Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom

<p>This paper discusses the development and instruction of an undergraduate class focused on increasing understanding of military veterans in American society. Since the institution of the all-volunteer force in 1974, the number of U.S. citizens with military service has been steadily decreasi...

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Main Author: Eric Hodges
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Virginia Tech Libraries 2018-04-01
Series:Journal of Veterans Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/7
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spelling doaj-a3a68b1018454680821e43ff4cc119ab2020-11-25T03:45:20ZengVirginia Tech LibrariesJournal of Veterans Studies 2470-47682018-04-01318910510.21061/jvs.77Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College ClassroomEric Hodges0University of South Florida Sarasota-Manatee<p>This paper discusses the development and instruction of an undergraduate class focused on increasing understanding of military veterans in American society. Since the institution of the all-volunteer force in 1974, the number of U.S. citizens with military service has been steadily decreasing. This reduction in military experience has led to a lack of understanding between American civilians and veterans. The literature suggests that many reintegration challenges faced by veterans (employment, health, education) are exacerbated by this knowledge gap. The intent of the course was to educate undergraduate students, mostly civilian, on what it is like to be a veteran in America, with the hopes that increasing awareness would aid veterans in their transition. Given that goal, the course also contained a significant service-learning component. Service-learning, when well-executed, has been found to impact learners in ways other forms of teaching may not. Relevant to the outcomes of this course, the pedagogy has been found to improve cultural competence (Einfield and Collins, 2008) and lead to stereotype reduction (Conner, 2010). In addition to improving learning outcomes, service-learning also provides a tangible benefit to the community. In this paper, I will discuss considerations for designing college classes focused on military veterans and service-learning projects that involve veterans.</p>https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/7veterans, cultural competence, service-learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Hodges
spellingShingle Eric Hodges
Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
Journal of Veterans Studies
veterans, cultural competence, service-learning
author_facet Eric Hodges
author_sort Eric Hodges
title Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
title_short Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
title_full Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
title_fullStr Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
title_full_unstemmed Teaching Veterans Studies: Bridging the Gap Between U.S. Civilians and Veterans through the College Classroom
title_sort teaching veterans studies: bridging the gap between u.s. civilians and veterans through the college classroom
publisher Virginia Tech Libraries
series Journal of Veterans Studies
issn 2470-4768
publishDate 2018-04-01
description <p>This paper discusses the development and instruction of an undergraduate class focused on increasing understanding of military veterans in American society. Since the institution of the all-volunteer force in 1974, the number of U.S. citizens with military service has been steadily decreasing. This reduction in military experience has led to a lack of understanding between American civilians and veterans. The literature suggests that many reintegration challenges faced by veterans (employment, health, education) are exacerbated by this knowledge gap. The intent of the course was to educate undergraduate students, mostly civilian, on what it is like to be a veteran in America, with the hopes that increasing awareness would aid veterans in their transition. Given that goal, the course also contained a significant service-learning component. Service-learning, when well-executed, has been found to impact learners in ways other forms of teaching may not. Relevant to the outcomes of this course, the pedagogy has been found to improve cultural competence (Einfield and Collins, 2008) and lead to stereotype reduction (Conner, 2010). In addition to improving learning outcomes, service-learning also provides a tangible benefit to the community. In this paper, I will discuss considerations for designing college classes focused on military veterans and service-learning projects that involve veterans.</p>
topic veterans, cultural competence, service-learning
url https://journal-veterans-studies.org/articles/7
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