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Community-Based Learning Builds Advocates, Activists

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Chante Harris participates in community-based learning at AU.

Activist Roots

As a child, Chante Harris鈥 family stories often dealt with marches, fire hoses, and police dogs. That鈥檚 because she comes from a long line of activists: her grandmother, mother, and aunt were all engaged in the Civil Rights Movement and the later struggles against inequality in Newark, N.J.

The family stories put Harris, now an AU senior, on a path toward service at 蜜桃直播, as she recalled thinking early on, 鈥淚 need to be like that. I need to make a difference in peoples鈥 lives.鈥

Today, Harris has specifically taken full advantage of AU鈥檚 community-based learning options鈥攁 program that engages students with the surrounding Washington, D.C., community. She鈥檚 volunteered across the city from local charter schools to literacy programs, getting to know the many issues facing residents.

Community Classroom

While AU holds a reputation for internships and solid academics, School of International Service professor Easten Law believes that community-based learning combines all of the above. 鈥淥ften [service] almost conflicts with class responsibilities,鈥 he said. 鈥淪tudents have to make choices between all these great resources in D.C. and their papers. What service-learning tries to do is integrate both into the class space.鈥

Meg Rego coordinates AU鈥檚 community-based learning through the Center for Community Engagement & Service (CCES), where Harris also works the front desk. Under Rego鈥檚 guidance, AU courses couple with dozens of local nonprofits, where students do everything from developing PR campaigns to building grant proposals.

鈥淭hey get to collaborate with a community partner. They get to learn about the organization they鈥檙e working with. This has led to internships and job opportunities,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t lets them get their feet wet, engage with the community, and learn from that experience.鈥

For some two decades, students have participated in the Community Service-Learning Program, which adds an additional credit to any course that a student combines with a related service project. Starting this semester, however, CCES, Academic Affairs, and the Registrar鈥檚 Office rolled out a new course designation, 鈥淐B,鈥 that denotes classes approved by a service-learning faculty advisory board.

Professor Law, whose cross-cultural communication course carriers the landmark 鈥淐B鈥 designation, sends students to engage with ethnic minority communities at places like the Chinatown Community Center. He sees an immediate intellectual reward in the experiential learning.

鈥淚t鈥檚 made what they鈥檝e learned more complex,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey realize that models and theories can look very clean on paper. When you have to deal with cross-cultural difference live, it鈥檚 a lot harder.鈥

For Harris, her time in the community (now as a mentor) has paved a solid path beyond graduation toward either government or nonprofit work鈥攚herever she can be a strong voice for change.

鈥淎 lot of people want to go and represent a community before they鈥檝e actually been engaged in that community and understand what its needs are,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been great that I鈥檝e been able to learn about a community that I鈥檇 either like to represent or advocate for one day.鈥

Two Missions, Combined

As community-based learning expands at AU to include 18 courses this fall, Rego notes this as fulfilling the university鈥檚 strategic plan, which calls for allowing any student the opportunity to take a course with a service component before graduating.

Plus, this semester welcomed the university鈥檚 first cohort of 40 undergraduate Community-Based Research Scholars. Participants receive merit scholarships and live together on campus in a living-learning community devoted to service in D.C.

鈥淭his is another way in which the university is living out that mission, to educate students and create really excellent citizens,鈥 she explained. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing there鈥檚 a way we can combine that very closely with supporting our community and acknowledging that our community can also greatly contribute to the education of our students.鈥

For Harris, as she looks toward possibly law school or the Peace Corps, it鈥檚 no surprise that she鈥檚 learned from the community both on and off campus. 鈥淚 knew D.C. was that place, AU was that place, just in terms of being the most politically active campus,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen I got accepted, I was ecstatic. . . . It鈥檚 been amazing. I鈥檝e had so many great opportunities since I came here.鈥

Still, she believes her work in becoming an advocate the likes of her grandmother or aunt is far from over.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really inspiring when you hear about your family doing things like that. You want to continue that legacy on,鈥 she said. 鈥溍厶抑辈 has definitely helped me do that.鈥