Portrays the experiences and development of students as they commit
themselves to community service during their college years.
In Community Service and Higher Learning, Robert A. Rhoads
examines the experiences of students as they commit themselves to
community service during their college years. The author explores
how a student's sense of self may be challenged through involvement
in the lives of others within the context of community service
relationships. Central to his 'explorations of the self" is the
role "caring" plays as a source of self understanding and identity
development.
Drawing upon classic symbolic interactionists such as George
Herbert Mead as well as contemporary feminists such as Carol
Gilligan and Nel Noddings, Rhoads suggests ways in which the self
might be reconsidered with an ethic-of-care philosophy at its core.
He argues that higher education ought to play a key role in
fostering more relational and caring individuals and that community
service offers a pedagogical opportunity for encouraging the
development of more caring selves. He maintains that as society
becomes increasingly complex, diverse, and potentially fragmented,
caring becomes a more important facet of one's sense of self than
perhaps ever before. It is only through an increasing concern for
the other (the essence of caring) that one is able to bridge the
relational barriers posed by the postmodern condition.
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