ABSTRACT

Service-learning studios provide qualitatively different design education experiences, engendering new awareness and critical insights among students (Dearborn, 2011). This chapter examines service-learning projects in East St. Louis, Illinois (ESL), and São Tomé and Príncipe (STP) in Africa, conducted through Action Research Illinois (ARI). For 25 years, the action research programs at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) have partnered with organizations and residents in distressed communities through service-learning efforts that enable university students, staff, and faculty to address important community-identified concerns through an iterative process of information gathering, application, and reflection. ARI puts community needs and voices first while also communicating to students the history and power structures that underpin a community’s current social, economic, and physical contexts. When working closely with community members, students can come to understand the value of local knowledge within design and planning practices.