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IV. Partner Relationships

C. Assessing the Impact of Experiential Learning Programs
     on Communities

Just as colleges and universities will want to demonstrate that measurable learning outcomes are resulting from experiential learning programs, so will the leaders of local service organizations feel bound to analyze how much good work by students is being done on behalf of the citizens they are responsible for assisting. The performance measures they will use are likely to parallel, but not replicate, the kinds of assessments being made by their academic partners.

  • Allegheny College - Center for Economic and Environmental Development
    Seven major projects are run by CEED. Energy saving measures are reported. Civic engagement, bolstered by the service-learning projects of students, is reported to be elevated. Alliances with major business and political leaders are helpful as are the workshops, which have reached more than 15,000 citizens. Significant monetary savings led to an acknowledgement by the governor who granted an Award for Environmental Excellence to those whose energy efficiency produced significant savings for the regional medical center. Other evidence of support for this work is offered.

  • Assumption College - Community Service Learning Program
    Just as CSC faculty and staff have gained from contributions to their program made by the executive director of the Rainbow Center, the Rainbow agency also benefited from CSL attendance at their annual fundraiser by getting space needed for staff training, and by other exchanges of resources. Commitments to reciprocity by the College and its agency partner were mutually valued.

  • Berry College - Hunger and Homelessness Outreach, Programs, and Education
    Teams of partners have planned, prepared, and served Saturday noon meals—partially with help from the College's food service division and its Friday food salvage program. Over a hundred impoverished local people benefit, an especially noteworthy result for school children who cannot receive free lunch program support on weekends. Services have been expanded to include health fairs. Grant support has been won for the purpose of expanding these services.

  • Calvin College - Nursing Department Partnership
    Three clinics made use of student-generated research while expanding neighborhood services and gaining a closer connection to community residents as a result of work done by students and faculty. No partnership problems have been reported. Surveys and interviews produce high marks for the work being done.

  • Chaminade University - Income Tax Preparation
    Students have assisted the elderly, homeless, and working poor in preparing their taxes as well as in personal budget planning. Those who are assisted learn to prepare their own taxes and help others. Individuals have been assisted in receiving otherwise unclaimed funds. Significant dollar amounts have been recorded for individuals and their families. High levels of satisfaction with this program are reported.

  • Chatham College - Choosing the Right Partners
    By using careful selection criteria, the College and its four partners were able to build on common interests and, where appropriate, expand collaborative activities. It was possible to maximize the impact of funding without straining internal resources.

  • College Misericordia - The Service Leadership Center
    A significant percentage of students plan to continue partaking in community-related activities after graduation because of their experiences in school. Community partners were unanimous in expressing satisfaction with their partnerships while nearly all of the agency representatives indicated an intention to continue participating.

  • Columbia College, Chicago - Office of Community Arts Partnerships
    Three partnerships (community, school, cultural) spawned dozens of high-quality art-based programs for young people each year. Many successful initiatives were launched.

  • Emory & Henry College - Communities Allied to Uplift Success in Education
    Initiatives added to after-school enrichment programs as well as mentoring and youth leadership development—on and off campus. The "Youth Summit" has become an annual event that includes middle schools and high schools. It is grant funded. The College and local organizations are reported to have been strengthened.

  • Gannon University - Lake Erie Arboretum at Frontier
    Fifth graders demonstrated a capability of learning and applying complex scientific conceptualizations. Their school teachers provided overwhelming support for the project. State academic standards in Pennsylvania were bridged by working through this project.

  • Heritage College - Exemplary Multicultural Practices in Rural Education
    Surveys of staff and students at three middle schools reported favorable resutls on six indicators of growing respect for multicultural differences.

  • Huntington College - MindScape
    The middle school students who have participated in the MindScape Academy have improved their attitudes toward learning, are taking more college-prep courses in high school, are spending more time studying, and view themselves as more likely to go to college than they did prior to their participation in the academy.

  • Ithaca College - EcoVillage of Ithaca
    Focus is on sustainability outreach on campus and in the local community. Positive results are reported.

  • Maryville College - Just Connections
    Just Connections promotes the development of self-sustaining communities that can offer more equitable access to resources for local citizens. Grants gained have been used to promote the use of technology in community-based research, and for extending the scope of collaboration and research to several urban areas beyond the Appalachian region (among other purposes).

  • Marywood University - The Latino Collaboration
    Reports of the College's provision of useful information and outcomes of collaboration are anecdotal. What is clear is that collaboration has increased as has Latino enrollment in the School of Social Work. Student evaluations of courses with community practice are reported as positive, and faculty/student feedback suggests that awareness of Latino culture has heightened.

