The Monthly Launch
Experiential Learning and Education
Experiential Learning—Know Your Options
Experiential learning is the process of developing knowledge and skills from direct experience - learning through action. Experiential learning opportunities are hands-on, real world experiences that give students a chance to learn by doing.
There are many things to consider when deciding on an experiential learning opportunity, such as the type of opportunity (internship? co-op? something else?), when to participate in the experience, the kind of organization you would like to work for, what you would like to gain from the experience, etc. Experiential learning can come in many different forms, and can occur both in and outside the classroom.
Types of experiences that students may be exposed to through Experience Learning include:
Apprenticeships
Apprenticeships provide students an opportunity to try out a job, usually with an experienced professional in the field to act as a mentor.
Clinical Experiences
Clinical experiences provide hands-on experiences of a predetermined duration directly tied to an area of study, such as nursing students participating in a hospital-based experience or child development and teacher education students participating in day care and classroom settings.
Fellowships
Provide tuition or aid to support the training of students for a period of time. They are usually made by educational institutions, corporations, or foundations to assist individuals pursuing a course of study or research.
Field Work
Field work allows students to explore and apply content learned in the classroom in a specified field experience away from the classroom. Field work experiences bridge educational experiences with an outside community that can range from neighborhoods and schools to anthropological dig sites and laboratory settings.
Internships
Internships provide students with an opportunity to test the waters in a career field and also gain some valuable work experience. Internships can be for credit, not for credit, paid, or unpaid.
Practicums
Practicums often a required component of a course of study and place students in a supervised and often paid situation. Students develop competencies and apply previously studied theory and content, such as school library media students working in a high school library or marketing majors working in a marketing research firm.
Service Learning
Service learning is distinguished by being mutually beneficial for both student and community. Service-learning is growing rapidly and is considered a part of experiential education by its very nature of learning, performing a job within the community, and serious reflection by the student. Service-learning involves tackling some of society’s complex issues such as homelessness, poverty, lack of quality education, pollution, etc.
Simulations and Gaming/Role-Playing
When used as part of a course, simulations and gaming/role-playing aim to imitate a system, entity, phenomenon, or process. They attempt to represent or predict aspects of the behavior of the problem or issue being studied. Simulation can allow experiments to be conducted within a fictitious situation to show the real behaviors and outcomes of possible conditions.
Student Teaching
Student teaching provides candidates with an opportunity to put into practice the knowledge and skills they have been developing in the preparation program. Student teaching typically involves an on-site experience in a partner school and opportunities for formal and informal candidate reflection on their teaching experience.
Study Abroad
Study abroad offer students a unique opportunity to learn in another culture, within the security of a host family and a host institution carefully chosen to allow the transfer of credit to a student’s degree program.
Undergraduate Research
Undergraduate research is increasingly common at universities across all disciplines. With strong support from the National Science Foundation and the research community, scientists are reshaping their courses to connect key concepts and questions with students’ early and active involvement in systematic investigation and research. The goal is to involve students with actively contested questions, empirical observation, cutting-edge technologies, and the sense of excitement that comes from working to answer important questions.
Volunteering
Volunteering allows students to serve in a community primarily because they choose to do so. Many serve through a nonprofit organization—sometimes referred to as formal volunteering—but a significant number also serve less formally, either individually or as part of a group.
Apprenticeship & Fellowship Programs
Check out these based experiential learning based programs.
You can always find more information on more opportunities like these by logging into UTSA Handshake, http://utsa.joinhandshake.com/login
Motor City Mission Apprenticeship
Motor City Mission Corps is a year long nonprofit apprenticeship for young adults with a focus on breaking down racism and building equitable community. Participants live in community, serve in organizations with a reputation for making change in the city of Detroit and explore how they might be called to join God's work in the world.
Management Fellows Program
For More Information:
Email: avin.jordan@utsa.edu
Website: http://careercenter.utsa.edu
Phone: (210) 458-7486
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/utsacareercenter