Iterative Service-Learning: A Computing-Based Case-study Applied to Small Rural Organizations
Sherri WeitlHarms

TL;DR
This paper presents an iterative service-learning approach where student teams develop, review, and improve computing artifacts for small rural organizations over multiple years, enhancing long-term sustainability and client satisfaction.
Contribution
It introduces a longitudinal, iterative process for updating computing artifacts in service-learning projects, addressing resource constraints of small organizations and improving artifact longevity.
Findings
High client satisfaction with iterative process
Increased implementation and sustained use of artifacts
Effective engagement of students and community partners
Abstract
This paper describes the iterative use of service learning to develop, review, and improve computing-based artifacts. It is well-known that computing students benefit from service-learning experiences as do the community partners. It is also well-known that computing artifacts rarely function well long-term without versioning and updates. Service-learning projects are often one-time engagements, completed by single teams of students over the course of a semester course. This limits the benefit for community partners that do not have the expertise or resources to review and update a project on their own. Over several years, teams of undergraduate students in a capstone course created tailored social media plans for numerous small rural organizations. The projects were required to meet client specific needs, with identified audiences, measurable goals, and strategies and tactics to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsService-Learning and Community Engagement
