“…In view of scholars, learning in the community setting is more natural, open, critical and reciprocal than the closed boundaries of a traditional classrooms where teachers tells about community life and citizenship (Brandell & Hinck, 1997). On the other hand, in service-learning programmes, students do and learn how to become citizens and how to help community people to solve their problems (Quezada & Christopherson, 2005;Steinberg, Hatcher, & Bringle, 2011). Research has strongly supported the theory of Dewey that students develop better learning skills and knowledge through personal explorations and experience and as an experiential educational practice, service-learning best achieves the community development and citizenship development goals of education (Cone, 1996;Prentice, 2011).…”