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PRESENTED BY: ELISHA WRITT LEAD TEACHER CLINTONVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOLS The Learning Link The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

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The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy. Presented By: Elisha Writt Lead Teacher Clintonville Public Schools. A Standard for Quality Practice: Link to Curriculum. Service learning is intentionally used as an instructional strategy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

PRESENTED BY:

ELISHA WRITTLEAD TEACHER

CLINTONVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

The Learning LinkThe Learning LinkEnsuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Page 2: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

SERVICE LEARNING IS INTENTIONALLY USED AS AN INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY TO MEET LEARNING GOALS

AND/OR CONTENT STANDARDS.

A Standard for Quality Practice: Link to Curriculum

Taken from National Youth Leadership Council’s K-12 Service-Learning Standards for Quality Practice

Page 3: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Indicators of Quality Practice

Clearly articulated learning goals

Aligned with academic curriculum

Participants learn how to transfer knowledge and skills from one setting to another

Formally recognized in school board policy and student records

Taken from National Youth Leadership Council’s K-12 Service-Learning Standards for Quality Practice

Page 4: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Link to Curriculum

Rubric for Continuous Improvement of the Service-Learning Experience

Advanced: students learn how to transfer knowledge and skills, explicit alignment to curriculum, students construct knowledge through challenging tasks

Experienced: students are able to master complex skills, instruction leads to project/experience completion, some intentional, some not

Introductory: link to curriculum is not intentional despite some skill mastery, experience does not push learning to higher levels

Novice: low level skills, project/experience does not come from curriculum, more like an add-on activity

Summarized from WI DPI’s Rubric , based on NYLC’s K-12 standards

Page 5: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

TIME TO SHARE and REFLECT

Think of a service learning experience you’ve been involved with

Share a brief overview of the project

Reflect on your practice – use the rubric to guide yourself

Page 6: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Avoiding the Traps

Start with your curriculum

Know your curriculum

Determine learning goals at the start

Plan assessments at the start

Page 7: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Avoiding the Traps…continued

Recognize that a project/experience will likely replace your old way of teaching a skill set, concept, or unit

Understand that the learning comes first, the impact on the community comes second

Page 8: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Deepen Your Practice

Setting the Context

Planning Sheets

Rubric

Page 9: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

FINDING WHERE SERVICE CAN COMPLIMENT AND ENHANCE YOUR CURRICULUM

Creating the Link

Page 10: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Steps to creating a link to curriculum

1. Write 5 course goals/objectives for one subject you teach.

2. What issues in the community relate to these topics?

3. How might students be able to have an impact on this issue through a direct, indirect, or advocacy focused solution?

Adapted from “A Project Walk Through” from Maryland Student Service Alliance, with input from T. Dary, WI DPI

Page 11: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Steps to creating a link…continued

4. What needs in the school or community would be met through this experience?

5. What do students need to know or understand before they can respond with a solution? What do you already do in your curriculum that prepares students for applying knowledge and skills in the community?

Adapted from “A Project Walk Through” from Maryland Student Service Alliance, with input from T. Dary, WI DPI

Page 12: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Steps to creating a link…continued

6. How can you document and assess student progress throughout the service learning experience to make sure they are learning what you want them to learn?

7. What do you already do in your curriculum that serves as meaningful, challenging reflection?

Adapted from “A Project Walk Through” from Maryland Student Service Alliance, with input from T. Dary, WI DPI

Page 13: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

CREATING THE LINK

Please take a few moments to start filling out a Creating the Link

worksheet.

Page 14: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

WHAT DOES IT MEAN…?

”PARTICIPANTS WILL LEARN HOW TO TRANSFER KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FROM ONE SETTING TO

ANOTHER.”

Discussion

Page 15: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

Fill in the blanks.Fill in the blanks.

Service-learning has clearly articulated ____________ goals.

Service-learning is _______________ with the academic and/or programmatic curriculum.

Service-learning helps participants ________ knowledge and skills from one setting to another.

Service-learning is formally _________ in school board policies and student records.

Let’s review…

Taken from National Youth Leadership Council’s K-12 Service-Learning Standards for Quality Practice

Page 16: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

My Final Thoughts

Make sure your students are aware of the instructional goals you have determined for this experience.

Be ready for those times when you will need to filter a student spawned idea through your instructional lens, so that what comes about is service-learning, not just service.

Remember…A service-learning experience without strong curricular ties is NOT high quality.

Page 17: The Learning Link Ensuring Service Learning is an Effective Instructional Strategy

ELISHA WRITTCLINTONVILLE PUBLIC SCHOOLS

[email protected]

715-823-7215 X3254

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