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Professor emeritus Leslie Jacobson returned from her annual trip to Morocco with a refreshed sense of ideas in the works: writing plays with community liaison about local hardships like homelessness.

With the help of a professor at Al Akhawayn University – located among the Middle Atlas Mountains in the city of Ifrane teaching Gender and Media, she used student-conducted interviews in the course to write and adapt the critical human rights themes into performances for any students, anonymously, to act out in a 45-minute stage production.

This year, the students focused on the sensitive-but-prevalent topic of sexual assault and violence, mainly against women, to speak about the country's unnerving truth of women being frequent victims of violence and assault from simply walking freely with friends, by themselves or wearing Western clothing.

...continue reading "Leslie Jacobson Continues to bring Student Experiences Center Stage on Morocco travels"

Course Support Resources

Resources such as sample syllabus language and a step-by-step guide to managing your own GWServes course page is available here. Please reach out if you need additional support, such as:
  • Identifying more community partner projects for students
  • Course design considerations
  • Connecting assignments to community engagement
  • Rubrics for evaluating reflection assignments
  • Facilitating reflection discussions in the classroom

Your GWServes Course Page

Use this online space to share service opportunities with students and have them report their service projects back to you. Find your page via this link, login (GW single sign-on), and use the "My Activity" menu to choose "Classes." Once you have found your course page, share the link to THAT page with students.

The Symposium on Community Engaged Scholarship

Thursday, January 26th, 2:30-4pm, Register here
This event is designed to prepare students who are about to serve with the comunity this semester through a course. Share the registration link with your students and encourage their participation. The event will feature leaders of community serving organizations, faculty, and students, discussing how to make this the best possible learning experience for all involved. The event concludes with time to circulate and network so students can have one-on-one conversations with community partners about their service opportunities. You are welcome to use/alter the following language in your syllabus:

"It is important that community engagement is done with empathy, intention, and personal reflection. We will aim for a strong start this semester by joining the Nashman Center's Symposium on Community Engaged Scholarship. This event features leaders of local community serving organizations and students who served through a course last semester. The event is Thursday, January 26th, 2:30-4pmPlease register at this link so the Nashman Center will be able to confirm your attendance. Notify me as soon as possible if your schedule does not allow you to attend. I will share a pre-reflection paper as an alternate assignment."


Nashman Center Course Guides 

Course Guides are Nashman Center student staff who support you and your students. You or your students can email them by clicking the "Contact" button on your GWServes course page. Your course guide will reach out to you early next week to set up time to meet and discuss how they can support you this semester. For example:
  • Field student questions about how to find service opportunities or how to report their service activities in GWServes
  • Distribute and collect Liability Release Agreement Forms for you
  • Regularly review student service reports and alert the instructor to any problems or reflections that should be addressed.
  • Communicate with community partners to ensure the student projects are meeting their expectations and going to plan
  • Collect anecdotes, photos or other artifacts from your students and community partners to help us better describe the impact of your course for partners and student learning
  • Forward your students information about additional Nashman Center opportunities, like the Clinton Global Initiative, student grant opportunities, or the Knapp Fellowship program.

Support for Students

Please direct students to the recently updated resources for students in Community Engaged Scholarship Courses, available here:   https://go.gwu.edu/CESCourses 
These resources include:
  • Student Guide to Community Engaged Scholarship Courses
  • Student Guide to Reporting Course Based Service Projects on GWServes
  • Navigating the DC Public School background check process
  • Community Engaged Scholarship Publication Outlets for Students

We are in need of volunteers to read, grade, and provide feedback on 15-page student papers. Please use this link - Review Senior Papers - to sign-up and share with your networks and anyone who would be interested. Each volunteer who signs up will receive an email from gwserves@gwu.edu that includes feedback guidelines, assigned papers, and a rubric. All volunteers must hold a bachelor's degree. Papers will be sent out before the holiday break.

