“…Phillips (2011) asserted that many scholars and practitioners see service-learning as a tool for social transformation. However, some have expressed concern that traditional service-learning approaches that position the university as a source of expertise and benevolence, and/or reinforce stereotypes and the status quo, do not align with the social work profession's emphasis on strengths, empowerment, challenging privilege and oppression, and being client-centered (Donaldson & Daughtery, 2011;Phillips, 2011). In one survey of social work educators about perceived effects of service-learning, respondents were least likely to say that service-learning "has the explicit social justice aim of dismantling structures of inequality" (Cronley et al, 2014, p. 161).…”