A tipping point analysis of service-learning hours and student outcomes

Author:

Garger John,Vracheva Veselina P.,Jacques Paul

Abstract

PurposeAlthough extant literature links overstimulation to various job outcomes, most studies do not consider a service-learning context, and they suggest a linear association between stimuli and outcomes. This paper examines the link between the number of service-learning hours students work and three educational outcomes – student satisfaction with the service-learning project, class relevancy to the service-learning project and expected community involvement.Design/methodology/approachApplying activation theory and Yerkes–Dodson law, we test curvilinear relationships between service-learning hours and student outcomes.FindingsResults suggest that students benefit from service learning up to a certain duration of a service-learning project.Originality/valueThis study identifies the tipping point of the number of service-learning hours beyond which students perceive decrements to three outcomes.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Education,Life-span and Life-course Studies

Reference66 articles.

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3. Barnett, R.C. (2006), “Relationship of the number and distribution of work hours to health and quality-of-life (QOL) outcomes”, in Perrewe, P.L. and Ganster, D.C. (Eds), Research in Occupational Stress and Well-Being (Volume 5): Employee Health, Coping, and Methodologies, Elsevier, Amsterdam, pp. 99-138.

4. Billig, S., Jesse, D. and Root, S. (2006), The Impact of Service-Learning on High School Students' Civic Engagement, Evaluation report prepared for the Carnegie Corporation of New York, RMC Research Corporation, Denver, CO.

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