...continue reading "Nashman Center Programs: Seeking Volunteer Readers for the School Without Walls Senior Reading Program"

Civic Learning for an Engaged Democracy is hosting a series of forums on "Planning and Action Forums for Educators & Policy Leaders". The first forum will be held December 13-14 from 2:00-5:30 pm and the second will be held February 6-7 from 2:00-5:30 pm. REGISTER →

...continue reading "Register Now: Civic Learning for an Engaged Democracy Forums"

Next Tuesday, November 8th 2022 at 2-3pm EST Collaboratory is hosting a webinar in partnership with Indiana University.  REGISTER HERE.

UW 1020 – Writing For Social Change in Washington D.C.

Professor: Phyllis Ryder

Students Reporting: 33

Time Reported: 224

Course Description:

“How do community leaders discover and name the systems that reproduce inequalities? How do they choose the right course of action? How do they mobilize people to respond? How can you contribute to this work?”

Professor Ryder’s UW 1020 course sought to address these questions and challenge students during the Spring 2022 semester. Students reflected on their own values and identity through a combination of writing and service learning, while strengthening their writing skills in the process.

In this service-learning course, students partnered with D.C. community leaders who addressed social inequities in areas such as housing, education, criminal justice, and the environment. In class, students analyzed local sites to learn how to research and write for community action both for academic and public audiences.

Students at GW are required to take a UW 1020, of which there are a variety of niche topics taught within the program. In this class, students examined the very idea of “writing well.” In this course that meant learning that the rules for “good writing” are themselves tools that can include and exclude people from power. By the end of the semester, students were able to build their own toolbox for developing complex, meaningful writing projects for diverse audiences.

 

For information about Community Engaged Scholarship at GW: https://go.gwu.edu/cesc

 

Community Partner Describe Project
Free Minds Book Club With the Free Minds Book Club, students helped give written feedback to incarcerated youth on poetry and writing projects with other volunteers. Students also attended writing circles where they gave advice and ideas on writing projects via zoom to authors of poems and stories.
Latino Student Fund As part of the LSF tutoring program, students helped reinforce math and English skills for PreK through 12th-grade students. Students met weekly as either a tutor or mentor with an individual student, building close relationships with the student throughout the semester.
Little Friends for Peace Students had the opportunity to partner with LFFP as after school tutors for younger children struggling in school. As trained volunteers, students built close bonds with their students and the LFFP program, developing stronger interpersonal communication skills. Some students also participated in LFFP’s peace circles, learning about peace and conflict resolution through direct service.
Miriam’s Kitchen Students partnered with Miriam’s Kitchen, a nonprofit organization that aims to end chronic homelessness in Washington D.C., to prepare meals for guests and distribute additional resources including toiletries and clothing.

Quotes from students:

“I participated in a peace circle for high school kids at Holy Family Catholic Church. The theme of this series of circles is building healthy relationships, and this session focused on connecting with others. I really enjoyed getting to meet a lot of the students! It was nice to connect with them and help them connect with each other. I often find that when helping with a peace circle, I get just as much benefit from it as the actual participants!” - A student serving with Little Friends for Peace

“This was my third time attending a Write Night event with Free Minds Book Club, and like both other times, I found this experience to be educational, enjoyable, and meaningful. Listening to the Poet Ambassadors stories is very interesting and gratifying because it shows how meaningful the work being done at these events and by this organization is. I found this time to be especially moving because the Poet Ambassadors shared two poems, "Looking Out My Cell Window" and "Under the Jail," both of which were written by a Free Minds member who recently passed away while incarcerated. The poems were very powerful and hearing them spoken out loud was an impactful experience for me.” - A student serving with Free Minds Book Club

“My student still faces difficulties with opening up and accepting my help, but slowly but surely, I'm sure she will become more and more comfortable to ask for help. I was available for my student during out tutoring sessions for whatever questions she had about homework and what she had been learning in school. This gives my student an extra resource for additional learning in academic subject areas she's having trouble with.” - A student serving with the Latino Student Fund

“During this experience, I helped with the peace classes at Chance Academy. I participated in three different groups with all ages of kids. It was a great experience to work with the kids even though it had to be over zoom. I really enjoyed learning about what a peace circle consists of and getting to be a part of one. It was great to make connections with the kids and make them feel heard!” - A student serving with Little Friends for Peace

 

Cause Distribution:

