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Campus Centers and Departments

Bentley College Service Learning Center
The Bentley Service-Learning Center (BSLC) was created in fall 1990 to establish connections between business and community interests and to add depth to the education of business students. Students from a variety of majors participate in service learning course projects and internships throughout the arts and sciences and business curricula. Several courses in business and in the liberal arts offer service-learning projects to foster student leadership development, civic participation, appreciation of human diversity, social awareness, and career preparation.

Citizenship and Service Education (CASE), Rutgers University
Begun in 1988, the Rutgers Citizenship and Service Education (CASE) program serves as a national model for integrating service and learning across the undergraduate curriculum. CASE courses, which are taught across the curriculum, combine an academically rigorous 3 credit classroom course with a 1 credit service-learning placement directly related to the subject matter of the course. The courses require students to do 40 hours of community service and help to forge a link between service and learning, and between the classroom and the real world. CASE includes programs on each of Rutgers three campuses (Camden, New Brunswick and Newark), summer session course offerings, and international service programs.

The Feinstein Institute for Public Service, Providence College
The Feinstein Institute for Public Service works with Providence College to develop an academic program in public and community service; the Institute's principles and goals can help guide those who are just beginning or seek to strengthen their service learning program. Established in 1993, The Feinstein Institute integrates community service with academic study. At the core of the Institute are the major and minor in Public and Community Service Studies at Providence College. Service-learning is integrated into the academic curriculum, meets actual community needs, and provides structured time for students to think, talk and write about what they are doing in their service experiences. In addition to the major and minor, the Feinstein Institute supports service learning courses in other departments across campus from Political Science, to English, to Sociology and Art.

University of North Carolina’s Public Service Scholar Program
The Public Service Scholars Program helps UNC students to cultivate the commitment and skills to serve long after they graduate. It not only connects students who care about similar issues with one another, guides participants in training that can make their service more effective but also links their coursework to service as well. When these students perform public service, they improve the quality of life for people in the community, state and beyond, while also helping Carolina fulfill its responsibility as the nation’s first public university.

The Haas Center for Public Service, Standford University
Established in 1985, the Haas Center for Public Service represents Standford University's institutional commitment to education for civic responsibility. The center includes a variety of student service organizations and University programs, including a Public Service Opportunities Clearinghouse, the Stanford Volunteer Network, the Community Service Writing Project, the Ravenswood Stanford Tutoring Program, the East Palo Alto Stanford Summer Academy, and Upward Bound. Through the Center's "study=service connections" initiative, staff work with faculty and students to connect service and study across the curriculum in 40 different courses.

Hobart and William Smith Colleges Service Learning
Service learning—community service connected to academics—is an integral part of Hobart and William Smith Colleges’ view of a liberal arts education. At HWS, what’s discussed in the classroom is applied to the "real world." An extra dimension is added when students see economic theory played out in a local program, when sociological hypotheses crystallize before their eyes through the work of community agencies.

Edward Ginsberg Center for Community Service and Learning, University of Michigan
The Center for Community Service and Learning, recently renamed in honor of a distinguished alumnus, is now entitled The Edward Ginsberg Center for Community Service and Learning. The Ginsberg Center is home to multiple community learning programs, including Academic Service Learning, America Reads Tutoring Corps, Michigan Community Service Corps, Michigan Neighborhood AmeriCorps Program, Project Community, and Project SERVE. The Ginsberg Center also houses the OCSL Press which produces the annual Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning. Through these programs and publications, the Ginsberg Center hopes to engage students, faculty members, university staff, and community partners in a process which combines community service and academic learning in order to promote civic participation, build community capacity, and enhance the educational process.

University of Virginia Center for Governmental Studies
The University of Virginia Center for Governmental Studies has as its primary mission to study national and state governmental and political concerns with an eye towards practical projects that benefit and educate the public.   The Center serves as a non-partisan resource for scholars, reporters, officeholders and the general public on issues central to our system of government.  At the Center for Governmental Studies, scholars, practitioners and pundits work together to fashion solutions to the challenges that imperil politics in America and to bridge the ever-widening gap between academe and real-world politics.

The Arts of Citizenship Program, University of Michigan
The Arts of Citizenship Program at the University of Michigan establishes connections between the university and the larger community in the arts and humanities to enrich both civic and community life and university research, teaching, and creative expression. The Arts of Citizenship runs a variety of programs, including community partnerships in which faculty and students work with schools, cultural institutions, public agencies, and grassroots groups; forums with artists, intellectuals, and cultural advocates; experimental teaching that mixes academic study with practical projects; and support for innovative research and creative work that speak to both academic and public audiences. The web site, in addition to providing access to Arts of Citizenship projects, includes a link to a lecture by the program's director, David Scobey, "Putting the Academy in Its Place: Building Bridges Between the University and the Community."

Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life
Imagining America: Artists and Scholars in Public Life is a national consortium of colleges, universities, and cultural institutions that supports the civic work of university artists, humanists, and designers. The program is developing a range of programs to build partnerships between faculty scholars and artists and schoolteachers, museum professionals, public agencies, and grass-roots community groups. Imagining America plans to offer three initial funding programs linked by annual conferences, workshops, newsletters, and the Internet: project and program grants for university-public partnerships; support for communities seeking residencies for faculty scholars and artists; and major artists' residencies for creating new work about the world shared by the academy and the community. The core grant program for collaborative work by faculty and community cultural leaders will be administered by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation. Imagining America, which is housed at the University of Michigan, began in March 1999 at a White House conference co-sponsored by the University of Michigan, the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, and the White House Millennium Council.

The Center for Democracy and Citizenship, University of Minnesota
The Center for Democracy and Citizenship is a research center at the Hubert H.Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota. The Center grows from Project Public Life, a field-testing project begun by Harry C. Boyte, Harlan Cleveland, and colleagues in the late 1980s, that worked to restore the practice of "public life" to systems where it had been eroded, teaching citizens that they are powerful actors in public problem solving. The Center for Democracy and Citizenship runs various projects to renew the civic mission of public organizations through creating partnerships with organizations concerned about the revitalization of their public cultures and purposes. The Civic Mission Project focuses on renewing the civic mission in higher education. Supported by a grant from the Kellogg Foundation and drawing on work with partners such as the College of St. Catherine as well as the University of Minnesota, the Center for Democracy and Citizenship is publishing a history of the civic mission of land grant institutions and mapping important developments.

San Francisco Urban Institute
The San Francisco Urban Institute is a non-profit research and action project of San Francisco State University.  Founded in 1993 by a coalition of university and civic leaders, SFUI has sponsored a wide range of policy initiatives, collaborative projects, and analytic studies.  Projects of the Institute address the such issues as economic development, workforce preparation, urban environmental restoration, inner-city education and health, business and community development.


AAC&U offers these resources only as possible models of interest and has not submitted each of them to any substantial peer or quality review. If you have questions about any particular resource, please contact the institution sponsoring it directly.

 

 

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