Building Connections Through Service-Learning
Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW at Heritage University
Experiences and Practice
WASSW 2025 Fall Conference
October 16th, 2025
Agenda
Learning Objectives
Speaker Introduction
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Jacob Campbell, Ph.D. LICSW
Associate Professor at Heritage University
Previous Program Social Worker in Special Education Classroom at Pasco School District
In your personal, professional, or educational pursuits, what are examples of things that have helped you learn?
Go to http://menti.com and enter code 3647 5394
Consider:
Service as a Core Value in our Practice
Value: Service
Ethical Principle: Social workers’ primary goal is to help people in need and to address social problems
Social workers elevate service to others above self-interest. Social workers draw on their knowledge, values, and skills to help people in need and to address social problems. Social workers are encouraged to volunteer some portion of their professional skills with no expectation of significant financial return (pro bono service).
(National Association of Social Workers, 2021)
Paired Discussion Activity
Reflection on our Code of Ethics
(Spring et al., 2008)
What is Service-Learning
Distinct from volunteerism, community service, experiential learning, field education and other similar and related activities
Service-Learning Standards
In K-12 Settings
Actively engages participants in meaningful and personally relevant service activities
Intentionally used as an instructional strategy to meet learning goals and/or content standards
Sufficient duration and intensity to address community needs and meet specified outcomes
Incorporates multiple challenging reflection activities that are ongoing and that prompt deep thinking and analysis about oneself and one’s relationship to society
Provides youth with a strong voice in planning, implementing, and evaluating service-learning experiences with guidance from adults
Engages participants in an ongoing process to assess the quality of implementation and progress toward meeting specified goals, and uses results for improvement and sustainability
Promotes understanding of diversity and mutual respect among all participants
Partnerships are collaborative, mutually beneficial, and address community needs
Meaningful Service
Link to Curriculum
Duration & Intensity
Reflection
Youth Voice
Progress Monitoring
Diversity
Partnerships
(National Youth Leadership Council, 2008)
following some of these standards was associated with better outcomes for students
(Celio et al., 2011)
Positive Effects Associated
with Students Participating in Service-Learning
There is a lack of large-scale randomized trials, and much of the research conducted has been qualitative. According to Filges et al. (2022), the evidence on the effectiveness of service-learning on students' academic success, personal and social skills, and risk behavior remains inconclusive.
(Celio et al., 2011)
Prevalence of Community Service and Service-Learning in Schools Across America
Historical Context
(Spring et al., 2008)
Service-Learning in Practice
EXAMPLE OF
Internal School �Service-Learning Activities
Various Activities Around Campus
Organizing school recycling and weekly recycling pick-up as a club
Hanging awareness campaign posters around the school with the behavior interventionist
Giving out donuts to teachers
Bringing and helping give out food for mobile food bank
Collecting supplies from school community for food bank and animal shelter
Supporting life skills students
External�Service-Learning Activities
Various Activities In Our Community
Tips for Implementation
Things to Keep in Mind
How could you implement some service-learning projects in your own school?
Dream Together
Share your ideas in small groups around you
Questions?
Feel free to connect with me. Find me at https://vsp.ink/hub
References
Celio, C. I., Durlak, J., & Dymnicki, A. (2011). A meta-analysis of the impact of service-learning on students. Journal of Experiential Education, 34(2), 164-181. https://doi.org/10.1177/105382591103400205
Filges, T., Dietrichson, J., Viinholt, B. C. A., & Dalgaard, N. T. (2022). Service learning for improving academic success in students in grade K to 12: A systematic review. Campbell Systematic Reviews, 18(1), e1210. https://doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1210
National Association of Social Workers. (2021). NASW code of ethics. https://www.socialworkers.org/About/Ethics/Code-of-Ethics/Code-of-Ethics-English
National Youth Leadership Council. (2008). K–12 service-learning standards for quality practice. https://nylc.org/k-12-standards/
Spring, K., Grimm, R. J., & Dietz, N. (2008). Community service and service-learning in America's schools. Corporation for National and Community Service, Office of Research and Policy Development. https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED506728.pdf