Benefits of Community-Based Service-Learning
| Print Version (375K pdf) | ||
| Source: Eugene C. Roehlkepartain, Search Institute, December 2007 | ||
| Benefits of Community-Based Service-Learning Thousands of community-based organizations engage millions of young people in service and service-learning. Though research in K-12 and higher education shows a wide range of benefits of effective service-learning, much less is known about the benefits of service-learning in community-based settings. This fact sheet highlights emerging knowledge. | ||
| What Are Community-Based Organizations? | ||
| Community-based organizations include: | ||
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| Benefits for Youth Participants | ||
| Youth who participate in high-quality community-based service-learning are likely to benefit in a number of ways: | ||
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| Benefits for Youth Development Organizations | ||
| Youth development organizations and after-school programs that use service-learning can benefit from this strategy in a number of ways: | ||
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| Benefits to Organizations that Utilize Young People as Volunteers | ||
| Community-based organizations that engage young people in service and service-learning point to the following kinds of benefits: | ||
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| Benefits for Service Recipients, Communities, and Society | ||
| Beyond the young people the organizations directly involve, community-based service-learning benefits the people served, their communities, and, ultimately, society: | ||
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| Benefits Don’t Come Automatically | ||
| The benefits outlined above are not automatic or universal. The specific benefits or impact will vary, depending on the focus, scope, and quality of a particular service or service-learning experience. Integrating core elements of effective service-learning is key to reaping these and other benefits. Among these core elements are: | ||
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| Conclusion | ||
| Community-based service-learning does not receive the kind of public attention that service-learning receives in education. Yet it offers significant benefits to society, to young people, and to the participating institutions. Lawrence Neil Ballis and colleagues write: "Schools are not the only institutions that educate our young people, and community-based organizations can be far more than the ‘stage’ that schools use to deliver the service-learning programs that they develop. Kindergarten-through-twelfth-grade schooling is only one format for ‘education’ where young people gain the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and aspirations they will need to become successful adults." | ||
For a more detailed discussion, including references and documentation, see the complete online fact sheet at http://www.servicelearning.org/instant_info/fact_sheets/cb_facts/benefits_cbosl/ © 2007 Learn and Serve America’s National Service-Learning Clearinghouse. | ||
Suggested Citation:
Roehlkepartain, Eugene C.. Benefits of Community-Based Service-Learning. Scotts Valley, CA: Learn and Serve America’s National Service-Learning Clearinghouse, 2007.
http://www.servicelearning.org/instant_info/fact_sheets/cb_facts/benefits_cbosl/