  • Messiah College - The Harrisburg Institute
    Attention was paid to the community's desire to see a long-term commitment by the College to the community. Positive feedback was reportedly received.

  • Presbyterian College - Communities Helping, Assisting, and Motivating Promising Students
    During the summer prior to their eleventh and twelfth grades, students are assisted in gaining internship opportunities in area businesses. A portion of their earnings is saved toward meeting anticipated higher education expenses. Data show that the relationship between College students and CHAMPS students is invaluable for both. CHAMPS students' comfort in the college atmosphere increases the likelihood that they will pursue a college education.

  • Rhodes College - Rhodes Service Scholars Program
    A student's senior thesis provided a measure of the impact of service scholars in community organizaitons. The number of hours spent on various projects is calculated.

  • Rhodes College - St. Jude Children's Research Hospital Summer Plus Scholars
    While engaged in an intensive research program, Summer Plus Scholars become part of a community effort to diagnose and treat catastrophic childhood illnesses, regardless of family income.

  • St. Ambrose University - Marketing for Mississippi Valley Growers Association
    An example was given of good work by an intern. Following his work on a consumer survey, he was requested to design a publicity packet to be used in improving attendance at special events and to research the feasibility of creating a coupon book that was ultimately produced as a supplement to additional marketing efforts. A number of student-recommended changes in marketing practices were implemented by MVGA, the first-place winners in an Iowa Farm Market improvement competition.

  • St. Edward's University - The HEB Community Internship Program
    Student interns who are paid provided many hours of community service. All program partners are reportedly realizing benefits. Several businesses are considering this program as a model for what can be accomplished by partnering institutions.

  • St. Thomas University - The Campus and Community Alliance for North Dade
    A community forum serves as a vehicle for evaluating the strategic plan and organizational structure of the Alliance. A By-laws Task Force is reviewing the need for making additions and corrections in the Alliance's purposes. An unintended outcome of the work of the Alliance was to incorporate a new city whose first elected mayor was an Alliance member.

  • Tougaloo College - Partnership in Excellence
    PIE is reported to offer an important communications mechanism among local organizations and residents. Workshops and summits held on campus proved to be effective forms for strategic collaboration among diverse partners. Two local organizations collaborate on evaluation and assessment training (components in a needed comprehensive community-based evaluation strategy).

  • University of Indianapolis - Parish Nursing
    Many nurses from across the state have completed the parish nursing course, and have provided service to a variety of denominations, congregations, and communities.

  • Utica College - The History Project
    An annual journal is made available to the city library, area high schools, local historical society shops, and museums. With growing awareness, community leaders increasingly seek out academic department members.

  • Wagner College - Learning by Doing
    Community leaders report that student presence brings greater attention to environmental/human health issues in a way that is analogous to the Quaker concept of bearing witness to the promotion of social change.

  • Wartburg College - Community Builders: Fostering Intergenerational Civic Engagement
    The institutional partners remain enthusiastic about this project which has grown in its capacity to attract participants.

  • Wesley College - Boys and Girls Club of Delaware
    Elementary and middle school children who would otherwise be unsupervised in late afternoons, enjoy educational and recreational programs as well as tutoring by staff and college student volunteers. In summers, weekly field trips are included. A gained sense of community exists between local children and college students; it replaces attitudes of the youngsters—that the campus was either a place to avoid or to cause trouble. A new Community Service and Partnership Center oversees and supports service that is rooted in experiential learning.

  • Wesleyan College, Macon - Aunt Maggie's Kitchen Table
    A significant portion of the student body participates in the family support programs of AMKT. These services include tutoring, organizing field trips, and many other activities. The agency has been able to rely on student volunteers as a central source of support for the Center. Aunt Maggie's is a household name on campus. Students provide 100 percent of the staffing for the year-long, bi-weekly Saturday School at Aunt Maggie's. More than one-third of the students who complete a service project at Aunt Maggie's end up staying involved in some capacity. AMKT won the Inaugural Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter Campus Community Partnership Award.

  • William Woods University - Rosa Parks Center
    Young women residents participate in campus athletic events, campus theatre, lectures, special events, and therapeutic equestrian riding. Occasionally, recognition is given for a specific talent that is exhibited. Young people report in open discussions that exposure to college life has opened new doors to them. For the first time, many can imagine attending college or trade schools. For its work with female juvenile offenders, the Center is viewed by many as a model for the nation, with comparitively low recidivism rates. Plans exist to replace anecdotal reports with quantitative and qualitative research.


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