Service Learning, Cultural Humility, and Language Instruction: Being in Community

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14288/bctj.v9i1.594

Keywords:

Service Learning, Intercultural Communication, Cultural Humility, Co-design, Settlement and Integration

Abstract

To address linguistic, social, and settlement needs among professional and highly educated newcomer language learners in Canada, a Service Learning program was established at an urban community college. It incorporated field-specific language instruction, cultural humility and intercultural communication training, and meaningful Service Learning placements with local organizations. Using a participatory action research approach, co-design, and developmental evaluation, a case study of the course’s development, delivery, and short-term impacts was conducted. This paper highlights key findings from that case study. Data were collected from surveys, focus groups, and reflections over the course of two pilot offerings with 27 learners. Using an inductive approach to qualitative data analysis, broad themes were identified. In this paper, the findings are grouped into four main themes: language development, settlement needs, cultural humility, and personal transformation. To conclude, barriers, facilitators, and recommendations are discussed with the goal of highlighting the challenges and celebrations of Service Learning for newcomer language learners.

Author Biographies

Katie Crossman, Bow Valley College

Dr. Katie Crossman is an instructor with an academic research focus in the School of Global Access at Bow Valley College. She has a PhD in Teaching English as an Additional Language (2014) and over 20 years’ experience teaching in Canada and overseas. Her research interests include language pedagogy, learner and instructor well-being, and newcomer settlement.   

Jason Andrews, Bow Valley College

Jason Andrews is an ESP instructor at Bow Valley College in Calgary, who holds a master’s degree in education with an emphasis on developing an authentic EAL leadership model. His research interests are in the sphere of authentic leadership, particularly within the contexts of language and higher education.

Iftu Hargaaya, Bow Valley College

Iftu Hargaaya is an instructor of Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion at Bow Valley College.  She has degrees in Geography, History, Education and over 10 years of experience in anti-oppressive education. Her research interests include racial trauma/stress, equitable grading practices, and structural origins of oppression.

Rida Abboud, Independent Evaluation Consultant

Dr. Rida Abboud is a consultant in the not-for-profit sector and sessional instructor at Mount Royal University. She has spent most of her career working in the areas of research and evaluation, community and social development, immigration and social policy. She completed her PhD from the University of Toronto in 2012 with a dissertation on the experiences of “low-skilled” Temporary Foreign Workers in Southern Alberta.  As a consultant, she supports not-for-profit agencies with strategic development, program development, research and evaluation. 

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Published

2024-11-18

How to Cite

Crossman, K., Andrews, J., Hargaaya, I., & Abboud, R. (2024). Service Learning, Cultural Humility, and Language Instruction: Being in Community. BC TEAL Journal, 9(1), 14–32. https://doi.org/10.14288/bctj.v9i1.594

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Articles