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= ** Beyond Summit: //Learning, Serving, Leading// ** =

At Summit School students become engaged, creative contributors to their communities and to the world. Summit students learn about local and global issues and related causes throughout the curriculum. Through the Advising Program, students get hands on experience working with established organizations. Students also initiate their own projects through the student-led Summit Service Council.

The goals of the service learning program are:


 * To educate students about issues that impact local communities and the world.
 * To educate students about organizations and causes related to these issues.
 * To provide opportunities for students to contribute to such organizations and causes.
 * To inspire students to ask new questions and offer new ideas.
 * To teach students principles of civic responsibility, service, stewardship, and leadership.

Requirements for Service Learning
 * Projects are sponsored by the Summit Service Council, part of the Executive Council of the Upper School, and led by ninth graders.


 * The Summit Service Council supervises the planning of projects and timeline of events. Meetings are held monthly and are led by current Executive Council leaders. Faculty sponsors and student project leaders serve on this committee.


 * Projects for the Upper School student body are led by ninth-grade students. To help students build leadership skills, students in sixth through eighth grades also help organize and sponsor projects for their individual grades. In sixth grade, teachers and students organize one project for third term. Seventh-grade teachers and students organize one project for second term. Eighth-grade teachers and students organize a project for first term. These projects allow students to experience the planning and follow-through needed to complete a project.


 * We serve many needs through our service learning program. Projects are based on outreach and spread throughout the community: one-third Summit, one-third local, and one-third international. Faculty and students help select projects.


 * We require students to earn the following hours:
 * Grade 6 - a minimum of 3 projects and six hours
 * Grade 7 - a minimum of 4 projects and eight hours
 * Grade 8 - a minimum of 5 projects and ten hours
 * Grade 9 - a minimum of 6 projects and fifteen hours


 * Students can earn up to half of their required hours outside of school. Students should get approval from their advisor prior to completing the service. Ongoing out-of-school service hours (e.g., ushering, helping with a Scout's Eagle project, serving as an acolyte, etc.) can be accumulated and turned in on a trimester basis.


 * Students individually join a service project by signing their name to the sign-up sheets outside the Upper School office. We expect students to follow through. If students cannot attend, they must arrange for a substitute. Students who fail to attend will lose the same number of hours they would have earned had they attended the project.


 * Cultivating responsibility is also an important goal of our Service Learning program. Students must document their service to others using service forms. Students will complete a form, including the signatures of the faculty sponsor and advisor, within one week of the project's completion. They will then turn in their forms to their advisors. Responsibility for recording and calculating service hours will be shared. Students can find these forms with their advisors.


 * Because service learning is an integral part of the curriculum, service awards will not be given for meeting requirements. Students who far exceed standards will receive recognition on Awards Day.