Fourth straight year: Miami named to President's Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll
May 19, 2011Miami University has been named a leader in community service programs
by being placed on the 2010 President's Higher Education Community
Service Honor Roll. This is the fourth year Miami has made the honor
roll, announced by the Corporation for National and Community Service
(CNCS).
Honorees are chosen based on a series of selection factors,
including the scope and innovation of service projects, the extent to
which service-learning is embedded in the curriculum, the school's
commitment to long-term campus-community partnerships, and measurable
community outcomes as a result of the service.
In 2009-10, 13,800 Miami students engaged in forms of community
service and 4,000 students participated in at least 20 hours of service
per semester, said Monica Ways, director of Miami’s office for community engagement and service. Total service hours engaged in by Miami students were 414,000.
Some of the programs Miami students are most involved in include
America Reads, Adopt a School, Hunger + Homelessness Awareness Week,
Pledge a Meal, Young Authors (a literacy program that facilitates second
through fifth graders writing and illustrating, in Spanish and English,
their own books assisted by Miami tutors), senior citizens and
disability services, Service Saturdays and various other
one-time/ongoing service projects. The Urban Teaching Cohort and the
Over-the-Rhine Residency Program were also highlighted in this year’s
application.
The honor roll – a collaboration of the CNCS, the U. S. departments
of Education, Housing and Urban Development, Campus Compact and the
American Council on Education – launched in 2006. Since then, according
to Ways, Miami has also tied service to instruction with 30 Miami
courses receiving the service learning designation and several other
service learning courses being eligible for designation.
Service learning is a teaching method that utilizes student
involvement in community service to meet instructional objectives of a
course. Designated courses at Miami range from Spanish to computer
science to art to teacher education and more.
The 2010 honor roll recognizes 641 colleges and universities out of
851 that applied. Miami is one of 7 public and 14 private universities
in Ohio on the list.
In January, Miami was selected for the 2010 Community Engagement Classification
by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. Miami’s
Oxford and Hamilton campuses are two of 115 institutions recognized by
the Carnegie Foundation for the voluntary classification.

