Moscow Parks. Community service would be just the clearing, but when our objective is service learning, the participants also learn about the natural foliage growing along the trail, what can be removed without endangering wildlife in that area, or perhaps the historical value of the area.

'The idea is that a service learning opportunity might instill a greater appreciation for the service itself and teach the participants who are new in the process.' The Washington and Idaho teens were brought together by their respective state 4-H conferences which met in Pullman and Moscow during the same week—the first time in some 85 years. 'More than anything, I think 4-H is community service,' Hope said. 'I don't think that's the image most people have. I think most people think of animals and home economics.' She said the 4-H pledge reflects the organization's commitment to community service: 'We better ourselves for our club, our community, our country and our world.' As part of the youth organization's national centennial celebration last year, Washington 4-H members and their adult youth volunteers pledged to do more than a million hours of community service. 'One county's youth club pledged 40 hours of mowing lawns and house cleaning for elderly residents in their community who couldn't do those kinds of things,' Hope said.

'We had a group in Lincoln County that built a computer lab for their community. It's still running. It allows people who don't have access to the technology to come in, take classes, and learn how to build a resumé and search the Internet.' What do 4-H'ers get out of the experience? 'A lot of people have helped me,' said Ryan Chappell, Shelton. He was one of the 4-H'ers pulling weeds along Davis Way. 'It makes me feel good to put back into the community.'

WASHINGTON IDAHO 4H

Dennis Brown,
Information Department


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