Spring 2025 Courses
Wintermester Courses
Leadership & Innovation at Disney
PPS 1100-01, 1 hour, January 2-7, 2025
Instructor: Jeremy Vickers, Baylor External Affairs
This course provides an unforgettable winter experience that blends leadership development, community service, and the magic of Disney! Instructor Permission Required
Spring Courses
Poverty in Waco
PPS 1100-01 & 1100-02, 1 hour, Wednesdays, 12:20-1:10pm & 1:25-2:15 PM
Instructor: Josh Caballero, Community Engagement Officer, City of Waco
This course is designed to provide students with a basic understanding of the causes and consequences of poverty in Waco and determine ways students can become more civically engaged. Students will learn from a variety of experts and Waco specific studies about the impact of poverty and its intersection with the sectors of employment, education, health, and community development. Students will also get a firsthand glimpse into the challenges facing those experiencing poverty in Waco through 20 hours of volunteer service over the course of the semester.
Law and Public Service
PPS 1100-03 & 1100-04, 1 hour, Wednesdays, 2:30-3:20 & 3:35-4:25pm
Instructor: Kent McKeever, Founder of Greater Waco Legal Services
In addition to one weekly classroom hour devoted to the public service aspect of the legal profession, students will engage the local legal community and various manifestations of law and public service outside the classroom. Whether
students are considering a career in law or not, all those interested in how the legal profession partners with those working in other public service roles and intersects with other vital social systems and professional endeavors will find this course engaging, edifying, and equipping. Students will hone and develop thinking, collaboration, and advocacy skills through their work inside and outside the classroom.
Community Gardening
PPS 1100-5 & 1100-6, 1 hour, Thursdays, 12:30-1:20 PM & 2:00-2:50 PM
Instructor: Doug Nesmith, Lab Coordinator, Baylor Environmental Science
In this course students learn the value of community gardens in schools and urban areas. Through volunteerism, students will learn how community gardens provide fresh produce as well as neighborhood improvement, sense of community and connection to the environment.
Housing Insecurity & Nonprofit Solutions
PPS 1100-7, 1 hour, Thursdays, 2:00-2:50pm
Instructor: John Alexander, Executive Director, Waco Habitat for Humanity
This course is designed to introduce students to ideas and methods of community service in the specific area of residential housing/construction. Conceptual differences between public and private sector housing initiatives are discussed with emphasis on the historical development of Habitat for Humanity as an ecumenical Christian, non-governmental organization (NGO). The philosophy behind this organization and details of its history are discussed in depth. Students participate in Habitat projects and learn first-hand the importance of community service, contributing 20 total hours of work time during the semester.
Urban Farmers Markets
PPS 1100-08, 1 hour, Tuesdays, 2:00-2:50pm
Instructor: Bethel Erickson, Director, Waco Downtown Farmers Market
This course explores the connection between small business and the local food and farming community - through the operation of an alternative marketplace. Students will learn how the Waco Downtown Farmers Market addresses food access, supports entrepreneurship, and builds community by engaging in weekly discussions and readings that investigate the various parts of the food system. Students will also spend 10 hours outside of the classroom volunteering with the farmers market or market vendors.
Advocacy for Children and Families
PPS 1100-09, 1 hour, Fridays, 12:20-1:10pm
Instructor: Dr. Kerry Burkley, Program Director, Children’s Advocacy Center
Students in this course discuss the specific impact of how trauma affects individuals and how a ministry of hope increases the likelihood of generating a “new normal” in which a family can survive and thrive.
Trauma Advocacy
PPS 1100-10, 1 hour, Fridays, 1:25-2:15pm
Instructor: Dr. Kerry Burkley, Program Director, Children’s Advocacy Center
This course engages students in becoming informed leaders and community responders, and in becoming advocates for the protection of those affected by child abuse.
Accompanying Immigrants in Waco
PPS 1100-11 & 1100-12, 1 hour, Tuesdays, 3:30-4:20 pm, & Thursdays, 3:30-4:20 pm
Instructor: Israel Loachamín, Executive Director, (section 11) and Emily Morrow Loachamín (section 12), La Puerta Waco
This course is designed to provide students with a basic understanding of the journey of a Spanish-speaking immigrant in Waco to develop an awareness of the unique and rich community that the U.S. has. Students will explore the journey of a Spanish-speaking immigrant through reading, journaling, volunteering with La Puerta, and class discussions.
