Abstract




Learning Service or Service Learning: Enabling the Civic

Marilynne Boyle-Baise
Indiana University
(boylebai@indiana.edu)

Rhondalynn Brown
Indiana University
(rhondabrown@gmail.com)

Ming-Chu Hsu
Indiana University
(mchsu@indiana.edu)

Denisha Jones
Indiana University
(dnjones@indiana.edu)

Ambica Prakash
Univ. of Wisconsin-Stout
(prakasha@uwstout.edu)

Michelle Rausch
Indiana University
(mnrausch@indiana.edu)

Shelley Vitols
Indiana University
(svitols@mccsc.edu)

Zach Wahlquist
Indiana University
(zwahlqui@acui.org)


Abstract:
Presently, service learning is utilized as a tool for learning about something other than service, such as: gaining civic dispositions, learning subject matter, practicing inquiry techniques, or questioning inequality. What might happen if, instead, an exploration of service itself grounded classroom studies and field work, fostering explicit consideration and critique of ethics, standards, and distinctive forms of learning through work with others? In this paper, the idea of service learning is turned on its head and "learning service" is considered as a means of enabling the civic, particularly in regard to higher education.






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