Some years ago when I was visiting a high school classmate in a small town in Ohio, he showed me some benches near a bus stop and a small park. “Our high school kids built those and installed them,” he told me, “because the senior citizens told them they needed benches.” “Ah, community service,” I responded, but he corrected me. “We call it ‘Serving Your Community,’ and not ‘Community Service,’ because they are not synonymous,” he told me. A school cannot serve its community unless the people in the school are connected to the community and its members, which means knowing the ‘who, what, when, where, and why’ of its members.
I learned from my friend that Community Service, though admirable, can be a check-off-the-box-and-satisfy-the-graduation-requirement activity. For example, the New York City Board of Education approaches Community Service with a list of what’s acceptable, and what’s not:
- volunteering to an outside group – this can be done at educational centers, religious institutions, nursing homes, animal shelters, soup kitchen, food pantry, homeless shelter, other non-profits, etc. MOST of these examples provide a letter from their institution to indicate # of hours provided and SHOULD be uploaded as documentation.
- RUNNING a drive or fundraiser event- coat, blood, clothing, toy, etc. Remember, donating the item is not, but working/organizing event is (hours)
- a run/walk (because it provides the time into the cause)
- writing letters to nursing homes, veterans, orphanage, etc
- Habitat for Humanity
- cleaning a highway/park/ocean or water source
- service periods in the library, an office, a classroom, etc (so to clarify the example of “currency” with this example- let’s say a student organizes 100 books in an hour…. they receive an hour of community service, not 100 hours because they sorted 100 books. it is about service HOURS, not currency.)
Other sites list ‘acceptable’ activities that qualify as Community Service, including picking up trash while taking a walk. Students are given a list, make a choice, and then keep records of their activity.
In contrast, the process of Serving Your Community is thoughtful, deliberate, proactive, and open-ended that young people own, from start to finish. Students must first figure out what their community wants and needs, which can only be determined by reaching out to community members and groups. It requires energy and intelligence and a commitment of whatever time it takes to survey the community, and then design and complete the project (which the students also might have to raise funds for and get official approval of).
Serving Your Community actually has deep roots. There’s an official name, “Service-Learning,” and even a federal definition, “Service-learning is a teaching and learning strategy that connects academic curriculum to community problem-solving.” The initial federal legislation passed in 1990, and the website asserts that about 20% of schools have participated over the years.
The three words in the phrase Serving Your Community are instructive. Serving is an active verb form—you’re doing something for others when you are serving. Being productive enhances one’s sense of self-worth. The two other words, your and community, convey membership–belonging–which is something we humans need and aspire to.
This is not trivial. A lot of American students feel alienated from school. Many of those who attend school regularly are literally present but not engaged. Their bodies are there, but their minds and hearts are elsewhere. And huge numbers of our kids skip school; more than 25% were chronically absent during the school year 2021-22, the latest data available, meaning they were absent at least 10% of the time. A recent New York Times editorial noted that even in affluent school districts absenteeism is a problem, citing New Trier Township High School in Illinois, where 38% of seniors were chronically absent.
Some in power want to get tough on these truants, but, even if harsh policies could force young people back into schools, that wouldn’t do anything to engage them. The opposite, more than likely. Pity the poor teachers with rooms full of hostile young people!
What’s required are changes that make school more interesting, more challenging, and more enjoyable for young people (and their teachers). Serving Your Community is one route to engagement, and I believe that many of my other suggestions, such as “Make Stuff,” will also help young people become productive participants in their own development.
Here are links to the other steps: Looping, Play, Practice Democracy, Business Cards for Teachers, Involve Outsiders, Multiple ‘Talent Nights’, Extended Homeroom, Ask the Right Question, “Education Grand Rounds”, and Looping (revisited).
Please share these widely. Public education is under attack from right-wing ideologues, whose voucher policies threaten to bankrupt public schools. Apparently these wacky but powerful people intend to starve public education and then condemn it because it’s not ‘effective.’
Supporting public education isn’t charity, because it’s in your own self-interest to give all young people maximum opportunities to grow and learn! Keep in mind that 90% of our children attend public schools, meaning that high school graduates are maintaining the airplanes you and your grandchildren fly in; monitoring your spouse’s IV drip in the hospital; and repairing the gas main leak in your neighborhood.
I very much appreciate the difference in approaches that you describe, John. The Center for Civic Education’s Project Citizen program goes a step further. The students in a class research and identify needs in their community for which a public policy solution is appropriate. They select a single problem and work together to research possible solutions, including consulting with experts and officials and seeing what solutions, if any, have been suggested already. Then they develop what they think is the optimal solution, which might not be what people think is a perfect solution but which has the best chance of being implemented. Then they present their projects to the relevant public officials and answer the questions that ensue. The final step is to reflect on their learning and, one hopes, their accomplishment in getting their solution approved.
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[…] suggested changes, including Extending the Homeroom Period (#7), Making Stuff (#11), and Serving Your Community (#13). A longer homeroom period will give students more time to get to know each other, while the […]
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Hi John, thanks for your dedication to Serving Our Communities.
I am concerned that currently the national service rules exclude AmeriCorps members under age 17. That omits teenagers during a critical time in their development.
In the late ‘70’s I started the Youth Action Program in East Harlem, through which teenagers created nine substantial community improvement projects of their own design. At the time there was a federal funding stream through the Community Anti-Crime Program of the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration that funded me to hire 9 community organizers. We created 9 tangible and significant projects, including a park, a leadership school, a crime prevention youth patrol in the Johnson Housing Projects, and others. One of our projects was rehabilitating abandoned buildings, because the young people said they wanted to hire the teenagers to rebuild those buildings to create housing for the homeless. This became YouthBuild. I spent the next 40 years spreading that one around the country.
Now I am trying to replicate that original process of engaging the teenagers in designing their own solutions to community problems. We have a start-up Council of young adults who have emerged from poverty and are community leaders, and we have a few pilot sites. They have named the project YouthCreate. It is operating under Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors. We have just completed an independent study of the impact of Youth Action Program on the teenagers who participated in the late ‘70’s and early ‘80’s. They all reported that it changed their lives.
I have sent you separately a short description of YouthCreate, and the research, just in case either one interest you.
I want to find a path to public funding for this type of activity, and I think it will help somehow for you and your followers to be aware of it.
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[…] Serve Your Community This is NOT the same as ‘Community Service.’ The distinction makes all the […]
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[…] 12) Serve Your Community This is NOT the same as ‘Community Service.’ The distinction makes all the difference. […]
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