Jump to content

Community service

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Community Payback)
Ukrainians doing street cleaning as a form of community service

Community service is unpaid work performed by a person or group of people for the benefit and betterment of their community contributing to a noble cause.[1] In many cases, people doing community service are compensated in other ways, such as those helping getting a lunch for free. In many countries, there are programs to incite people to do community service. People may do community service to get citizenship. In some cases, it is possible to replace a criminal justice sanctions with community service. There may also be school or class requirements. Obtaining certain benefits may be linked to doing some form of community service. For all these reasons, it is distinct from volunteering.

Background

[edit]

(Community) service is a non-paying job performed by one person or a group of people for the benefit of their community or its institutions. Community service is distinct from volunteering, since it is not always performed on a voluntary basis and may be performed for a variety of reasons, including:

Community service and volunteerism are supported and encouraged across the world, influenced by a mix of personal, societal, and cultural factors. Research shows that individual traits like personality and religiosity, combined with organizational settings, play a significant role in fostering long-term volunteerism.[4] Different methods to encourage volunteering can result in volunteers motivated by their own interests or a desire to help others, suggesting the importance of promoting community engagement and altruism for sustained involvement.[5] A study spanning 21 countries linked economic development, education, cultural values, and political systems to higher rates of formal volunteering, indicating a global perspective on volunteer engagement.[6] Student volunteering, particularly in Western English-speaking countries, is driven by altruistic and career-oriented motivations, highlighting a strong culture of volunteerism among young people.[7] Moreover, the motivation to volunteer varies with cultural values across different regions, and is shaped by societal expectations and cultural norms.[8]

Reasons

[edit]

Educational community service

[edit]

Secondary education

[edit]

Some educational jurisdictions in the United States require students to perform community service hours to graduate from high school. In some high schools in Washington, for example, students must finish 200 hours of community service to get a diploma. Some school districts in Washington, including Seattle Public Schools, differentiate between community service and "service learning", requiring students to demonstrate that their work has contributed to their education.[9] If a student in high school is taking an Advancement Via Individual Determination (AVID) course, community service is often needed. Whether American public schools could require volunteer hours for high school graduation was challenged in Immediato v. Rye Neck School District, but the court found no violation.

Many other high schools do not require community service hours for graduation, but still see an impressive number of students get involved in their communities. For example, in Palo Alto, California, students at Palo Alto High School log about 45,000 hours of community service every year.[10] As a result, the school's College and Career Center awards 250–300 students the President's Volunteer Service Award every year for their hard work.

Starting in 2010, Danish high school students receive a special diploma if they complete at least 20 hours of voluntary work.[11]

The International Baccalaureate program formerly required 50 hours of community service, together with a written reflection on the service performed, to fulfill the requirement of 150 hours of CAS (creativity, action, and service) and receive an IB diploma.[12]

Higher education

[edit]

Though not technically considered a requirement, many colleges include community service as an unofficial requirement for acceptance. However, some colleges prefer work experience over community service, and some require that their students also continue community service for some specific number of hours to graduate. Some schools also offer unique "community service" courses, awarding credit to students who complete a certain number of community service hours. Some academic honor societies, along with some fraternities and sororities in North America, require community service to join and others require each member to continue doing community service.

Many student organizations exist for the purpose of community service, the largest of which is Alpha Phi Omega. Community service projects are also done by sororities and fraternities.

Beginning in the 1980s, colleges began using service-learning as a pedagogy. A partnership of college presidents began in 1985 with the initiative of boosting community service in their colleges. This alliance called Campus Compact,[13] led the way for many other schools to adopt service-learning courses and activities.

Service-learning courses vary widely in time span, quality, and in the balance of "service" and "learning" stressed in the course. A typical service-learning course, however, has these factors in common:

  • A service component where the student spends time serving in the community meeting actual needs
  • A learning component where students seek out or are taught information—often both interpersonal and academic—that they integrate into their service
  • A reflection component that ties service and learning together

Reflection is sometimes symbolized by the hyphen in the term "service-learning" to indicate that it has a central role in learning by serving.[14] Reflection is simply a scheduled consideration of one's own experiences and thoughts. This can take many forms, including journals, blogs, and discussions.

