Following the conclusion of this semester, the Spring 2025 semester, I will officially be closer to entering the classroom as an educator than I was leaving the classroom the last time as a student(K-12). With that in mind, it is important to begin formulating how exactly one will go about leading their classroom! Those formulations should be things that future educators are excited about, things that will immediately bring value to the classroom.
I did some digging around the WE.org site, and eventually came across the service-learning student toolkit. This toolkit revolves around, well, service learning! As I read through this toolkit, I saw that the examples of success stories working with a service-learning oriented approach were younger students. I will be a high school teacher, so ages 15-18. My thinking process leads me to believe that service learning is better suited for that age group. These students are entering either college or the workforce, part-time or full time, and the skills that can be gained from this learning style can greatly aid in the endeavors, both future or current, for high school students. Skills like those listed below are very important to have whether or not a student goes to college or the workforce.
Should I be able to find ways to engage my students into a service-learning environment, I can set them up to cultivate vital traits that will greatly benefit their futures. As an educator, I see it as my role to inspire and provide as much support to my students. That would include examples like this, providing opportunities for my students to grow.
Potentially incorporating a toolkit like this also excites me, as high school age students have one thing at their disposal that other level students don't... cars! If working through these lessons inspires them, they can go out on their own and continue doing good in the world. That is exciting to me because that is what I aim to do as a teacher: I aim to inspire and promote good, and through lessons like this, that is very much possible.
Through lesson guiding, or through individual efforts, my students can go out into the world and bring about a positive impact. Just the idea of that is exciting, and the potential lesson planning like the service-learning student toolkit brings is enough for it to be incredibly valuable to any classroom. If incorporated properly, students can become harbingers of positivity, and that would make me, as an educator, so incredibly proud of them and what we have been able to do!
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