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Service Learning Activities

Service learning is valuable to PSD because it allows us to advance sustainability in several areas at once. First, it creates community development as we use community members to identify and address problems. Second, it encourages youth engagement, as it is young people who are the main targets of such programs and are challenged to change their lives and communities. Third, service learning is a form of capacity building, giving youth valuable skills. PSD has put on several service learning activities in the past few months. Here are a few:

Twasel Initiative

In coordination with the Ministry of Education, PSD chose two local schools (Almazinyya and King Talal) to engage 150 students in communication, leadership, and CYD training for 1 hour a week. Afterwards, they revitalized their schools: students went to work cleaning the courtyard, painting walls, and planting trees and flowers.

Junior Police Program

In Nablus and Salfeet the PSD youth groups implemented the idea of the JPP in cooperation with the police and education directorates in the aforementioned districts. In mid-January the program started in schools of Nablus and Salfeet, adopting a peer-to-peer approach which engaged last years' trained participants and their peers.

Ambitious Lawyer Initiative

This initiative, which took place in May, engaged twenty young lawyers who wished to enhance their interpersonal skills. Bader Alhudhud trained participants in collaboration leadership, communication skills, job ethics and community development. At the end of the training the participants were divided into four groups based on university major to develop community initiatives in “Democracy and Human Rights.” Participants then established the winning initiative, a Human Rights Clinic, at the Nablus CLDC to provide younger generations with workshops to raise their awareness of their rights in the community.

Salfeet: An English Training Course for Police Officers

On November 1, 2011, members of the Salfeet Police Department received certificates for completing an English training course given by PSD. The course developed the English skills of the police officers, focusing on phrases and vocabulary necessary for communicating with English-speaking visitors. The students studied topics relevant to their work – including making introductions, asking for identification, giving directions, and responding to complaints. They learned through lectures and handouts, and practiced their skills by role playing as police officers helping English-speaking tourists. This course lasted three months and met twice weekly. The 23 police officers in the class received credit for a total of 50 hours of English.

Awarding the certificates at the ceremony were, from PSD, Nasfat al-Khufash, Coordinator of the PSD office in Salfeet, and Andrea Pietrzyk, the volunteer who taught the course; and from the Salfeet Police Department, Lieutenant Colonel-in-Law Alaa al-Shalabi, Commander of the Salfeet Police; and Major Samer Zitawi, Director of Public Relations and Media. Lt. Col. Al-Shalabi thanked PSD for implementing the English course and for its strong relationship with the Salfeet Police.



From left to right: Major Zatawi, Nasfat al-Khufash; Lt. Col. Shalabi; Andrea Pietrzyk

October Activities in Nablus

The Nablus CLDC has spent the week carrying out activities and programs in its many areas of activity, including ICT training, English conversation classes, and the NETKETABi program. In ICT, the Nablus CLDC has continued its computer classes for all students in various subjects. In the English conversation classes, the classes for this month have undergone a more extensive leveling system, in which a detailed verbal examination was used to place students into one of four levels. Currently in the English conversation class there are two level one classes, two level two classes, a level three class, and a level four class. The addition of two high school classes and a primary school class on Saturdays have brought the total number of students to about one hundred.

The NETKETABi program staff have spent the week processing the many applications we have gotten from the 4 major villages we are targeting, and are also in the process of expanding the program to new areas. To these ends, this week the paper application records we have received were transferred to Excel spreadsheets, and 1500 applications went out to Aseera Shamaliya to enroll new students in the program. PSD staff also met with several organizations interested in partnering with the NETKETABi program, including representatives of the Social Rehabilitation Program and the village counsel and three school principals in Roujeeb.

The Nablus CLDC has also taken on several new volunteers and interns to assist with the NETKETABi project. This week they were shown their duties and acquainted with the center. This culminated in the weekly staff meeting on Thursday, where everyone was introduced to the new team.

Service Learning Initiative in Partnership With Civil Defense

October 4, 2011

In keeping with its goal of youth engagement, PSD partnered with members of the Civil Defense and kicked off a training course for 25 PSD volunteers in Hebron this week. The course will include the theoretical aspects of civil defense as well as fire extinguishing, rescue, evacuation, prevention, home safety, and public safety. This hands on training will result in a cadre of trained volunteers ready to respond to an emergency.

This activity, part of PSD's broader service learning initiative, taught volunteers lessons both in the practicalities of emergency management and the reward brought by public service. The community benefits from greater readiness for disasters, and the volunteers have a whole new base of knowledge and experience to draw upon.

You can read more about this story here and here (sources in Arabic).

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