Micronesian Educator Vol. 13, 2009, Service-Learning in a Pacific

Page 1

Service-Learning in a Pacific Island Village Lessons on History, Culture, and Community from University of Guam Students at Historic Inalajan Ann Hattori University of Guam

Abstract This paper reports the results of a service-learning project undertaken by the University of Guam students in the historic district ofinalahan village. Students contributed their time and effort in an array oflabor-intensive tasks; and, in the process, gained numerous benefits. They expressed appreciation for the project as an opportunity to smell, touch, see, hear, feel, learn, and understand their history and culture and also expressed a sense of accomplishment and increased cultural pride. The paper demonstrates that servicelearning can provide faculty, students, and community members with a mechanism for advancing academic learning while simultaneously forging collaborative and reciprocal relationships.

Keywords: service-learning, Guam, history, Pacific

*** After eight years as a Pacific History professor at the University of Guam (UOG), I had come to realize incontrovertibly that the majority of my students were entering my classroom with increasingly less knowledge and awareness of the island's history or its rich and ancient culture. They also appeared to be increasingly disconnected from everyday village life, its obligations, responsibilities, and rewards seemingly far from academia's comfortable air-conditioned rooms, laptop computers, and project deadlines. Thus I sought, and continue to seek, avenues to relate and engage students with Guam's past, specifically in ways that would simultaneously connect them to the island's present and future. In Fall 2007, I attempted to address these issues by starting a service-learning project in the Historic Inalahan district of Guam. This paper describes and reports the successful results of the service-learning project, utilizing assessment essays written by 50 History of Guam students at UOG. Scholars on Guam, as well as across Oceania, have long bemoaned the cultural alienation resulting from centuries of colonial education on the island (Aguon, 1993; Underwood, 1989). Aguon points to the damaging impacts resulting from the wholesale

-


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Micronesian Educator Vol. 13, 2009, Service-Learning in a Pacific by MARC - Issuu