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University of Michigan
MCSP Integrates Community Service into Learning
The Michigan Community Scholars
Program differs from other learning community programs
offered at the University of Michigan because of its
"distinct purpose." The program "emphasizes
making a difference" says David Schoem, Faculty
Director of MCSP. "The students who apply to our
program have been involved in community service projects
or in 'giving back
' and they want to continue
to be involved in society and to have an impact."
What makes MCSP unique among
other learning communities at the University of Michigan
is its "integration of the ideals of community
service learning with those of learning communities."
In this program, community service is an "explicitly
stated emphasis
" according to Dr. Shoem.
There are three dimensions
that we bring to our community focus. First, we provide
academic coursework, through first-year seminars and
other classes, that provides an intellectual grounding
on issues of community and moves students to think
seriously about complex community issues from different
disciplinary perspectives. Second, we take our students
into the community to do good and necessary community
work and we bring them back to the classroom to reflect
on their experience. And third, because it's a residential
community with a student population that is about
50 percent students of color and 50 percent white
students, we have the opportunity to attempt to model
what a diverse, democratic society should look like.
How, in our everyday lives, do we live the values
that we've been thinking about in the classroom and
that we've been critiquing and observing in the work
we're doing in the community?
Students are an integral part
of the planning and management of the program. First-year
students serve on the MCSP Programming Board and define
themselves as community leaders. They plan community
service projects, as well as arts, social, and cultural
events for the community. These events include movie
nights, trips to participate in Habitat for Humanity,
museum trips, and a recent trip to Detroit to see the
dedication of the Underground Railroad Memorial. Penny
Pasque, the program's director and co-founder, emphasizes
that this board is a significant portion of the MCSP
program and what students feel is a large part of their
learning community experience.
According to Schoem, the program
benefits faculty as well as students. He believes it
enables faculty to form a collaborative scholarly community
and serves as "an attractive alternative to many
faculty
it becomes as important a community and
academic home for some of our faculty as it is for our
students."
Any incoming student at the
University of Michigan is eligible to apply to MCSP,
but to indicate the popularity of this two-year-old
program, the MCSP brochure warns that "space is
limited at Couzens Hall."
Hallmarks of many learning
communities include team teaching, teaching across disciplines,
living in a diverse community, service, and fieldwork.
The basic principles of learning communities have become
standard fare in many college curricula, building on
other trends such as writing across the curriculum,
community-service programs, and interdisciplinary programs.
In addition to the MCSP, the
University of Michigan offers several other residential,
non-residential, and four-year academic learning community
options such as the Health Sciences Scholars Program,
the Women In Science and Engineering Residence Program,
and the University Mentorship Program among others.
For an overview of these and other learning communities
at the university, visit
http://www.umich.edu/~mlcprogs/.
Dr. Schoem will present a
session titled "The Educational Promise of Linking
Learning Communities and Community Service Learning"
at AAC&U's upcoming Annual Meeting (see
http://www.aacu.org/meetings/annual.cfm). Watch
the mail for AAC&U's quarterly, PeerReview
devoted to the problems, successes, and assessment of
learning communities.
For more information on MCSP,
visit, http://www.lsa.umich.edu/mcs.
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