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Service Learning for Students | Service Learning for Faculty | Partnerships
Why
should Meredith
College
ask its
students
to participate
in service-learning?
As these
statistics
demonstrate,
we as a
community
have far
to go in
meeting
the basic
needs of
our fellow
citizens,
and students
can have
a strong
hand in
ameliorating
these problems.
Linking
service
directly
to education
provides
an opportunity
to not only
meet and
promote
public good,
but also
to develop
the students
understanding
of socio-economic
disparities,
the structures
of poverty,
and possible
solutions.
Service-learning
is education
in action.
Statistics
for Wake
County Raleigh
Homelessness
1,472
persons
and families
who are
homeless
on any
given
night
in Raleigh.
Raleigh
City Government,
2003.
1,264
homeless
persons
with mental
illness
or severe
drug and
alcohol
addiction.
Raleigh
City Government,
2003.
370
homeless
children
and youth
on any
given
night
in Raleigh.
Raleigh
City Government,
2003.
7,822
wake county
families
are living
in poverty
and 6,412
of them
had children,
a 31%
increase
over a
decade.
Wake County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
75-80%
of the
homeless
works
in a part-time
job at
the lowest
end of
the wage
scale.
Wake County
Community
Assessment,
2000
Basic
Needs & Poverty
Family
of 4 living
in poverty
has an
annual
income
of $17,
652. Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
Even
the 37%
of Wakes
population
wielding
a $53,719
annual
income
faced
difficulty
in meeting
basic
needs.
Wake County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
Males
represented
76% whereas
females
represented
24% of
the adult,
single
homeless
population
in Wake
County.
Continuum
of Care Point
in Time
Count, Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
Most
homeless
families
(79%)
are comprised
of single
parents
with children
and about
the same
percentage
of these
homeless
families
were headed
by single-parent
females.
Continuum
of Care Point
in Time
Count, Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
Abuse
Over
90% of
Wake County
homeless
families
are headed
by a mother
suffering
from post-traumatic
stress
stemming
from rape,
domestic
violence,
and/or
sexual
or physical
abuse
of the
mother
in her
childhood.
These
women
have become
socially
isolated,
since
their
abusers
often
are extended
family
members;
moreover,
21% suffer
from severe
and persistent
mental
illness,
44% from
chronic
substance
abuse,
and another
15 % are
dually
diagnosed.
Continuum
of Care Point
in Time
Count, Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
The
Child
Protective
Services
Unit of
Wake County
Human
Services
has reported
an 80%
correlation
between
child
abuse/neglect
and substance
abuse.
Wake County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
When
Ethnicity
Matters
Socio-Economically
Ethnicity
of the
homeless
was comprised
of the
following:
African-Americans
(79%);
Caucasians
(13%);
Hispanics
(6%);
Native
Americans
(2%).
Continuum
of Care Point
in Time
Count, Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
African-American
households,
which
are 20%
of the
general
population
in Wake
County,
make up
38% of
families
earning
below
50% of
AMI (Wake
Consolidated
Plan,
2000).
However,
85% of
homeless
families
in Wake
County
are African-American.
Continuum
of Care Point
in Time
Count, Wake
County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
Wake
County
ranks
second
nationally
in the
percentage
of growth
of Hispanic
population growing
at a rate
of 162%
between
1990 1998.
Wake County
Community
Assessment,
2000.
The
State
of North
Carolina
Obtained
from
the
Office
of Economic
Opportunity,
North
Carolina
Department
of Health
and
Human
Services
13
percent
or 830,000
people
in North
Carolina
live in
poverty
according
to the
1990 census.
A significant
number
of these
people
are employed
but their
wages
are not
enough
to cover
basic
food,
clothing
and shelter
needs.
North
Carolina
ranks
42nd in
the nation
in total
population
without
a high
school
diploma
with 30
percent
of the
States
residents
being
in that
category.
70
percent
of the
low-income
individuals
and families
in our
state
are experiencing
housing
problems.
The major
problem;
they pay
more than
30 percent
of their
total
income
for housing
costs.
The
FY 1996
annual
survey
of the
characteristics
of the
population
to be
served
by Community
Services
Block
Grant
Program
eligible
entities
indicated
the following:
Source
of income
o 9
percent
of those
served
or 1,395
persons
had
no source
of income.
o 22
percent
listed
employment
as their
primary
source
of income,
o 17
percent
depended
upon
AFDC
as their
primary
source
of income,
o 34
percent
identified
Social
Security
or SSI
as their
primary
source
of income.
Household
makeup
o 56
percent
or 7,006
households
were
headed
by a
single
female
parent,
o 3
percent
or 378
households
by a
single
male
parent,
o 22
percent
or 2,658
households
represented
were
single-parent
households.
o 13
percent
of the
households
were
two-parent
households,
Income
level
o 70
percent
of those
served
were
families
with
incomes
below
$6,970,
o 23
percent
of the
remaining
families
had
income
below
$11,890.
Age
o 74
percent of the participant head
of households were 18 to 59 years
old,
o 20
percent
or 2,462
households
had
household
heads
of 60
years
and
above.
Race
o 60
percent of the families served
were black,
o 36
percent
were
white.
Education
o 51
percent of household heads or
6,791 persons had not finished
high school,
o 4
percent
or 449
persons
had
completed
college.
Miscellaneous
characteristics
o 16
percent
of the
families
served
lived
in public
housing,
o 46
percent
received
food
stamps,
o 36
percent
received
Medicaid
services.
From
July 1,
1999 - June
30, 2000,
47,475 homeless
people were
served by
the 134
facilities
in 55 counties
that received
Emergency
Shelter
Grants (ESG)
program
funding.
Approximately
3,400 homeless
people were
sheltered
each day
by these
134 facilities.
Of the 47,475
people served
during that
period:
64 percent
were
single
adult
males
and
females,
23 percent
were
children
between
ages
birth
to seventeen
years,
36 percent
were
members
of families,
8 percent
were
veterans.
Over
5600 homeless
families
were served
during the
period.
Of the 17,024
people in
homeless
families
served,
97 percent
were women
and children.
Of the 10,907
homeless
children
served 80
percent
of the 10,907
homeless
children
served,
97 percent
were women
and children.
80 percent
of the 10,907
homeless
children
served were
between
the ages
of one and
twelve.
Leading
causes
of homelessness
reported
by homeless
people
or by
the ESG
grantees
serving
them from
July 1,
1999 -
June 30,
2000 included
unemployment/underemployment,
alcohol,
substance
abuse,
mental
illness,
eviction,
domestic
violence/sexual
assault,
release
from prison,
child
abuse
and neglect,
parental/child
conflict,
natural
disaster
and HIV/AIDS.
Statistics
on Students
in Service
Issues
most commonly
addressed
by Campus
Compacts
members campus-based
service
projects:
Tutoring:
75%
Housing/Homelessness:
71%
Mentoring:
71%
Reading/Writing:
69%
Hunger:
68%
Environmental
Issues:
66%
Health:
64%
Students
involved
in service
through
their
campuses
are on
the rise!
In 1999,
students
contributed
32,000,000
hours
of service
to their
community.
Campus
Compact,
Highlights
and Trends
in Student
Service
and Service
Learning,
1999.
By
2002,
more than
1/3 of
students
on Campus
Compacts
member
campuses
were involved
in service
projects,
up from
28% in
2001.
Campus
Compact,
Service
Statistics,
2002.
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