University General Course Catalog 2015-2016 
    
    Nov 26, 2024  
University General Course Catalog 2015-2016 ARCHIVED CATALOG: LINKS AND CONTENT ARE OUT OF DATE. CHECK WITH YOUR ADVISOR.

Service-Learning and Civic Engagement


Office of Service-Learning and Civic Engagement (OSLCE)
Thompson Building, Room 101E
(775) 784-4846

The Office of Service-Learning and Civic Engagement (OSLCE) is an initiative under the Office of the Provost. Our mission is to facilitate meaningful community-based learning experiences that engage students and faculty with the community through service-learning courses, civic engagement experiences, and community research to enhance and foster learning and discovery. We connect and integrate the campus, classroom and community through sustainable partnerships, assessing learning and tracking impact.

As a result, students enhance their learning and development to enhance their capabilities to be skilled, empowered and active citizens after they graduate. Faculty enrich their pedagogy and scholarship as active contributors to the community. Broader community needs are addressed and partners become an integral part of the overall University learning experience through a reciprocal partnership of knowledge.

Service-Learning is a specially designed model of experiential-learning in which students engage in meaningful activities that address community needs together with structured opportunities for reflection in order to achieve learning outcomes and teach civic responsibility. Equal emphasis is placed on both the service and the learning (service-learning). Reflection and reciprocity with the community are essential components of service-learning (Jacoby 1996).

Civic Engagement is about working to make a difference in our communities. This includes actions individuals take to influence public matters. It is a bout working to enhance and promote the quality of life in our local and global community.

“Civic engagement means working to make a difference in the civic life of our communities and developing the combination of knowledge, skills, values and motivations to make that difference. It means promoting the quality of life in a community, through both political and non-political processes.” (Ehrlich 2000).