Impact of Academic Service-Learning on Students: an Evaluation Study of a University-Level Initiative in China

This study assesses the impact of a service-learning (SL) initiative at a coastal university in East China, analyzing data from 232 students enrolled in five pilot SL courses over the 2017 –2020 academic years. Utilizing the Intended Learning Outcomes (ILO) questionnaire and the Community Service Attitudes Scale (CSAS), it explores changes in students’ intellectual and civic development through SL. The findings reveal significant improvements in the intellectual/cognitive dimensio n of the ILO, confirming SL’s efficacy in bridging theoretical learning with practical application, enhancing critical thinking, and fostering problem-solving skills. The study finds a positive shift in students’ attitudes towards local community engagement, evidenced by improvements in six out of ten CSAS components. This contrasts with the relatively unchanged aspects of broader civic responsibilities, particularly in the civic dimension of the ILO and four CSAS sub-scales. Additionally, a gender gap in community service attitudes exists, with female students displaying more favorable vi ews towards service than male students. The study also shows that first year students demonstrated a stronger positive assessment of benefits from community service compared to senior students. These findings suggest that in the Chinese context, SL’s impact on students’ sense of broader civic re sponsibility, empathetic understanding, and overall assessment of the costs and benefits of serving the comm...
Source: Applied Research in Quality of Life - Category: International Medicine & Public Health Source Type: research