Service-learning courses present learning the material in context, meaning that students often learn effectively and tend to apply what was learned.[15] As the book Where's the Learning in Service-Learning? notes, "Students engaged in service-learning are engaged in authentic situations; they get to know real people whose lives are affected by these issues... As a result, they have lots of questions—real questions that they want to have answered."[16] Thus, students become interested and motivated to learn the materials to resolve their questions.

Community service learning strives to connect or re-connect students with serving their community after they finish their course.[17] It creates a bridge for the lack of community service found among college-age people in the United States.[18]

Community service-learning

[edit]

The one serving may be able to take something away from the experience and be able to use any newfound knowledge or interpersonal discoveries to improve their future servitude and the people around them. To gain the most from community service requires balancing learning with serving. Learning and serving at the same time improves a student's community while teaching life lessons and building character.

Community service-learning is "about leadership development as well as traditional information and skill acquisition".[19] Therefore, the combination of people doing service and learning at the same time teaches them how to be effective and how to be effective regarding what is important to them. It can improve their overall experience and application opportunities they gain from it. By adding service to learning, and balancing the two, community service can become more than just the act of serving. The goal of service-learning is to achieve large change through small actions. By being a classroom, a hands-on learning experience, and an opportunity to change the community, people are able to not only serve, but impact themselves as well.

Definition
[edit]

According to Fayetteville State University, "service learning is a process of involving students in community service activities combined with facilitated means for applying the experience to their academic and personal development. It is a form of experiential education aimed at enhancing and enriching student learning in course material. When compared to other forms of experiential learning like internships and cooperative education, it is similar in that it is student-centered, hands-on and directly applicable to the curriculum."[20]

Professor Freddy Cardoza defines community service-learning as "a pedagogy (or a specific teaching-learning approach) that has few lectures, and is a more interactive hands on educational strategy which provides students with instruction while leading them through meaningful community service experiences and engaging them in personal reflection on those experiences in order to build character and to teach problem-solving skills and civic responsibility."[21][citation not found] Cardoza stressed that it was important for a student take some time and reflect on what they are experiencing, seeing, doing, and what problems they are encountering and how they are going to apply what they have been learning to solve these problems. In other words, service-learning aims to link the personal and interpersonal development with cognitive development, as well as equipping the student with critical knowledge to help them understand the world.[22][citation not found]

Character.org defines service-learning as "different than community service in several key ways. Service learning includes student leadership, reflective and academic components, and chances for celebration once the service activity has been successfully completed. Students reflect on community needs, ways to help, and once their service has been completed, they can internalise how their efforts have helped, while learning more about academics such as geography, math, or science."[23]

Critical service learning

[edit]

For community service to be effective, a different sector of community service learning; critical service, emerged in colleges throughout nations. The emergence of critical service learning in colleges had to do with solving the question of how students can create longstanding, effective change in the services they do for their communities. Critical service learning is centered around teaching and learning methods that focus on the transformation of power and deconstructions of systemic inequalities through community engagement by students. According to Mitchell, there are three different approaches required to achieve a critical learning service status. These are: redistributing power to marginalized groups of people; developing meaningful partnerships with community members/partners and those in the classroom; and, approaching service learning through the lens of making impactful social change.[24] The ultimate goal of this sector is to connect students' services to their learning discourses. Students then ask themselves how their services create political and social change in these communities. Meeting individual needs in relation to poverty is not the main focus for critical service learning. Instead it is to address how students can become agents of social change and dismantle the institutions that allow for inequalities to exist in the communities they serve in the first place.[24]

Background of critical service learning
[edit]

