69传媒

College & Workforce Readiness

Community Service Requirements Seen to Reduce Volunteering

By Sarah D. Sparks 鈥 August 20, 2013 6 min read
Local high school and middle school students paint the exterior of a childcare center as part of the Momentum Youth Conference community outreach project earlier this summer in Marion, Ind.
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Requiring students to take part in community service to graduate from high school can actually reduce their later volunteering, new research suggests.

Maryland鈥檚 statewide requirement that all students complete 75 hours of service learning by graduation led to significant boosts in 8th grade volunteering鈥攇enerally in school-organized activities鈥攂ut it actually decreased volunteering among older students, leading to a potential loss in long-term volunteering, according to a study previewed online by the Economics of Education Review in June.

鈥淚f this is for school, how do we know [students] are considering this as community service, rather than just homework for school?鈥 said the study鈥檚 author, Sara E. Helms, an assistant professor of economics at Samford University in Birmingham, Ala. 鈥淥ne of the interpretations that is more convincing is, maybe we are substituting this [requirement] for being self-motivated. Does it dilute the signal value of volunteering?鈥

Service learning鈥攊n which students engage in projects and activities to improve their communities or address social problems鈥攈as become more popular in the past decade. In 2011, 19 states allowed districts to award credit toward graduation for volunteering or service learning, and seven states allowed districts to require service for graduation, according to data collected by the Education Commission of the States. In 2001, only seven states allowed high school credit for service.

Districts on Board

While Maryland remains the only state to require universal service learning as a condition of graduation, the District of Columbia school system began requiring 100 hours of community service in 2007, and several other large districts, including Atlanta, Chicago, and Philadelphia, also require community service for graduation.

State Policies

Service learning has been growing in popularity. More states and districts are adopting policies to incorporate service learning into their requirements for high school graduation.

BRIC ARCHIVE

SOURCES: Education Commission of the States; Education Week

If Ms. Helms鈥 interpretation is correct, the new findings undermine some of what proponents have argued makes service learning so popular. Prior studies have found students who volunteer more frequently tend to be higher-achieving, more engaged in their communities, and less prone to risky behaviors as adolescents. Moreover, service learning in particular has been found to improve students鈥 engagement in school and reduce their risk of dropping out, and Maryland鈥檚 policy was touted as a way to help students 鈥渄evelop as citizens,鈥 Ms. Helms said.

鈥淚鈥檓 pro-service learning,鈥 she said in an interview. 鈥淗owever, I think it matters how we implement it. What you hear over and over in the literature is, don鈥檛 require service learning; give incentives. We get very nervous about requiring people to do something because it鈥檚 good.鈥

Early Boosts

The study used student data from Monitoring the Future: A Continuing Study of the Lifestyles and Values of Youth, a nationally representative annual survey of 8th, 10th, and 12th graders, to compare Maryland students鈥 volunteering trends with those of other American students during the same time period.

From 1991 through 2011, nearly three in four American high school seniors reported doing community service at least a few times a year, with 31 percent volunteering at least monthly and 12 percent volunteering weekly. Among 8th graders, 65 percent volunteered at least a few times a year, 26 percent volunteered monthly, and 10 percent volunteered weekly.

Ms. Helms graduated from high school in Maryland two years before the service requirement was enacted for the class of 1997. She recalled family conversations about how her younger brothers would meet the criteria.

鈥淚t was pretty controversial when it was put into place,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was a mixed bag. You hear stories where students got involved with something because they had to complete service hours, and it changed their life and they went into social justice to try to stop poverty鈥攁nd then you hear the stories of, 鈥極h, my dad鈥檚 friend let me do something to help out,鈥 鈥 Ms. Helms said.

In each year, the students were asked as part of the Monitoring the Future survey to report how often they had volunteered: never, a few times a year, at least monthly, at least weekly, or nearly daily.

In the first years after the Maryland policy took effect in 1993, the proportion of the state鈥檚 8th graders who reported weekly volunteering increased nearly 6 percentage points compared with the time before the requirement. The increase dropped to 3.2 percentage points above pre-requirement levels by 1998, however, and to only 2 percentage points above pre-requirement levels by 2010.

The proportion of 8th graders volunteering at least monthly initially rose by 7.4 percentage points in the early years, compared with the pre-requirement level.

But there was no significant difference between the volunteering of Maryland 8th grade students and those in other states, suggesting that some of the increase could have come from a general trend toward more service learning.

It was a different story among older students. Before the requirement, Maryland seniors were 7.8 percentage points more likely than students nationally to be engaged in service activities鈥攄riven primarily by rising service activities among boys and following a national trend of more volunteering during that time. After the service requirement, Maryland seniors were 9.2 percentage points to 17.4 percentage points less likely to volunteer from 1997 to 2011.

That contrast is particularly notable because national volunteering among 12th graders rose during the same time.

R. Scott Pfeifer, the executive director of the Maryland Association of Secondary School Principals and a former principal of Centennial High School in Howard County, Md., cautioned that the findings may underrepresent subtler volunteer activities among older students because students may be better able to recall and report official school-related volunteer activities, such as those they would pursue during middle school.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a ton of volunteering that goes on,鈥 he said, but 鈥渒ids are social animals. They may not think of their activity in National Honor Society of bringing food to the old-age home as volunteering.鈥

鈥楶art of the Culture鈥

Service learning, Mr. Pfeifer said, is 鈥減art of the culture now; it鈥檚 pretty routine. In terms of the actual graduation requirement, looking for systematic ways that groups of kids and classes can fulfill that requirement just works for everybody. It doesn鈥檛 get to that individual volunteerism, but it works.鈥

Both Ms. Helms and Mr. Pfeifer agreed that schools鈥 service-learning programs require planning and time for students to reflect on their experiences in order to be meaningful.

Mr. Pfeifer argued that the service-learning requirement is not intended to be primarily about building civic character.

鈥淪ome people might have thought this would build up an individual sense of volunteerism,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think it ever really achieved that focus, because there鈥檚 a bureaucratic nightmare that could come from that. So instead we鈥檝e used it tied to the curriculum.鈥

And as a tool for engaging students in different subjects, from history to environmental science, Mr. Pfeifer argues that the state鈥檚 service-learning requirement has been a success.

鈥淲ithout it, there鈥檇 be something lacking in every one of our schools that鈥檚 there now, a focus,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here鈥檇 be something missing if [the service requirement] wasn鈥檛 there.鈥

A version of this article appeared in the August 21, 2013 edition of Education Week as K-12 Community-Service Requirements May Discourage Student Volunteering

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