Office of Volunteer Programs at U I U C

Service Reflection Activities

 

1-5 Minute Activities

Question discussion: Randomly, or in a circle, each person responds to a posed question (such as "project highlight").

One to Three Words: Each person shares one to three words to describe the service activity or how you feel about the service activity or anything else regarding the project.

Journaling: Each person responds to a question in writing.

Poetry/Writing Slam: Take turns; each day somebody else will write a short poem or sentence about the project, then share it with the group.

Sculptor: One participant chooses a topic and asks for a set amount of participants to be the clay. The clay people let the sculptor mold them into the sculptor's vision of their topic, i.e., invasive plant removal or the plight of someone who is homeless or racist.

5-30 Minute Activities


What? So What? Now What?: To get to each step in the model, allow 5-30 minutes for group processing.

Written Reflection: Pose three or four questions using "what, so what, now what" model, and allow time for writing (i.e., what you did, why/how you did it, how you could do it better).

The Image: Prior to the project, each person writes or draws about the people or objects they will be working with (such as a tree for a tree-planting project or the community being served), the subject matter, or their feelings about the project. Revisit (or re-write/draw) it after the service project and discuss.

Senses: Before activity, project, event, or even before the first day or service, ask participants to share what they expect to hear, smell, see, touch, and taste. The follow-up after the day with what the participant actually senses.

Pictionary: Have a pictionary game about the experience and how you felt. Talk about it as a group.

Parables/Stores: Read a piece of pertinent literature and have participant's response and draw correlations to service experience.

Letter to Self: Prior to a project, have participants write a letter to themselves about their personal and career goals regarding the project, or feelings about the project or community. Place it in a sealed envelope, mail it to yourself, or hand out again to the team after six months and reflect.

Masks: Make a two-sided mask from a paper plate. Draw an image of how others might see you on one side and how you see yourself on the other. Discuss the contrast. Or, could be work self/free time self, actual work/dream work.

Gingerbread Models: Draw a large gingerbread person at the beginning of the day with drawings/writings of what makes a good (mentor, urban forester, team member, etc.). At the end of the day share what you did well, how you thought you could improve.

Yarn Web: Stand in a circle with a ball of yarn. Each person throws it to another and says one word that explains what they will bring to the next project, something they appreciated in the person they are throwing it to, what they learned, etc. The yard forms a web supported by the group. Use a thicker string, lower it, and have someone climb on and try to support a person! (Use caution with this one!).

Cartoon: Draw a cartoon that teaches something important regarding the service project.

All on the Wall: Put a large piece of paper up on one wall or all the way around the room. Participants write or draw feelings, thoughts/learning on the paper. Facilitator leads discussion based on writings.

Recommendations: Compose a letter to your site supervisor offering suggestions for working with future volunteers.

Lifeline Biography: Draw a line representing and plot significant periods/events (with writing or drawings) influencing who you are. Share with a partner or small group. This can be adapted many ways: do the same except using a river as a metaphor (where were there rapids, meandering, etc.) or do a Service Biography line (when first service experience, what influenced you, positive and negative impacts on your life).

Object share: Each person brings in and passes around an object and shares how the object is like them or the project they just did (pick a specific one). Examples include: "what I contributed to the team, how I felt about this project, what I learned, etc.". The object can be something found in nature, a type of food, a book, etc. (pick one!)

How Did It Taste: Bring a mixture of fruits and nuts, have them use these items as metaphors to describe their day, week project, group interaction, etc., and answer the questions "How did it taste?" Then, "What would you like it to taste like?"


 

Copyright 2002 Office of Volunteer Programs.
Send comments to ovp@uiuc.edu

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