Service Learning and Women's Studies

Each semester, undergraduate students in the UCF Women's Studies Program turn knowledge into action by completing Service Learning projects with community partners. In the classroom, students learn theories and methods of analyzing women's roles in history and contemporary society and the importance of activism on behalf of women. With Service Learning, students take that knowledge into the community and learn, with the help of community organizations, how to make social change. Students complete fifteen hours of community service and deliver a final project based on that partnership; in class, they present their work to their peers and write a final reflective essay that links their community activism with their classroom knowledge of women's and gender issues.

Benefits of Service Learning to Women's Studies students

Women's Studies courses with Service Learning components

Examples of Service Learning Projects by Women's Studies Students

What students are saying about Service Learning and Women's Studies

The greatest benefit of Service-Learning, accoring to student Brittany Bernstein, is the chance to work in a large group with like-minded women . . . and to actually feel like you make a difference in the community... I have gained the courage to make myself heard and to use my voice, as these authors have, to make visible the injustices of the world and to expose my own truths. . . I am inspired to live my life as a dangerous woman, who won't 'give up or shut up.'

Learn more about Service Learning on the Experiential Learning Web site.