Feminine and Feminist Ethics and Service-Learning Site Selection: The Role of Empathy

Melody Bowdon, Stacey Pigg, Lissa Pompos Mansfield
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引用次数: 11

Abstract

Service-learning has emerged over the past forty or so years as a staple of higher education pedagogy within many disciplines. In that time, scholars and practitioners have argued that the model provides a wide range of benefits to students, communities, and institutions. Consistent among these claims is that participating in service-learning helps students develop empathy for their fellow human beings (Brown 853–54, 859, 861, 863; Davis and White 87; Einfeld and Collins 102, 103, 105; Wilson 210, 213–15). Generally, when service-learning scholars describe empathy, they refer to an ideal disposition of perceiving and relating to populations whom students serve based on identification rather than apathy or sympathy. The idea is that by learning about and sometimes sharing in the experiences of people served by various nonprofits and other service-learning site organizations, students will experience deeper learning that will apply beyond the immediate course context and encourage them to be better people and citizens, as well as, perhaps, better teachers, doctors, nurses, social workers, scientists, poets, and engineers. In a 2011 article, Judy C. Wilson summarized much of the research on servicelearning and empathy and described her study exploring the impact of servicelearning experiences as demonstrated by the level of empathy expressed by students in end-of-course reflective letters. According to Wilson’s findings, “students involved in the service-learning assignment were significantly (p < 0.05) more likely to express empathy in their reflective writing than the students who did not participate in service-learning” (207). Wilson ended the article by calling for much more research on the topic, including studies that not only explore what kinds of experiences promote empathy in students, but also ask “what contributes to students’ decisions to participate (or not participate) in SL” (217). In this article we respond to that call, but we also ask other questions with significant implications for the feminist teacher: What dangers or risks might be associated with encouraging students to develop empathy for those they work with in service-learning courses? And how do the empathy and shared experiences that students bring with them to Feminine and Feminist Ethics and Service-Learning Site Selection: The Role of Empathy
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女性和女性主义伦理与服务学习地点选择:共情的作用
在过去的四十多年里,服务学习已经成为高等教育教学中许多学科的主要内容。当时,学者和实践者认为,这种模式为学生、社区和机构提供了广泛的好处。在这些说法中一致的是,参与服务学习有助于学生培养对同伴的同理心(Brown 853 - 54,859,861,863;戴维斯和怀特87;Einfeld and Collins 102, 103, 105;Wilson 210,213 - 15)。一般来说,当服务学习学者描述共情时,他们指的是一种理想的性格,即基于认同而不是冷漠或同情来感知和联系学生所服务的人群。我们的想法是,通过学习和分享各种非营利组织和其他服务学习网站组织所服务的人们的经验,学生们将体验到更深层次的学习,这将超越直接的课程背景,并鼓励他们成为更好的人和公民,以及更好的教师、医生、护士、社会工作者、科学家、诗人和工程师。在2011年的一篇文章中,朱迪·c·威尔逊(Judy C. Wilson)总结了许多关于服务学习和同理心的研究,并描述了她的研究,该研究通过学生在课程结束后的反思信中表达的同理心水平来探索服务学习经历的影响。根据Wilson的研究结果,“参与服务学习任务的学生在反思性写作中表达同理心的可能性显著(p < 0.05)高于没有参与服务学习任务的学生”(207)。威尔逊在文章的结尾呼吁对这个话题进行更多的研究,包括研究不仅要探索什么样的经历能促进学生的同理心,还要问“是什么促使学生决定参加(或不参加)外语学习”(217)。在这篇文章中,我们回应了这一呼吁,但我们也提出了其他一些对女权主义教师有重要意义的问题:鼓励学生培养对他们在服务学习课程中共事的人的同情心,可能会带来哪些危险或风险?以及学生们在女性和女权主义伦理与服务学习地点选择:共情的作用中所带来的共情和共同经历
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