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Friday, September 12, 2008

At Columbia, Students Mix Studies With Volunteer Work, for Credits

Columbia University is conducting what this New York Times article calls an "unusually aggressive push of the popular 'service learning' concept. The organization Campus Compact is the best place to go for additional information on service learning. SCUPers who are employed in the corporate sector may wish to learn more about that organization's Consulting Corps.
In an unusually aggressive push of the popular “service learning” concept, 500 engineering students will earn academic credit this year participating in projects around Harlem: designing swings for people in wheelchairs, building an environmentally sustainable greenhouse at a local high school and creating a trash can that can be used by the severely disabled, and others.

For the past six years, such service learning has been a graduation requirement for all of Columbia’s engineering majors, in what experts say is one of just a handful of programs nationwide to make mandatory what used to be known as volunteerism.

“We obviously want to create engineers and applied scientists who are technically adept, but also effective in this global society,” said Jack McGourty, the associate dean of Columbia’s Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. “We want to create students who are socially aware.”

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