University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education

The long-standing vision of universities as the “alma mater” of students and graduates is a demonstration of its role as sustaining the person, the expert/professional, and the citizen. This role has persisted in the face of rising global challenges such as the emergence of new learning spaces, the...

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Main Authors: Márcia Coelho, Isabel Menezes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-02-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.617300/full
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spelling doaj-f1a79ccde4624f8d84db28d69de382382021-02-25T08:06:15ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782021-02-011210.3389/fpsyg.2021.617300617300University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic EducationMárcia CoelhoIsabel MenezesThe long-standing vision of universities as the “alma mater” of students and graduates is a demonstration of its role as sustaining the person, the expert/professional, and the citizen. This role has persisted in the face of rising global challenges such as the emergence of new learning spaces, the growing diversity of publics, the call for productivity and performativity, and the hope for a significant engagement with the community and the public good. These sometimes conflicting tendencies have also stimulated higher education institutions to further pedagogical strategies that articulate in novel ways the classical elements of learning: action/experience and reflection/theory. In this context, service learning received a new impetus, particularly in the post-Bologna European Higher Education Area, as universities were looking for ways in which to articulate the social dimension of HEI and their “third mission” as institutions not only committed to addressing and solving societal problems, but also committed to fostering public-minded alumni through powerful experiences of engagement for both the students and the community.This paper is based on the experience of Erasmus+project ESSA, a service earning based project focused on University social responsibility (USR). ESSA engaged four groups of students from three European universities (Edinburgh, Porto, and Kaunas) in conducting a 1-week on-site USR audit based on an ecologic and situated concept of social responsibility. We will consider the perceived impact of ESSA on 44 students through a thematic analysis of focus group discussions and student self-assessment reports produced during and after their participation in the USR audit.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.617300/fullUniversity social responsibilityhigher educationservice learningstudentstransversal competencesexperiential learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Márcia Coelho
Isabel Menezes
spellingShingle Márcia Coelho
Isabel Menezes
University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
Frontiers in Psychology
University social responsibility
higher education
service learning
students
transversal competences
experiential learning
author_facet Márcia Coelho
Isabel Menezes
author_sort Márcia Coelho
title University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
title_short University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
title_full University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
title_fullStr University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
title_full_unstemmed University Social Responsibility, Service Learning, and Students' Personal, Professional, and Civic Education
title_sort university social responsibility, service learning, and students' personal, professional, and civic education
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2021-02-01
description The long-standing vision of universities as the “alma mater” of students and graduates is a demonstration of its role as sustaining the person, the expert/professional, and the citizen. This role has persisted in the face of rising global challenges such as the emergence of new learning spaces, the growing diversity of publics, the call for productivity and performativity, and the hope for a significant engagement with the community and the public good. These sometimes conflicting tendencies have also stimulated higher education institutions to further pedagogical strategies that articulate in novel ways the classical elements of learning: action/experience and reflection/theory. In this context, service learning received a new impetus, particularly in the post-Bologna European Higher Education Area, as universities were looking for ways in which to articulate the social dimension of HEI and their “third mission” as institutions not only committed to addressing and solving societal problems, but also committed to fostering public-minded alumni through powerful experiences of engagement for both the students and the community.This paper is based on the experience of Erasmus+project ESSA, a service earning based project focused on University social responsibility (USR). ESSA engaged four groups of students from three European universities (Edinburgh, Porto, and Kaunas) in conducting a 1-week on-site USR audit based on an ecologic and situated concept of social responsibility. We will consider the perceived impact of ESSA on 44 students through a thematic analysis of focus group discussions and student self-assessment reports produced during and after their participation in the USR audit.
topic University social responsibility
higher education
service learning
students
transversal competences
experiential learning
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.617300/full
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