Possibilities for Community-Engaged/Civic Education

There are plenty of ways to connect our courses to the world around us, whether you’re teaching online or hybrid.

Below are strategies along with specific local examples of how to engage with the local community. Click each header to see more.

CECE Strategies with Local Examples

  • Partner with community agencies for project-based learning with community clients. Provide remote support (online research, content creation, social media, outreach, feedback analysis) for local agencies. Contact RISE for ideas.
  • Plan a community food drive where students collect items for their local food bank.
  • Have students learn about the City of Bellevue and participate in shaping policy.
  • Ask students to create proposals for local organizations on improving capacity, launching programs, or achieving goals, or contribute to resource guides for community clients.
  • Make chew toys for dogs in shelters using old rags or t-shirts (video tutorial).
  • Provide crisis and counseling support from home through the Crisis Text Line.

  • Ask your students to share websites and social media profiles about causes that they care about, and reflect about how they support these causes.
  • Ask students to create an online social media campaign that highlights the inequities in educational, justice, healthcare, etc. systems.
  • Create plans for activism and community organizing around topics of local or global importance.
  • Ask students to create a civic impact by commenting on public legislation, writing to / calling elected officials, attending virtual city council meetings, attending virtual community organizing meetings, etc. Contact RISE to discuss.
  • Use platforms like Democracy.io to enable students to write directly to their Senators and Representatives (being a citizen not required). Have students research and write to their local officials or media.
  • Students can create ‘position papers‘ on certain policies or campaigns. For example, Defunding Police: why or why not? People could organize a virtual debate and ask other students/classes to attend.
  • Create works of art as a form of protest.
  • Gamify civics. Make learning about them more fun.
  • Ask students to attend virtual Civic Saturdays and then reflect on the experience.
  • Pick up neighborhood trash and post a video talking about why this matters.
  • Participate in the Changemaker Challenge by using art to recognize those who contribute to their communities; for each recognition, the Bezos Family Foundation will donate to youth and educators.

  • Search Facing History and Ourselves for social justice curricula, resources, and videos.
  • Have students play Spent and reflect on challenges faced by those living paycheck-to-paycheck and connections to homelessness.
  • Ask students to read aloud books by Black, Indigenous, Latino/a/x, Asian, and other People of Color to youth.
  • Engage in storytelling to magnify unheard voices using Culture Surge as a model.
  • Have students observe local juvenile court cases and reflect on how they perpetuate criminal justice inequities (sessions are public and many are streamed).
  • Write letters or cards to youth in juvenile detention, especially around holidays.

  • Use National Issues Forums Institute PDF booklets for deliberative dialogues (on Service-Learning SharePoint), or guides from Living Room Conversations and the Interactivity Foundation.
  • Foster community dialogues where students discuss class topics with 5-10 community members and report back.
  • Lead virtual discussions using Consider.It.
  • Host “Hot Drinks and Hot Topics” informal chats about current events relevant to the course.
  • Ask students to invite friends and family to class conversations, with trained students facilitating small group dialogues.

  • Invite guest speakers or use TED Talks instead of texts. Note: RISE may be able to help find guest speakers.
  • Access public records and laws to ground course content in community contexts.
  • Incorporate virtual Place-Based Education using local natural, built, historic, or cultural environments. Contact RISE to brainstorm.
  • Require students to listen to podcasts and reflect on connections to course material.
  • Ensure sources reflect diversity of histories and perspectives.
  • Update curriculum using Native Cases to frame topics from Indigenous perspectives.

  • Integrate critical reflection to help students process current events in connection to course material. Contact RISE for suggestions.
  • Have students journal or write about what they want their world to look like.
  • Connect content to the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and discuss actions to meet at least one goal.
  • Ask students to make a wish for the U.S. through Made By Us.
  • Join #WeavingCommunity to share: What are you experiencing? What are you doing for yourself and others? What’s the life we want?
  • Conduct interviews with often unappreciated Bellevue College staff and reflect on their importance to the community.
  • Combine Drawdown with a carbon footprint calculator to explore actions addressing climate change.
  • Use the Slavery Footprint calculator to identify actions to reduce human rights impact.

  • Have students research ballot issues and explore various perspectives.
  • Attend candidate forums and reflect on how shared values appear in policy proposals.
  • Create a class strategy for voter and/or Census engagement. RISE has resources to share.
  • Use Census data from the 2020 Census and American Family Surveys to teach Excel, statistics, and data analytics.
  • Review redistricting maps or create new ones, connecting proposals to diversity and politics.

  • Engage with OSoMeNet to understand how topics spread through social media and learn to identify trolls.
  • Use the RedBlue Dictionary for definitions without political biases and AllSides for information about bias and fact-checking.
  • Have students read two Op-Eds from reputable sources for each topic and reflect on the importance of different viewpoints.

Looking to volunteer in the community?

You and/or your students may feel the urge to volunteer in the community. Definitely do it! Find in-person volunteer opportunities at BC in the Community, and Idealist. The BC in the Community web portal offers 85+ local organizations, hour logging, and volunteer resume creation.

Looking for on-campus volunteer opportunities?

At Bellevue College, you can: