Teaching Civic Engagement E-books from the Ozuna Library
Below are e-books on the topic of teaching civic engagement from the library's general collection.
Teaching Civic Engagement by Forrest Clingerman(Editor)Reid B Locklin(Editor)What is the civic relevance of the academic study of religion, considered on its own terms and in its increased diversity? The contributors to the present volume explore this question by focusing on four core capacities: intellectual complexity (C), social location (L), empathetic accountability (E), and motivated action (A)-the CLEA model.
Call Number: E-book
ISBN: 9780190250515
Publication Date: 2016
Assessing Service-Learning and Civic Engagement by Sherril B. Gelmon; Barbara A. Holland; Amy Spring; Amy Driscoll (As told to); Seanna M. Kerrigan (As told to)This book offers a broad overview of many issues related to assessment in higher education, with specific application for understanding the impact of service-learning and civic engagement initiatives. This revised edition includes an additional chapter that explores recent changes in the assessment landscape and offers examples and resources for designing assessment strategies for community engagement in higher education. The original text includes narrative addressing assessment issues and strategies; a detailed discussion of learning from multiple research projects performed over the past two decades about impact on multiple constituencies -students, faculty, communities, and institutions; and a discussion of strategies for data collection, analysis, synthesis, and reporting. Specific assessment instruments for use with each constituency are provided, including suggestions for administration, preparation, and data analysis. This volume will be helpful for individuals seeking a comprehensive resource on assessment issues in higher education.
Call Number: E-book
ISBN: 9781945459115
Publication Date: 2018-09-06
Civil Society and Social Responsibility in Higher Education by Enakshi Sengupta (Editor); Patrick Blessinger (Editor); Craig Mahoney (Editor)As an increasing number of universities across the world focus efforts on giving back to the communities they exist in, there is now a growing appetite for information, examples, and case studies of best practice for social responsibility in Higher Education. This volume explores different angles of sustainability, university corporate social responsibility, and the role of civil society in the context of education, with a focus on curriculum development and teaching. The chapters provide international examples of new and innovative intiatives, focusing on areas including eliminating racism in nursing education, teaching writing for advocacy and active citizenship, and several examples of service learning in different contexts. The chapters also importantly provide theoretical frameworks for teaching sustainability in Higher Education. This book will prove an invaluable resource for those looking to reorienting curriculums, develop programs and modules, and implement innovative teaching methods which integrate sustainability and civil society into their institutions and educational programmes.
Call Number: E-book
ISBN: 9781839094668
Publication Date: 2020-06-23
Creating Citizens by Brigitta R. Brunner (Editor, Introduction by, Contribution by); James Emmett Ryan (Contribution by); Kyes Stevens (Contribution by); Timothy S. Thornberry (Contribution by); Chad Wickman (Contribution by); Kelly D. Alley (Contribution by); Barb Bondy (Contribution by); Elizabeth Brestan-Knight (Contribution by); Laura Nan Fairley (Contribution by); Anne-Katrin Gramberg (Contribution by); William E. Kelly (Contribution by); Christopher McNulty (Contribution by); Iulia Pittman (Contribution by)In Creating Citizens, professors and administrators at Auburn University's College of Liberal Arts recount valuable, first-hand experiences teaching Community and Civic Engagement (CCE). They demonstrate that, contrary to many expectations, CCE instruction both complements the mission of liberal arts curricula and powerfully advances the fundamental mission of American land-grand institutions. The nine essays in Creating Citizens offer structures for incorporating CCE initiatives into university programs, instructional methods and techniques, and numerous case studies and examples undertaken at Auburn University but applicable at any university. Many contributors describe their own rewarding experiences with CCE and emphasize the ways outreach efforts reinvigorate their teaching or research. Creating Citizens recounts the foundation of land-grant institutions by the Morrill Act of 1862. Their mission is to instruct in agriculture, military science, and mechanics, but these goals augmented rather than replaced an education in the classics, or liberal arts. Land-grant institutions, therefore, have a special calling to provide a broad spectrum of society with an education that not only enriched the personal lives of their students, but the communities they are a part of. Creating Citizens demonstrates the important opportunities CCE instruction represents to any university but are especially close to the heart of the mission of land-grant colleges. In open societies, the role and mission of public institutions of higher learning that are supported by public subsidies are perennial subjects of interest and debate. Creating Citizens provides valuable insights of interest to educators, education administrators, students, and policy makers involved in the field of higher education.