Critical service learning emerged through the ideologies of Dewey in 1902. His main goal was reconnecting education and communities. He argued that it was essential that students took their learning discourses and used it to connect to their personal experiences. Doing this would allow for social development and the well-being of communities.[25] Between World War 1 and World War 2 Kilpatrick, a  progressive leader, introduced "the project method" to educational practices.[25] He stressed the importance of introducing social reforms that focused on the livelihood of persons outside of the classrooms.[25] Some attempts to create policy for critical service learning started in the 50s and continued through the 60s. In the 50s, The Citizenship Education Project set precedents to understanding the frameworks between learning in the classrooms and action in the communities.[25] This precedent led to many more political reform efforts to incorporate critical service learning into education in the 70s. Many educational institutions introduced political proposals that focused on the integration of learning and civic engagement with communities.[25] Reform documents were not made until the 80s but Reagan and his era had already moved past progressivism and towards neoliberalism.[25] Since reforms in the past 100 years  haven't seemed to work, educational leaders and schools have made critical service learning into more grassroots type movements.[25] By not focusing on state reforms, critical service learning has now become a methodology in University programs and other local organizations.[25] Community and Critical service brings an opportunity of change for students and for the communities they serve.

Court-ordered service

[edit]
Community service work detail for 35th District Court, Northville, Michigan

People convicted of a crime may be required to perform community service or to work for agencies in the sentencing jurisdiction either entirely or partially as a substitution of other judicial remedies and sanctions, such as incarceration or fines. For instance, a fine may be reduced in exchange for a prescribed number of hours of community service. The court may allow the defendant to choose their community service, which must then be documented by "credible agencies", such as non-profit organizations, or may mandate a specific service.

Sometimes the sentencing is specifically targeted to the defendant's crime, for example, a litterer may have to clean a park or roadside, or a drunk driver might appear before school groups to explain why drunk driving is a crime. Also, a sentence allowing for a broader choice may prohibit certain services that the offender would reasonably be expected to perform anyway.

In the United Kingdom, community service is now officially referred to by the Home Office as more straightforward compulsory unpaid work.[26] Compulsory unpaid work includes up to 300 hours of activities, such as conservation work, cleaning up graffiti, or working with a charity. The Howard League for Penal Reform (the world's oldest prison reform organization) is a prominent advocate for increased community sentencing to reduce prison population and improve rehabilitation.

Community service for institutions

[edit]

Many institutions require and/or give incentives to students or employees alike to volunteer their time to community service programs. From volunteering to participating in such charity events like walks or runs, institutes continue the practice or require their employees or students to grow in camaraderie while giving back to various communities. Many institutions also provide opportunities for employees and students to work together, and most student groups participate in their own form of community service. Each is unique in its own right; all are incredibly popular with employees; and in all of these programs, human resources plays an integral role.[27]

One such program, Johns Hopkins University, under the leadership of Johns Hopkins University president Ronald J. Daniels and the chief executive officer of Baltimore City Schools, the university's human resources and community affairs departments worked with the school system to develop the Johns Hopkins Takes Time for Schools program in 2009, launching it on March 3, 2010. The program is a service partnership aimed at providing support and assistance to Baltimore City Schools (BCS) while providing faculty and staff an avenue for community service, offering their talents to the city's youth and improving the administrative and educational capacities of the area's school system.[27]

Some institutes even give their students or employees a guaranteed number of days or weeks of leave for certain acceptable community service programs. One example is East Carolina University, which gives 24 hours of community service leave for full-time employees per year as an incentive and compensation for community service.[28]

In addition, approximately 40% of Fortune 500 companies offer volunteer grant programs where companies provide monetary donations to nonprofit organizations in recognition of their employee's volunteerism (e.g. $500 volunteer grant after 25 hours of community service).[29]

Religious reasons for serving

[edit]

Religion is one of the greatest motivating forces behind community service. "Although beneficence and good works are also important secular goals, religion remains one of the major motivating forces behind community service."[30] All the major religious groups emphasize values of charity, compassion, and community.[31]

Beyond required community service, some religious groups emphasize serving one's community. These groups and churches reach out by holding Vacation Bible Schools for children, hosting Red Cross blood drives, having fall carnivals, or offering free meals. Through these services, churches are able to benefit neighborhoods and families. Some churches create non-profit organizations that can help the public. Crisis pregnancy centers are often run by religious groups to promote pro-life values in local families. To meet impoverished people's needs, some churches provide a food pantry or start a homeless shelter. Also, certain churches provide daycare so that busy parents can work.