The Bonner Foundation will be hosting a virtual Teaching Social Action Summer ‘22 Institute on June 28-30. This three-day institute will introduce faculty and staff to an approach for incorporating social action campaigns into either a semester-long course or co-curricular workshop series.  ...continue reading "Upcoming Event: Teaching Social Action Summer Institute "

The Writing Program Administrators - Graduate Organization (WPA-GO) is excited to announce that the Diversity sub-committee is hosting two speaker events with writing scholars Dr. Asao Inoue and Dr. Suresh Canaragajah in late April. Designed for a graduate student audience, these workshops focus on topics related to antiracist assessment and decolonial pedagogy in writing in higher education. Please see the information below for further details: 

Dr. Asao Inoue, “Thinking Through Antiracist Feedback to Student Writing"

    • Description: This interactive workshop offers participants ways to frame, design, and employ feedback practices in college classrooms that have antiracist agendas and consequences. The practices that will be explored are grounded in Inoue’s ecological theory of writing assessment. 
    • What to bring: Some past typical written feedback you have offered a student on a writing assignment in your course. It may help also to have handy the assignment materials that the student used/responded to.
    • Day: Wednesday, April 20 
    • Time: 1:00-2:00 pm (PT) / 4:00-5:00 pm (ET)
    • Zoom: Register for the link here

Dr. Suresh Canagarajah, “Decolonizing Writing Pedagogy for Multilingual Students"

    • Description: This workshop will provide practical tips in the classroom within a decolonial context.
    • Day: Friday, April 29 
    • Time: 1:00-2:00 pm (PT) / 4:00-5:00 pm (ET)
    • Zoom: Register for the link here 

On Friday April 8th at 12:00 pm, Lewis R. Gordon will be leading a discussion titled, “Why Fearing Black Consciousness is a Form of Bad Faith.” The event will be held at 151 Duques Hall, and all students and faculty are highly encouraged to attend. 

Lewis R. Gordon is an Afro-Jewish public intellectual, academic, musician, Professor, and Head of the Philosophy Department at UCONN.  He lectures and is involved in political and artistic projects across the globe and holds appointments in South Africa, Jamaica, India, and France.  

Dr. Tamara Taggart teaches this terrific summer course for graduate students, introducing students to the purpose, guiding principles, and methodology of community-based participatory research. This is a terrific opportunity for preparing students for graduate research assistantships. Please promote to your own student research teams.

Course Information: PUBH 6534.10; Summer 2 2022; 2 credits
Community-Based Participatory Research
Tuesdays and Thursdays 5:30-7:40PM, 6 weeks
Professor: Tamara Taggart, PhD, MPH

Students gain a broad understanding of the importance of addressing community needs when examining how social, political, and economic factors influence health and health outcomes. The course provides an examination of the relevant CBPR literature with a particular focus on the history, theoretical frameworks, and application of CBPR within public health programs and research.

This year’s IARSLCE Publication of the Year Award highlighted the book Rewriting Partnerships: Community Perspectives on Community-Based Learning.  ...continue reading "Good Reads: Rewriting Partnerships: Community Perspectives on Community-Based Learning"

AAC&U’s 2022 Institute on Engaged and Integrative Learning is accepting applications through May 10th, 2022. The Virtual Learning Experience will take place from July 18-22 and will provide participants with the time, resources, and support needed to develop and plan efforts to integrate engaged learning across curricular and co-curricular initiatives. APPLY HERE. ...continue reading "Apply Today: 2022 Institute on Engaged and Integrative Learning "

Join the International Association for Research on Service Learning and Community Engagement (IARSLCE) and LEAD California (formerly California Campus Compact) for The Dissertation Dish on April 27th, 2022 at 12 pm PST.  ...continue reading "Register Now: Dissertation Dish "

In an article recommended by Dr. Rodriguez-Diaz, Associate Professor and Vice-Chair from the Milken Institute of Public Health, researchers discuss faculty perceptions of “practice” activities in contrast to research and teaching as priorities in the academic space. 

The article published from PLOS Global Public Health explores the “perceptions of faculty and government decision makers on the roles, responsibilities, and restrictions of an academic to proactively engage in efforts that can be interpreted as activism, advocacy and/or lobbying in the quest to contribute to the policy decision making process.”

To read the full article, click here