Resource type: Google site and Digital Guidebook Intended for: New faculty, emerging practitioners, seasoned educators, students
Contributors: Created by PSU staff, graduate students, faculty, interviewed students, and community partners
A Toolkit for Students
The Community Engagement Toolkit is designed to help students develop and practice skills used to engage with their community for social change. The toolkit will help students explore how and why they want to engage within the community, find the tools to make meaningful connections with communities, and build their sense of community agency to become a catalyst for change.
Community-engaged learning, also known as community-based learning or service learning, is a teaching and learning strategy that integrates meaningful community service or engagement with instruction and reflection to strengthen communities and expand the learning experience.
Get Started with the Faculty and Facilitator Guide
The Faculty and Facilitator Guide is a simple guide for faculty and facilitators supporting students’ use of the Community Engagement Toolkit. The guide includes learning objectives, sections, and sequencing support for the toolkit’s five modules. The guide also includes ideas for how to integrate resources and activities into your course or workshop as well as additional facilitation and faculty support resources.
This module defines community engagement as collaborative work with communities on shared goals, emphasizing personal reflection, understanding issues, and making impactful contributions in various forms of social change.
Module Two helps individuals identify their skills and capacities for community engagement, explore various opportunities that align with their values, navigate the communication process with potential partners, and overcome initial anxiety and imposter syndrome to foster meaningful connections.
This module emphasizes the importance of ethical community engagement by exploring how identities, positionality, and worldview influence interactions, highlighting the need for awareness of these factors to prevent harm and promote authentic relationships, power redistribution, and social change.
Module Four highlights that effective and sustainable community engagement demands preparation, reliable communication, reciprocal relationships, and cultural sensitivity along with feedback and graceful transitions to ensure meaningful impact for all involved.
Engaging others in community work amplifies impact but requires careful planning to ensure ethical participation; this section offers guidance on connecting with like-minded individuals and organizing accessible events.