“How wonderful is it that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world.”
—Anne Frank
Combining School Curriculum and Service to the Community
Learn and Serve America provides direct and indirect support to K-12 schools, community groups and higher education institutions to facilitate service-learning projects. By integrating community service projects with classroom curriculum, service-learning projects offer students a unique opportunity to use what they learn in the classroom to solve real-life problems. In the process, they develop academic and practical skills, self-esteem, and a sense of civic responsibility while meeting community needs.
Here are a few examples of service-learning projects:
- Designing neighborhood playgrounds or building wheelchair ramps while building math, research methods and leadership skills;
- Teaching younger children to read or creating a tutoring program for adults with limited English-language skills as a Language Arts class project;
- Developing urban community gardens or preserving native plants as part of the biology and history curriculum;
- Starting school recycling programs or testing water quality as part of the math, science and social studies curriculum.
Learn and Serve America facilitates service-learning projects by:
- Providing grant support for school-community partnerships and higher education institutions;
- Providing training and technical assistance resources to teachers, administrators, parents, schools and community groups;
- Collecting and disseminating research, effective practices, curricula, and program models; and
- Recognizing outstanding youth service through the Presidential Freedom Scholarship, President’s Volunteer Service awards and other programs.
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