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What is Community-Engaged Learning

Handbook of Research on Service-Learning Initiatives in Teacher Education Programs
Learning set in the community aimed at reciprocally benefitting individuals in both universities/organizations and neighborhoods/communities.
Published in Chapter:
Establishing Asset Thinking With Preservice Teachers: Community-Engaged Learning With Young Children From Public Housing
Christopher Meidl (Duquesne University, USA), Xia Chao (Duquesne University, USA), and Anne Marie FitzGerald (Duquesne University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-5225-4041-0.ch014
Abstract
This chapter explores how deficit and asset thinking of preservice teachers is influenced when they are provided with community-engaged learning (CEL) that prepares them to serve children and families from a marginalized community. Twenty-seven early childhood education preservice teachers participated in CEL at a local HUD neighborhood as part of a junior level course called Families, Schools, and Communities. Narrative inquiry guided the methodological framework to analyze data from course assignments including weekly Exit Slips and student reflections from the actual CEL experience. From those data sources, several themes emerged in relation to asset thinking, deficit think, and pedagogical approaches to learning about marginalized communities using CEL. Students recognized asset thinking in a variety of ways, but also were stuck using deficit thinking to judge the community's utility of a childcare event.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
More Results
Dismantling Cultural Walls: Peace Through Stories, Ritual, Community, and Action
The intersection of academic course objectives and community aspirations and goals such that students and community members are mutually benefited by endeavors undertaken side by side; a specific form of experiential learning that preferences underserved communities and fosters deepened learning and civic responsibility in students.
Full Text Chapter Download: US $37.50 Add to Cart
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