Transforming Child Poverty
PPS 1100-13 & 1100-14, 1 hour, Mondays, 10:10-11:00 AM & 11:15 AM-12:05 PM
Instructor: Sarah Pedrotti, Transformation Waco
Working with Transformation Waco, this course explores the consequences of child poverty in Waco and attends to the role cross-sector collaboration, community schools, and wrap-around services play in mitigating disadvantage.
Community Data and Research
PPS 1100-15, 1 hour, Mondays, 5:30-6:20 PM
Instructor: Jeremy Rhodes, Senior Director of Data & Research, Prosper Waco
Engaging and partnering with community members and entities in research, sometimes in the form of research practice partnership, can be a powerful mechanism for ensuring research and data is appropriately situated within the context and utilized for social change. Students will learn how to apply research methods and data analysis to local organizations focused on social impact. Partnering with Prosper Waco, students will implement a community-engaged research project.
Family Community Medicine
PPS 1100-18, 1 hour, Wednesdays, 9:05-9:55 AM
Instructor: Dr. Michael Boone, Waco Family Medicine
Students in this course discuss primary care family medicine for disadvantaged communities and volunteer weekly in clinics at Waco Family Medicine.
Arts and Social Change
PPS 1100-19 & 1100-20, 1 hour, Mondays, 8:00-8:50 AM & 9:05-9:55 AM
Instructor: Soledad Bautista, Director of Professional Development and Outreach, Creative Waco
Alongside partners at Creative Waco, students will pursue Design Thinking projects as a collective healing tool for meaningful change in communities. Understanding the power and limitless potential of the creative and arts economy will help us see ourselves as contributors of the cultural heritage and the public good of any and all of the places that we inhabit.
Food Justice: Solving Access Disparities
PPS 1100-21, 1 hour, Mondays, 12:20-1:10 PM
Instructor: Tasha Roberts, Director of Public Affairs, Baylor Collaborative for Hunger and Poverty
This course will invite students to create and submit a Request for Proposal (RFP) for a food intervention to compete for a $20,000 grant. This intervention will address food insecurity for individuals, families, or communities impacted by the carceral system. Students will act as a nonprofit foundation board, interviewing and selecting an external partner to implement the grant-funded intervention under the supervision of the Baylor Collaborative team. Students will gain insight into the grant proposal process as well as valuable experience engaging with organizations addressing food insecurity and prison reentry.
Learning for the World
PPS 1101 (5 sections), 1 hour, Tuesdays, 2:00-2:50 PM
Instructors: Tammy Adair, Guilherme Almeida, Mona Choucair, and Jennifer Good, Baylor Office of Engaged Learning
Focuses on pathways to excellence in scholarship and citizenship for students, enabling them to connect their transformational work in the classroom to opportunities for immersion, application, and engagement. Students will work with local nonprofits to learn how to address persistent community needs and challenges.
Community Law Enforcement
PPS 1102-01, 1 hour, Wednesdays, 10:10-11:00am
Instructor: Robert Lanning, Assistant Police Chief, Waco Police Department
This course provides students an opportunity to interact with and listen to federal, state, county, and municipal government officials and understand how they function. The students are exposed to 12-14 guest lectures from all areas mentioned. The focus is on management and law enforcement and class discussions are held on hot topics such as racial profiling, use of force, etc. The course involves guest speakers such as federal agents, district attorney representatives, state police, municipal police, county police, S.W.A.T. teams and crime scene experts.
Leadership and Social Change
PPS 2302-01, 3 hours, Tuesdays & Thursdays, 9:30-10:45 AM
Instructor: Leia Duncan, Baylor & Beyond LLC
This course illuminates the theory and practice of leading groups toward positive social change locally and globally, emphasizing issues such as poverty, public education, and systemic inequality. All students will learn from community engagement projects and activities on best practices for leading change. The primary goal for this course is for each
student to think about their role as a contributing global citizen.
Law, Justice, and the Community
PPS 337201, 3 hours, Mondays & Wednesdays, 4:40-5:30 PM
Cross listed with PSC 3372
Instructor: Chris Galeczka, Baylor Law School
Introduction to legal practice. Contains community service component and required internship in legal offices.
Philanthropy and the Public Good
PPS 4310, 3 hours, Wednesdays, 12:20-3:05pm
Cross listed with SOC 4312
Instructors: Andy Hogue & Mark Richards, Baylor Office of Engaged Learning
This course is designed to provide an understanding of the role of philanthropy in shaping public life and investigate charity’s relationship to power in contemporary social institutions. Students will apply disciplinary knowledge towards stewarding 100,000 dollars to the Waco community in partnership with local social sector organizations.