Christian service

[edit]

Christianity promotes community service. In fact, volunteer work is popular amongst churches. According to Diana R. Garland, a professor of social work at Baylor University in Texas, "In the United States, congregations serve as a major source of volunteers, with church attendance known to be the best general predictor of involvement in volunteering."[32] Some non-governmental (NGO) community service organizations were founded by Christians seeking to put their beliefs into practice. Three prominent examples are Samaritan's Purse, Salvation Army, and Habitat for Humanity.

Samaritan's Purse was inspired by a prayer of evangelist Robert Pierce, "Let my heart be broken for the things which break the heart of God."[33] After traveling through Asia and seeing first-hand the suffering of impoverished children, lepers, and orphans—in 1970, Pierce founded Samaritan's Purse. Today, Samaritan's Purse reaches millions of people across the globe by providing aid such as disaster relief, medical assistance, and child care. A notable Samaritan's Purse project is Operation Christmas Child headed by Franklin Graham.[34]

The Salvation Army was founded by William Booth and his wife Catherine Booth in 1865. Booth was a Methodist minister and preacher on the streets of London. His tent meetings gathered crowds of drunkards, prostitutes and thieves[35] who eventually became the first "soldiers" in the army, which has grown to 1,442,388 members in 126 countries.[36] The Salvation Army's motto is "Doing the Most Good" and does so by providing aid such as shelter, food, clothing, spiritual training and disaster relief.

Habitat for Humanity provides housing for people in need. Founded by Millard Fuller, its vision is to "...put God's love into action by bringing people together to build homes, communities and hope".[37] Habitat for Humanity has built or repaired over 800,000 homes and served more than 4 million people worldwide since its creation in 1976.[37] They describe their vision as "...a world where everyone has a decent place to live".[37]

Muslim service

[edit]

Islam promotes volunteerism by calling on its followers to provide their time, knowledge, and wealth of their own free will. In Islam one of the pillars of the religion is Zakat which is the obligatory form of charity especially to the needy. There are two different forms of volunteerism in Islam.[38]

The first form of Volunteering involves spending money or providing physical support in order to help others. This can be a form of Zakat or Sadaqah. These two acts of volunteering also count as forms of worship for the sake of spiritual purification. This form is called Al-Mujahadah fi sabil Allah bi al-Amwal, which means, striving in the cause of Allah with one's goods (Sulaiman).[38]

The second form of volunteering involves providing goods and services without spending money. An example of providing a service without spending money would be, "visiting the sick, being an attendant to the blind, collection and distribution of donations, constructing houses (for the homeless), schools (for the poor children), orphanages, retirement centers, nursing homes, hospitals and working in the Nongovernment Islamic Organizations that need volunteers due to limited resources"(Sulaiman). The second example would be," providing intellectual support, for example, being a teacher or tutor for the poor" (Sulaiman).[38]

Personal benefits of serving

[edit]

Community service also allows those participating to reflect on the difference they are making in society. Some participants of a community service project may find themselves gaining a greater understanding of their roles in the community, as well as the impact of their contributions towards those in need of service. Because community service outlets vary, those who serve are exposed to many different kinds of people, environments, and situations.[39]

A benefit of participating in community service is to gain greater experience and benefits to help individuals gain advantages for their careers. According to "The Give and Take of Volunteering: Motives, Benefits, and Personal Connections among Irish Volunteers", " Career benefits took different forms depending on the person's career stage and on the type of work involved"(McKeena). At the beginning of a profession, volunteering could be beneficial, giving people at a more practical level of hands-on experience in health and social care, while persons at a more advanced level of their careers achieved career-related benefits from high-level relationships for job-related reasons (Mckenna).[40]

With each new community service project, some participants may gain insightful experience in a variety of areas. Participants may also internalize the information that they found personally insightful for future use. While simply performing community service is valuable to the recipients, those serving often find it beneficial to pause and reflect on how they are changing society for the better. Schools often take students on community service projects so they can learn how their individual actions affect the well-being of the public. Participants may find that serving the public fosters a more solidified view of self and purpose.[41]

Those involved in community service learning may also find that after serving the community for an extended period of time, they have an advantage in real-world experience. Eventually, the skills and knowledge obtained while working with the community may be applied in future areas of work.[41] Community service may also increase a participant's social connectivity. Because most community service opportunities allow others to interact and work with other individuals, this service may help volunteers network and connect with others toward a common goal.[42]

People gain the most from their community service projects when they volunteer their time to help people that they have never interacted with before. This direct contact allows people to see life from a different perspective and reevaluate their opinions of others. Many young people who get involved in community service come out with a more well-rounded worldview.

Another benefit in participating in community service is a greater understanding and appreciation for diversity. Appreciating other cultures and breaking down stereotypes is important to becoming a responsible citizen and better person. By participating in a community service project where interaction is required, personal relationships can begin to grow. These personal relationships help people have informal and consistent interactions that through time, often break down negative stereotypes.

These relationships can also facilitate more opinions and viewpoints surrounding various topics that help participants to grow in diversity.[43] Stereotypes can be defined as, "believing unfairly that all people or things with a specific characteristic are the same."[44] Stereotypes often reveal themselves in quick judgments based solely off of visible characteristics. These judgments move into a biased opinion when you believe that these judgments are always true.[45] These stereotypes can be harmful to both personal relationships and relationships within the workplace. Community service helps people to realize that everyone does not fall into these preconceived ideas.

Along with breaking down stereotypes, community service work can assist people in realizing that those they are helping and working with are no different from themselves.[46] This realization can lead to empathizing with others. Learning to understand the needs and motivations of others, especially those who live different lives from our own, is an important part of living a productive life. This leads to a view of humanity that can help a person stay free of biased opinions of others and can lead to a more diverse and ultimately more productive and thought-provoking life.[47]

Volunteer work that's relevant to the job position can be added as work experience in resume. According to U.S. News & World Report, "If volunteer work is relevant to the job position, it may want include it under the professional or work experience sections on resume."[48] This depends on working term as a volunteer. If the term were more than 2 years, it's not worthwhile to list community service as work experience.[48]

Choosing the right strategy

[edit]

Civilians have a desire and aptitude to organize themselves apart from the government to address the needs in their communities. However, making sure an effort has a positive effect on society requires clear analysis and a strategy. The analysis identifies the root causes of problems that project implementation must address. Individuals, like neighborhoods, enjoy permanent change only if it is an inner one—and the greatest form of community service is encouraging that inner change.

Abraham Kuyper advocates sphere sovereignty, which honors the independence and autonomy of the "intermediate bodies" in society, such as schools, press, business, and the arts. He champions the right of every community to operate its own organizations and manage its own groups, with the foundational belief that parents know what their child really needs, and that local people are more capable of helping fellow locals. Those who agree with his views perceive community service as a tool of empowerment that can help people achieve better employment and lifestyle, avoiding what they see as destructive decision-making for mal-established goals by poorly developed community service efforts.

Amy L. Sherman, in her book Restorers of Hope,[49] suggests that community service planning should be made with the valuable opinion of the local residents, since they have firsthand knowledge of the inside realities of their community's current state. Making them a part of the movement, change or project creates in the members of the community a sense of belonging and hope.

A joint study suggests that a more effective approach to community service focuses on increased participation of local people in decision-making and collaborative partnerships. The goal is "a bottom-up approach in which participants become agents of change and decision making."[50] This is accomplished through several principles: inclusion, equal partnership, transparency, sharing power, sharing responsibility, empowerment, and cooperation. Being cognizant of who is given a voice in defining the need for community service, and the ways in which these issues are approached, is one of the first steps in recognizing spaces in which participation can be increased.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Community Service". Merriam-Webster. Archived from the original on 2021-04-18. Retrieved 2020-08-01.
  2. ^ "(Community) Compensatory service worker definition". Archived from the original on January 29, 2023. Retrieved January 29, 2023.
  3. ^ Charlotta Hellberg (2012). "Att undanröja villkorlig dom som förenats med samhällstjänst" (in Swedish and English). Lund University. Archived from the original on 17 September 2016. Retrieved 30 July 2016.
  4. ^ Penner, Louis A. (January 2002). "Dispositional and Organizational Influences on Sustained Volunteerism: An Interactionist Perspective". Journal of Social Issues. 58 (3): 447–467. doi:10.1111/1540-4560.00270. ISSN 0022-4537.
  5. ^ Stukas, Arthur A.; Snyder, Mark; Clary, E. Gil (2016-05-03). "Understanding and encouraging volunteerism and community involvement". The Journal of Social Psychology. 156 (3): 243–255. doi:10.1080/00224545.2016.1153328. ISSN 0022-4545. PMID 27064177.
  6. ^ Parboteeah, K. Praveen; Cullen, John B.; Lim, Lrong (2004-11-01). "Formal volunteering: a cross-national test". Journal of World Business. Human Resource Development in the Asia Pacific. 39 (4): 431–441. doi:10.1016/j.jwb.2004.08.007. ISSN 1090-9516.
  7. ^ Smith, Karen; Holmes, Kirsten; Haski-Leventhal, Debbie; Cnaan, Ram A.; Handy, Femida; Brudney, Jeffrey L. (2010-10-26). "Motivations and Benefits of Student Volunteering: Comparing Regular, Occasional, and Non-Volunteers in Five Countries". Canadian Journal of Nonprofit and Social Economy Research. 1 (1). doi:10.22230/cjnser.2010v1n1a2. ISSN 1920-9355.
  8. ^ Grönlund, Henrietta; Holmes, Kirsten; Kang, Chulhee; Cnaan, Ram A.; Handy, Femida; Brudney, Jeffrey L.; Haski-Leventhal, Debbie; Hustinx, Lesley; Kassam, Meenaz; Meijs, Lucas C P M; Pessi, Anne Birgitta; Ranade, Bhangyashree; Smith, Karen A.; Yamauchi, Naoto; Zrinščak, Siniša (June 2011). "Cultural Values and Volunteering: A Cross-cultural Comparison of Students' Motivation to Volunteer in 13 Countries". Journal of Academic Ethics. 9 (2): 87–106. doi:10.1007/s10805-011-9131-6. ISSN 1570-1727.
  9. ^ High School Graduation Requirements Classes of 2008-Beyond Archived 2007-06-15 at the Wayback Machine, Seattle Public Schools, G10-00B, revised September 1, 2004
  10. ^ "Get Involved Palo Alto". Archived from the original on 19 June 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  11. ^ Students to get recognition for volunteer work Archived 2011-07-19 at the Wayback Machine, Danish Ministry of Education, January 8, 2010
  12. ^ "Creativity, action, service (CAS)". Diploma Programmer curriculum—core requirements, homepage of the International Baccalaureate Organization. Archived from the original on 2010-07-03.
  13. ^ "Community Service Learning Program History". Adele H. Stamp Student Union. Archived from the original on 13 October 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  14. ^ Eyler, Janet (1999). Where's the Learning in Service-Learning? (First ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-7879-4483-4.
  15. ^ Eyler, Janet (1999). Where's the Learning in Service-Learning? (First ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. p. 96. ISBN 978-0-7879-4483-4.
  16. ^ Eyler, Janet (1999). Where's the Learning in Service-Learning? (First ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. p. 86. ISBN 978-0-7879-4483-4.
  17. ^ Eyler, Janet (1999). Where's the Learning in Service-Learming? (First ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. p. 46. ISBN 978-0-7879-4483-4.
  18. ^ "Economic News Release". Bureau of Labor Statistics. Archived from the original on 10 September 2014. Retrieved 16 September 2014.
  19. ^ Eyler, Janet (1999). Where's the Learning in Service-Learning?. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. p. 10. ISBN 978-0-7879-4483-4.
  20. ^ "Definition of Service Learning". uncfsu.edu. Archived from the original on 2016-09-25. Retrieved 2016-09-28.
  21. ^ Cardoza, Freddy. The Theology and Theory of Service Learning.
  22. ^ Cardoza, Freddy. Introduction to Service Learning.
  23. ^ "Service Learning". character.org. Archived from the original on October 12, 2016. Retrieved September 22, 2016.
