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Made in America? Assumptions About Service Learning Pedagogy as Transnational: A Comparison Between Ireland and the United States

Publication Date: 
2010
Publisher: 
Center for Excellence in Teaching at Georgia Southern University
Journal Issue: 
v.4(2), July 2010
Pages: 
17
ISBN / ISSN: 
1931-4744
Abstract: 

Using exploratory, qualitative interviews, the authors studied conceptions of academic service-learning in the United States and the Republic of Ireland in order to elucidate the ways in which culture and social context shaped practitioners’ perceptions and practices regarding service-learning pedagogy. Participants articulated a shared understanding of service-learning, identified similar barriers to utilizing service-learning and institutionalizing its practice, and discussed tensions surrounding the purpose of service-learning. However, Irish participants distanced their practice from the historical and cultural context of U.S. service-learning, demonstrating the process of localization. We conclude that the overarching tenets of service-learning may be transferable but the social, cultural, economic, historical, and political conditions of individual countries define how these are to be achieved. (authors)

Call Number: 
100/B/IVE/2010
Sector: 
Electronic Availability: 
Available online
Library Item Type: 
Print resource - serial article
Demographics & Settings: 
Topics: Organization & Management: 
Topics: Theory & Practice: 
Topics: Theory & Practice: