|
A new online database
will make service-learning opportunities even more accessible to the
Calvin College students who participate in them.
The database,
which is funded by a $1,750 Venture Grant from Michigan Campus Compact,
will list the between 200 and 300 organizations (social service agencies,
schools, clinics, churches and other non-profits) where Calvin students
already serve and learn.
"It will make
it easier for them to connect with service opportunities that fit who
they are and what they want to do," says Jeff Bouman (above), director
of Calvin's Service-Learning Center.
The grant will
pay for student workers to create the database, which will be accessible
through KnightVision, Calvin's online community. The online resource
will be available to Calvin's students, faculty and staff and alumni.
The idea for the
database grew out of a Campus Compact training session where students
mapped Calvin's service-learning resources. Calvin graduate Greg Veltman,
who was Bouman's research coordinator last year, helped write the grant
to put Calvin's service learning online.
"It's characteristic
of the kind of thing service-learning engenders in students," says
Bouman. "Initiative, civic participation and thinking beyond themselves."
Calvin's longstanding
tradition of service-learning includes such annual events as StreetFest,
which annually puts 900-1,000 first-year students to work stocking food
pantries, painting, cleaning alleys and serving in variety of other
ways in the Grand Rapids area. Calvin students also tutor, serve as
Big Brothers and Big Sisters and perform stream cleanup, among other
service activities. Calvin even offers several service-learning spring
break trips, through which students may serve on a Navajo reservation
in New Mexico or work at a home for at-risk girls in Tennessee.
Calvin is especially
impressive in the area of academically based service learning - incorporating
service learning into the classroom. The college's nursing students
perform blood pressure and blood sugar screenings, do inoculations and
teach nutrition at local clinics and neighborhoods. Education students
serve as reading buddies and tutors in area schools. And the list goes
on.
"Almost every
department has at some time incorporated academically based service
learning," Bouman says. "Philosophy, economics English- you
name it. There isn't a discipline where it doesn't apply."
In fact, Calvin
students are more likely to participate in academically based service-learning
than students at private, four-year colleges nationwide. A recent survey
of graduating seniors showed that 79 percent of Calvin students had
taken one or more courses that incorporated community service and service-learning,
compared with 51 percent of those at peer institutions.
~words by media
relations staff writer Myrna Anderson
|