Integrating Community Engagement and Service Learning into Environmental Engineering Curricula
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. East Tampa
2.2. Interdisciplinary Teaching, Learning and Research
2.3. Environmental Justice Seminar
2.4. Envision Sustainable Communities Course
2.5. Attitudinal Surveys
3. Results
3.1. Environmental Justice Seminar Findings and Analysis
“Ensuring communities (especially historically marginalized communities) have the opportunity and voice to participate in ensuring their communities are safe and clean places to live. Either through remediation (clean ups, resource investment, legal cases) or preventative (policy, legislation, zoning) work.”
“I appreciated seeing the looks on the Seniors faces when our videos included direct quotes from when we interviewed them. I started off the semester with being unsure with just how much the course was actually going to work together with them. I heavily valued seeing the Seniors, especially the ones I interviewed, seeing their own contributions in our videos. It made me realize how much the communities that work together with universities appreciate seeing their voice and power in these projects. Reading about that relationship is different than seeing it and being in that relationship in person.”
“This class was really interesting for me as an engineer because I’ve never taken an anthropology class before. It was the first time we’ve really gotten to interact with the community as our main focus.”“It is one thing to sit in class every day and read a ton of research papers, but it is a different thing when you come to the community, and you sit down with people and actively listen.”
3.2. Envision Sustainable Communities Course Findings and Analysis
“In my opinion EJ means everyone has the right to have clean water to drink, fresh air to breathe, nice neighborhood, all the necessary things that everyone needs should be near the place they live, and I mean infrastructure (highways, bridges, …) should be a connector between people not a divider.
“Visiting the stormwater ponds earlier this semester, it’s the first field trip I’ve had since middle school. Very educational.”
“The most valuable academic experience I had was the 22nd street field trip because of how eye opening it was to see the community project was based on.”
“The [class was] rich with creativity and engineering design ideas. I enjoyed seeing the different group’s ideas for the stormwater pond. There were many great additions that I did not think of myself such as the addition of speed bumps and raised crosswalks to help with pedestrian safety. The boardwalk idea around the entire lake was another great idea since the slopes are so steep.”
“I enjoyed collaborating with my classmates to see ways which we could enhance the park on 22nd St and we had a lot. I’m glad most of us had close to the same kinds of ideas and tried to promote more involvement for the community. This is the kind of thinking that has not been as prominent in the field of engineering. This also shows me that we will be the generation to take more account of communities wants and needs when we are trying to develop infrastructure.”
“Meeting and talking with the representatives of the project we are working on, to actually gain a realistic perspective rather than pure numbers.”
“My most valuable community experience was taking the field trip to 22nd street and hearing from community partners on the issues they face everyday.”
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| ABET | Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology |
| EJ | Environmental Justice |
| ISI | Institute for Sustainable Infrastructure |
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| Student Demographics | Environmental Justice | Envision Sustainable Communities |
|---|---|---|
| Total number of students | 20 | 35 |
| Undergraduate | 11 (55%) | 28 (80%) |
| Graduate | 9 (45%) | 7 (20%) |
| Civil or Environmental Engineering Major | 2 (10%) | 33 (94%) |
| Anthropology Major | 10 (50%) | 1 (3%) |
| Other Majors * | 8 (40%) | 1 (3%) |
| Female Students | 18 (90%) | 13 (37%) |
| Male Students | 2 (10%) | 22 (63%) |
| Enrolled in Sustainable Communities Course | 2 (10%) | - |
| Enrolled in Environmental Justice Seminar | - | 2 (6%) |
| Topics | Pre-Assessment Themes | Student Response Examples | Post-Assessment Themes | Student Response Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How would you define community? | What did you learn about community in this course? | |||
| Community | Shared attribute, Commonality, Care (n = 13) | “Community refers to the group one identifies themselves as belonging to. It can coalesce because of a shared location, interest, or any other commonality.” | Difference and Fluidity (n = 5) | “A community is not a homogenous entity, there are many individuals with different interests, priorities, and goals that have to be balanced and considered.” |
| How would you define environmental justice? | What did you learn about environmental justice in this course? | |||
| Environmental Justice | Environmental hazards, health crises, certain communities (n = 13) | “Environmental Justice is the systemic issue that works to compensate and redeem groups that have suffered major health crises due to hazardous facilities being disproportionately assembled in their communities by the facts of class and more so race.” | Policy, politics, decisions (n = 5) | “I learned how much environmental justice is tied to past policies and decisions. Decisions and policies made in times when racism was considered okay continue today.” |
| How would you define racism? | What did you learn about racism in this course? | |||
| Structural Racism | Discrimination, Prejudice, Use of Binaries (e.g., direct/personal vs. structural/systemic, conscious vs. unconscious, physical vs. emotional) (n = 15) | “Racism is the unfair, inequitable, and historic treatment of a group based on their skin color, race, and/or ethnicity. It occurs not only in personal interactions between people but also as a larger systemic issue which places certain people more at a disadvantage than others.” “Preferential treatment of individuals of a certain race, whether purposeful or implicit.” | Connected to policy and environment (n = 6) | “I learned that there are more burdens that people experiencing interpersonal and institutional racism face than just social and financial. Racism also impacts people’s health and wellbeing because of issues like environmental racism placing a disproportionate amount of toxic waste facilities in communities of color because the majority white population didn’t want them.” |
| How do you expect your involvement in this course will support your academic/professional growth? | How has your involvement in this course supported your academic/professional growth? | |||
| Academic Experience | Skills and Experiences, Application, Learning (n = 14) | “I think it will give me some great hands-on experience in the community that I haven’t had before which will benefit me when I do field work and community work in the future” “I hope that what I learn in this course will help me determine where to go from here. I am interested in sustainability, community spaces (specifically co-living spaces), and environmental anthropology.” | Learning and skill implementation (n = 6) | “Through this course I have been able to greatly expand on my knowledge of environmentalism and race in the United States… Through this experience I have begun to solidify my personal academic and professional goals as I approach graduate school and the job market.” |
| What do you think your most valuable community experience might be this semester? | What was your most valuable community experience this semester? | |||
| Community Experience | Real-life: Hearing and Helping (n = 10) | “Most definitely hearing from residents and community members first-hand and working with them to address their concerns. I love the opportunity to take the learning out of the classroom and actually apply what we know…” | Collaboration and relationship building (n = 3) | “I appreciated seeing the looks on the Jazzy Seniors faces when our videos included direct quotes from when we interviewed them. I started off the semester with being unsure with just how much the course was actually going to work together with them. I heavily valued seeing the Seniors, especially the ones I interviewed, seeing their own contributions in our videos. It made me realize how much the communities that work together with universities appreciate seeing their voice and power in these projects. Reading about that relationship is different than seeing it and being in that relationship in person.” |
| Topics | Pre-Assessment Themes | Student Response Examples | Post-Assessment Themes | Student Response Examples |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| How would you define community? | What did you learn about community in this course? | |||
| Community | Commonality, Group (n = 13) | “I define community as a group or people that share a common or common beliefs.” | Connection, Challenges (n = 19) | “This course helped me recognize that community isn’t just to define groups in same neighborhood or areas, but those who share a background, belief, ideals, and any values that connect them together.” “Ways infrastructure can help or harm community” |
| How would you define environmental justice? | What did you learn about environmental justice in this course? | |||
| Environmental Justice | Environmental Protection and Fairness (n = 10) | “The process or processes which help protect all environments from unjust, unethical, or damaging practices by implementing and enforcing laws and regulations.” “I define environmental justice as the issue of fairness in the case of environmental protection and laws set forth.” | Equal Rights, Decision-Making, Infrastructure, Envision principles (n = 15) | “This course taught me the method to achieve environmental justice, through the Envision framework.” “I learned that environmental justice is a concept that aims to ensure that all people have equal rights and opportunities to participate in environmental decisions that affect their lives.” “I learned that environmental justice affects people livelihoods, health, environment, and money. It’s not just something that’s ‘unfair’.” |
| How would you define racism? | What did you learn about racism in this course? | |||
| Structural Racism | Discrimination, mistreatment, negative opinion or feeling (n = 13) | “Unjust treatment to any individual based on their ethnicity or background” “Discrimination towards someone or a group due to their race” | Within Infrastructure (n = 13) | “I learned that the environment and how communities are built actually plays a big role in racism.” “It is reproduced and reinforced in infrastructure, the built environment and often unconsciously” |
| How do you expect your involvement in this course will support your academic/professional growth? | How has your involvement in this course supported your academic/professional growth? | |||
| Academic Experience | Broaden perspective, opportunities (n = 13) | “I think it will open my mind to things I had never considered before allowing me to grow.” “It will provide a perspective that traditional courses won’t on how what we do as engineers impacts those with a less powerful voice.” | Perspective shift, Reflection (n = 19) | “I’ve learned how to engage better with a community for infrastructure projects which is very beneficial as an engineer about to enter industry.” |
| What do you think your most valuable community experience might be this semester? | What was your most valuable community experience this semester? | |||
| Community Experience | Openness and uncertainty (n = 6) | “Connecting with individuals and hearing there concerns and letting it mold the type of engineer I want to become.” “Discovering new ways to contribute to my community.” “I am currently unsure and excited to find out” | Community Partnership, Field Trip (n = 22) | “Meeting and talking with the representatives of the project we are working on, to actually gain a realistic perspective rather than pure numbers.” “The most valuable academic experience I had was the 22nd street field trip because of how eye opening it was to see the community project was based on.” |
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Share and Cite
Henderson, M.; Vidmar, A.; Trotz, M.; Cobb-Roberts, D.; Wells, E.C. Integrating Community Engagement and Service Learning into Environmental Engineering Curricula. Educ. Sci. 2025, 15, 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121599
Henderson M, Vidmar A, Trotz M, Cobb-Roberts D, Wells EC. Integrating Community Engagement and Service Learning into Environmental Engineering Curricula. Education Sciences. 2025; 15(12):1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121599
Chicago/Turabian StyleHenderson, Michelle, Abby Vidmar, Maya Trotz, Deirdre Cobb-Roberts, and E. Christian Wells. 2025. "Integrating Community Engagement and Service Learning into Environmental Engineering Curricula" Education Sciences 15, no. 12: 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121599
APA StyleHenderson, M., Vidmar, A., Trotz, M., Cobb-Roberts, D., & Wells, E. C. (2025). Integrating Community Engagement and Service Learning into Environmental Engineering Curricula. Education Sciences, 15(12), 1599. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15121599