  24. ^ a b Mitchell, Tania (2008). "Traditional vs. critical service-learning: Engaging the literature to differentiate two models". Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning. 14 (2): 40–65. Archived from the original on 2021-12-05. Retrieved 2021-12-16.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g h Kraft, Richard J. (February 1996). "Service Learning". Education and Urban Society. 28 (2): 131–159. doi:10.1177/0013124596028002001. ISSN 0013-1245. S2CID 143302144. Archived from the original on 2024-03-04. Retrieved 2021-12-16.
  26. ^ "How we manage offenders". National Offender Management Service. Archived from the original on 2008-08-06.
  27. ^ a b "Community Service Projects Allow Institutions to Give Back While Building Camaraderie Among Employees" (PDF). The Higher Education Workplace. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2020-11-26. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
  28. ^ "EN-13: Community Service | AASHE STARS". AASHE. Archived from the original on 2018-05-11. Retrieved 2018-05-10.
  29. ^ "FAQ – Our database of corporate giving programs". Doublethedonation.com. Archived from the original on 2021-01-24. Retrieved 2021-01-30.
  30. ^ Serow, RC; Dreyden, JI (1990). "Community service among college and university students: individual and institutional relationships". Adolescence. 25 (99): 553–66. PMID 2264505. Archived from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  31. ^ Serow, R. C.; Dreyden, J. I. (1990). "Community service among college and university students: individual and institutional relationships". Adolescence. 25 (99): 553–566. ISSN 0001-8449. PMID 2264505. Archived from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  32. ^ Garland, Diana R.; Myers, Dennis R.; Wolfer, Terry A. (5 January 2009). "Protestant Christian Volunteers in Community Social Service Programs: What Motivates, Challenges, and Sustains Their Service". Administration in Social Work. 33 (1): 23 through 39. doi:10.1080/03643100802508627. ISSN 0364-3107. S2CID 153455551. Archived from the original on 16 October 2022. Retrieved October 8, 2022.
  33. ^ "History". Samaritan's Purse. Archived from the original on 31 August 2014. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  34. ^ "Operation Christmas Child". Samaritan's Purse. Archived from the original on 18 February 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  35. ^ "The Salvation Army – History of the Salvation Army". Archived from the original on 21 February 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  36. ^ The Salvation Army#cite note-stats-1[broken anchor]
  37. ^ a b c "About Habitat for Humanity". Habitat for Humanity Int'l. Archived from the original on 22 February 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  38. ^ a b c Sulaiman, Kabuye (June 2011). "Volunteerism From Islamic Perspective" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2023-02-13. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  39. ^ "Students". Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  40. ^ "TheGiveandTakeofVolunteeringMotivesBenefi". Google Docs. Archived from the original on 2022-11-14. Retrieved 2022-11-14.
  41. ^ a b "Evidence of Service-Learning Benefits". Service Learning. Archived from the original on 2 March 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  42. ^ "Welcome to the SiteMaker Transition Project". Archived from the original on 9 April 2013. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  43. ^ "Where's The Learning in Service-Learning," Janet Eyler and Dwight E. Giles Jr., Jossey-Bass, 1999, Page 28
  44. ^ "Stereotype – Definition of Stereotype by Merriam-Webster". Archived from the original on 15 February 2016. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
  45. ^ "Why Stereotypes Are Bad and What You Can Do about Them". AAUW: Empowering Women Since 1881. Archived from the original on 2017-10-14. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
  46. ^ "Where's The Learning in Service-Learning," Janet Eyler and Dwight E. Giles Jr., Jossey-Bass, 1999, Page 31
  47. ^ Phillips, Katherine W. (2014). "How Diversity Works". Scientific American. 311 (4): 42–47. Bibcode:2014SciAm.311d..42P. doi:10.1038/scientificamerican1014-42. PMID 25314869. S2CID 45436278. Archived from the original on 2015-03-03. Retrieved 2015-03-02.
  48. ^ a b Crawford, Hallie. "When and How to List Volunteer Work on a Resume". U.S. News. Archived from the original on 13 November 2022. Retrieved 1 November 2022.
  49. ^ Sherman, Amy L. (2004-11-04). Restorers of Hope: Reaching the Poor in Your Community with Church-Based Ministries that Work (Reissue ed.). Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Pub. ISBN 9781592449910.
  50. ^ "Have Participatory Approaches Increased Capabilities?". International Institute for Sustainable Development. Archived from the original on 2023-05-11. Retrieved 2023-05-11.
[edit]