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Service-Learning: History, Theory, and Issues

Author: 
Bruce W. Speck
Author: 
Sherry L. Hoppe
Publication Date: 
2004
Publisher: 
Praeger Publishers / Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.
Pages: 
209
ISBN / ISSN: 
897898524
Abstract: 

Although service-learning programs can have diverse theoretical roots, faculty who engage their students in service-learning may not be cognizant of alternatives to the one they adopt. This book presents not only a historical perspective, but it also debates the theories and issues surrounding the conflicts inherent in those theories. One theory, based on a philanthropic model, engages students in a commitment to serve others from a sense of gratitude for their own good fortunes or from a desire to "give back" to communities from which they have benefited. Typically, service-learning programs based on the philanthropic or communitarian models deal with the overt needs of community members. In contrast, the civic model requires deeper analysis of the various political and social issues that may be the cause of social conditions that require the help of the more fortunate. Opponents of the civic theory fear that proponents see the classroom as a forum for advancing particular political agendas, conceivably indoctrinating students to a particular view of social injustices. (Amazon)

Call Number: 
100/C/SPE/2004
Sector: 
Library Item Type: 
Print resource - book/monograph
Exemplary: 
Topics: Theory & Practice: