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The following is an excerpt from the Campus
Community Partnerships in Health (CCPH) website ( http://depts.washington.edu/ccph/ ):
Service-learning is a structured learning
experience that combines community service with preparation and reflection. Students engaged in service-learning provide community
service in response to community-identified concerns and learn about the context in which service is provided, the connection
between their service and their academic coursework, and their roles as citizens.
Service-learning differs from traditional
clinical education in the health professions in that:
- Service-learning
strives to achieve a balance between service and learning objectives - in service-learning, partners must negotiate the differences
in their needs and expectations.
- Service-learning
places an emphasis on addressing community concerns and broad determinants of health
- In service-learning,
there is the integral involvement of community partners - service-learning involves a principle-centered partnership between
communities and health professions schools.
- Service-learning
emphasizes reciprocal learning - In service-learning, traditional definitions of "faculty," "teacher" and "learner" are intentionally
blurred. We all learn from each other.
- Service-learning
emphasizes reflective practice - In service-learning, reflection facilitates the connection between practice and theory and
fosters critical thinking.
- Service-learning
places and emphasis on developing citizenship skills and achieving social change - many factors influence health and quality
of life. The provision of health services is not often the most important factor. In service-learning, students place their
roles as health professionals and citizens in a larger societal context.
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