Abstrakt: |
Purpose: Community-engaged learning, often practiced through service-learning pedagogy, has been shown to have numerous benefits for both students and communities in communication sciences and disorders undergraduate and graduate programs. While service-learning typically involves students applying their knowledge and learned skills to help satisfy an expressed community need, the recent shift to online learning combined with shuttered community partner organizations may make some practitioners hesitant to pursue the pedagogy. This tutorial reviews the literature on service-learning, its use in online learning, and ways in which faculty in higher education can re-imagine and prioritize community engagement during and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Conclusions: Continued community-engaged learning, whether through virtual, hybrid, or in-person practice, is still an essential component of a liberal education that can help students practice clinical skills, develop cultural humility and cross-cultural knowledge, gain an understanding of social inequities and health care disparities, and build positive relationships with their community. There are ways for faculty to re-imagine service-learning course delivery in order to maintain the virtues of higher education, sharpen clinical skills, and develop civic engagement among students. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |