Abstract
Service-Learning (SL) is an experience that allows students to (a) participate in activities co-designed in partnership by universities and local organizations and (b) reflect on the service activity in such a way as to gain an enhanced sense of responsibility. These experiences represent significant ways to meet and experience real-world contexts for students. The COVID-19 pandemic required Higher Education Institutions to rethink and shift in-presence courses to online platforms. This transition included SL courses as well. This study aimed to explore the responsibility and democratic dimensions elicited by an extreme online Service-Learning (XE-SL) experience and the perceptions of engaging in exclusive online service activities with local communities during the COVID-19 Italian national quarantine. A qualitative driven mixed-method longitudinal approach was chosen to triangulate qualitative (reflexive journal) and quantitative (pre-post questionnaire) data from 20 university students. The findings shed a positive light on the capability of XE-SL to promote a sense of responsibility, civic engagement, and the acquirement of democratic and transferrable competencies, such as perspective-taking, adaptability, cultural background respect, global mindedness, teamwork, leadership, communication, creativity, and organizational competencies. Reflection, connection, and being agents of change for the community were perceived as the major assets of the XE-SL experience, while adapting face-to-face SL experiences to exclusively online activities evoked ambivalent feelings in students. The study suggests a rethinking of the design XE-SL and other forms of eSL with the inclusion of more structured interactive activities within community contexts to favor students’ sense of connection to the community organizations or NGOs.
Subject
Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reference51 articles.
1. Hodges, C., Moore, S., Lockee, B., Trust, T., and Bond, A. (2020). The Difference Between Emergency Remote Teaching and Online Learning. Educ. Rev., 27, Available online: https://er.educause.edu/articles/2020/3/the-difference-between-emergency-remote-teaching-and-online-learning.
2. Tzankova, I.I., Compare, C., Marzana, D., Guarino, A., Di Napoli, I., Rochira, A., Calandri, E., Barbieri, I., Procentese, F., and Gatti, F. (2022). Emergency online school learning during COVID-19 lockdown: A qualitative study of adolescents’ experiences in Italy. Curr. Psychol., 1–13.
3. The transformation of higher education after the COVID disruption: Emerging challenges in an online learning scenario;Front. Psychol.,2021
4. Viewing community as responsibility as well as resource: Deconstructing the theoretical roots of psychological sense of community;J. Community Psychol.,2010
5. Aramburuzabala, P., McIlrath, L., and Opazo, H. (2019). Embedding Service Learning in European Higher Education: Developing a Culture of Civic Engagement, Routledge.
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献