ABSTRACT
Ninth in the Service-Learning in the Disciplines Series, this book discusses the pervasive use of service-learning in environmental studies programs and explains why it often is a required part of the environmental studies curriculum. Contributors from a wide range of college and university environmental studies programs discuss the benefits and challenges these programs provide and the consequent natural fit between environmental studies and service-learning.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
chapter |12 pages
Introduction
Why Is Service-Learning So Pervasive in Environmental Studies Programs?
part 1|75 pages
chapter |11 pages
A View From the Bottom of the Heap
A Junior Faculty Member Confronts the Risks of Service-Learning
part 2|112 pages
chapter |12 pages
An Educational Strategy to Reduce Exposure of Urban Children to Environmental Lead
ENVS 404 at the University of Pennsylvania
chapter |11 pages
ALLARM
A Case Study on the Power and the Challenge of Service in Undergraduate Science Education
chapter |10 pages
Environmental Service and Learning at John Carroll University
Lessons From the Mather Project