01-09-2018
31-08-2021
CONTEXT & NEEDS
The ENGAGE STUDENTS project focuses on social responsibility of higher education institutions at student and teacher level. Strengthening the social dimension in education has been an important European priority (COM(2006) 208 final, 2013/C 168/02), that has been accentuated even further by the Commission in the renewed EU agenda for Higher Education. Innovative curricula and teaching approaches are seen to contribute to reducing the current high-level skills gap between students and labour market needs. Especially the integration of extra-curricular experience into study programmes is identified as solution for enhancing students' transversal skills, better preparing them for finding a job (COM(2017) 247 final).
The service learning approach aims to strengthen the students' relationship with the community, with a view to their personal development and civic engagement (Menezes, 2003, Barber, 1991; Colby & Damon, 1992; Dewey, 1966; Waldstein & Reiher, 2001). The essential elements of this learning approach entails the active involvement of students in solving a need identified in the community and intentionally providing spaces for reflecting upon the experiences (Leming, 2001; Trainor, Muscott & Smith, 1996). These approaches can be integrated into the curricula of students or they can be extra-curricular.
In the anglo-american university culture extra-curricular activities have a long tradition and a value when it comes to students looking for a job. Showing a potential employer that you have already engaged in extracurricular activities is seen as an advantage raising students' employability. In Europe, there have been initiatives to enhance the engagement of university students in the communities they live in, i.e. civic engagement centers, volunteering centers, community research or community-related projects.
In many European countries this approach is rather new and the system is more formal, credit- and curricula-based becoming more and more important in the last five years. For this reason we argue that social responsibility of students should be promoted through integration into curricula - this needs specific teaching approaches, namely service-learning, project-based learning and teaching about action research. Moreover, HE teachers need to be trained in how to incorporate these activities into their course concepts.
AIMS AND OBJECTIVES
The project general objective is to empower the social dimension of higher education by increasing its relevance for society through embedding service-learning as a common pedagogical approach within education and research practice.
The project specific objectives are as follows:
- to explore the existing methodology of service-learning and other forms of community-related learning and research;
- to develop a methodological toolkit and a pedagogical workbook to be used by teachers;
- to build the critical mass of knowledge and resources in partner HEIs in order to foster the use of service learning and other community-related learning methodologies.
The specific aims are divided on 3 levels:
For STUDENTS:
- To acquire the ability to solve complex problems;
- To develop sense of responsibility and engagement;
- To experience self-efficacy and self-respect;
- To broad their future career choices through community ties.
For TEACHERS:
- To implement and test new teaching and student guidance methods;
- To link the theoretical matters with real community problem solving;
- To foster the collaboration with other teachers.
For LOCAL COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS:
- To raised awareness of ongoing teaching & research at local HEIs;
- To have the opportunity to be a mentor or an expert for students and potential employees;
- To increase the participation in socio-political processes and in solving local problems.
TARGET GROUPS
- Students in higher education who are in their advanced studies and have basic knowledge about research and their field of study and want to engage in service-learning to increase their skills.
- Teachers in higher education who apply the service-learning already and those who have potential courses for such a teaching approach, but who are not familiar with it.
- Communities - the local environments of HEIs with their local stakeholders (business, NGOs, public services, etc.), who will be asked to share their needs with the university and actively liaise with students, teachers and the project partners through formal/non-formal partnerships.
THE TRANSNATIONAL CHARACTER
The consortium will bring together the expertise of HEIs from 6 different local contexts and educational environments having different approaches towards university social responsibility, community engagement, teaching and research methodologies. This cultural diversity together with the different partners' professional profiles will foster the quality and coverage of the project activities and outputs, increasing this way their usability and transferability.
PCEP - Participation, Communities and Political Education
European Comission, Erasmus+
Ref. 2018-1-RO01-KA203-049309