Peer Facilitators as Border Crossers in Community Service Learning

Author:

Chesler Mark A.1,Ford Kristie A.2,Galura Joseph A.3,Charbeneau Jessica M.4

Affiliation:

1. Mark A. Chesler is professor emeritus of sociology at the University of Michigan and the founding faculty director of Project Community. He is an activist researcher focusing on issues of race and gender equity and organizational transformation. His latest book (with Amanda Lewis and James Crowfoot) is Challenging Racism in Higher Education: Promoting Justice.

2. Joseph A. Galura is the staff director of Project Community and co-director of LUCY: The Lives of Children and Youth Initiative. He also is faculty associate in Asian-Pacific Islander American Studies and field instructor in the School of Social Work. His latest book (edited with Penny Pasque, David Schoem, and Jeffrey Howard) is Engaging the Whole of Service Learning, Diversity and Learning Communities.

3. Kristie A. Ford is assistant professor of sociology at Skidmore College. She received her Ph.D. from the University of Michigan, where she taught with Project Community and the Program on Intergroup Relations. She continues to conduct research in the area of her dissertation, “Masculinity, Femininity, Appearance Ideals and the Black Body: Developing a Positive Raced and Gendered Bodily Sense of Self.”

4. Jessica M. Charbeneau is a Ph.D. candidate in sociology at the University of Michigan, where she has taught with Project Community and the Program on Intergroup Relations, and is currently serving as the graduate student mentor for first-time graduate student instructors in the department. Her research interests focus on whiteness and pedagogical practice.

Abstract

Community service learning offers students the opportunity to cross socially constructed and epistemological borders of power and privilege, allowing them to come into contact with groups of people who are different from themselves and to learn in different ways. Peer facilitators, undergraduate student instructional leaders who guide others through these encounters, often experience especially powerful border crossing experiences, both by virtue of their service site supervision and their seminar leadership roles. Using their own writings and interviews, we explore some of these peer facilitators' border crossing experiences in a community service learning course at a large midwestern research university. We focus on how peer facilitators encounter various issues as they guide discussion of the experiences students have at community service sites in reflective seminars. The findings suggest that such border crossing experiences can encourage peer facilitators to reflect on their own social group identity and position within the larger social structures of privilege and oppression, and on their own learning styles and engagement in the higher educational environment.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science,Education

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