A Community Based Learning Class Visit with Nora Reynolds
Posted by on November 22, 2013
“Education for Liberation: Here and Abroad” at Temple University
By Liz Shriver and Nora Reynolds
I visited Nora Reynolds’s course, “Education for Liberation: Here and Abroad,” to catch up on her most recent endeavor establishing Community Based Learning (CBL, another name for Service-Learning) at Temple University. Nora, who previously taught a CBL course called “Education in the Global City,” now incorporates an optional CBL component in Education for Liberation.
On his own, Dakarai Campbell, a Temple sophomore and site coordinator for the Ben Franklin AVID tutoring program (which I manage), recruited a classmate for his AVID team from this course. I wanted to know more about how Nora was able to build a CBL component from scratch given that Education for Liberation was not originally designated as a CBL course.
I met Nora in her first year as a PhD student in Urban Education as one of three professors of the “Education in the Global City” course at Temple University. CBL classes can be challenging to implement. Students have competing priorities: jobs, leadership positions and family responsibilities. Supplemental service as part of a course can become yet another obligation on an already full plate. They also require the management of community partners. I, along with several other community partners, recruit service-learning participants from this course.
However, from the first semester, Nora established a high level of rigor and accountability in her classes. She also established concrete partnerships with community organizations, including the AVID tutoring program. After a year teaching this course, Nora went on to pursue participatory field research with Water for Wasala in Wasala, Nicaragua, where she currently serves as the Vice President.
Nora is a service-learning teacher at heart. With her course, “Education for Liberation: Here and Abroad,” she sees a unique opportunity to provide students with a comparative perspective through work in the community. She could not require a community based placement as part of the class, so she has offered her students a choice: complete an extensive research paper or complete at least ten hours of service in the community and reflect on the experience.
The day I visited, class discussion focused on dissecting the article, “To Hell With Good Intentions” by Ivan Illich (1968). Students posed the question, once you know how much harm you can do in the world even with the best intentions, how do you manage your assumptions and expectations? How do you know which programs have an impact you can support and which are exploiting both volunteers and local participants? A tense discussion followed about Toms Shoes and this amazing video: RadiAid for Norway. There were multiple levels of interpretation and understanding. Most students held that organizations like Toms Shoes have murky intentions at best but some held fast that companies like Toms Shoes have a valid pace in the service field. After observing these discussions, I had several follow up questions which Nora has graciously answered below.
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