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Maryland Student Service Alliance
The
Sherry Unger Award
for July 2002:
Have a Heart for the Homeless
Kayleen Reese
Bonnie Branch Middle School, Howard County
kreese@mail.howard.k12.md.us, 410-313-2580
Our 8th grade students completed an indirect service-learning project
January through March 2002. It was our goal that students demonstrate every
individual's role in affecting positive change. In fact, our motto
throughout this project was, "Kids CAN make a difference!" This year, we
worked with a local homeless shelter to collect a range of items at our
school and within the local community, which was then donated to adults and
families in need in Howard County. All of our activities were created to
help individuals who are underprivileged in our community.
Best Practice 1: What recognized community need was met by your project?
Homeless shelters receive most of their donations during the holiday season,
but are in need of items throughout the year. Our service-learning project
provided a community homeless shelter with food items, personal items, first
aid supplies, cleaning supplies, paper products, gift certificates, baby
items, games, and school supplies. The shelter identified the items they
needed to help people who are homeless.
Best Practice 2: How was the project connected to the school curriculum
and curricular objectives?
The following Maryland Learning Outcomes were achieved through our
service-learning project. An explanation of how the outcomes were achieved
follows each Outcome.
- Social Studies: Analyze examples in which individuals and groups bring about
civic improvement. By helping people who are homeless, students realized
that their efforts directly impacted and changed the lives of people in our
community.
- Math: Organize, display, and interpret data using tables, pictographs, and
bar graphs. Graphs of each homeroom's contributions were created. These
graphs determined which homeroom earned the reward for bringing in the most
donations.
- English: Write essays for an intended audience and purpose that state the
thesis or purpose of the paper, that follow an organizational pattern, and
that offer compelling evidence in the form of facts and details to support
the thesis. Students wrote a description of our project for the PTA
Newsletter, our news broadcast at school, and local newspapers.
Best Practice 3: How did participants reflect on their experiences
throughout the project?
Discussion and brief written responses to prompts provided the vehicle by
which students reflected on their service-learning. For example, after
watching a video, "Shelter Boy," students wrote down what they could do to
help a boy like the one in the video. At the end of the project, students
invited a speaker from Grassroots to come back to accept our donations.
After hearing how the donations would help the people Grassroots serves, the
students wrote how the service-learning impacted their community.
Best Practice 4: How did students take leadership roles and take
responsibility for the success of the project?
Each group of students was assigned a task in relation to the project. For
example, one group was responsible for maintaining the graphs, another for
advertising the project, and another for collection of the donations. Within
each group, the students were responsible for ensuring the success of our
project.
Best Practice 5: What community partners were worked with on this project?
Our community partners for this project were Grassroots, the student body,
and the Parent Teacher Association.
Best Practice 6: How did you prepare and plan ahead for the project?
We prepared and planned for the project by watching "Shelter Boy," about a
12-year-old boy and his family who became homeless. Students analyzed how
they could help people like those in the video. A speaker from Grassroots, a
local homeless shelter, talked to the students about homelessness in our
community. The speaker identified how our service project would help people
in need.
Best Practice 7: What knowledge and skills did students develop through
this project?
People who are homeless are not addicted to drugs or lazy citizens who don't
want to work. Students now understand that homelessness is not a choice that
some people make. Circumstances beyond a person's control contribute to
homelessness, and that is why it is so important that community members
become involved in helping people get back on their feet. Students also saw
the real world applications of writing and graphing skills. Students also
used organizational skills to ensure the efficiency of collecting and
packaging the items for the shelter.
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