Shaker, Genevieve G.Ho, Meng-HanJi, Chen2024-10-142024-10-142024"The Interview Inspired, Shocked, and Moved Me": Philanthropic Informational Interviews as a Pandemic Alternative to Service-Learning. Journal of Nonprofit Education & Leadership, 14(1). doi:10.18666/JNEL-2023-12044https://hdl.handle.net/1805/43915The Covid-19 pandemic upended college classrooms, challenging instructors to deliver classes differently while still seeking to achieve pre-planned goals. Service-learning instructors faced a quandary: discontinuing activities could compromise course integrity, but requiring service was impossible, impractical, or inappropriate. Creative solutions were needed. This study explored the learning outcomes from a replacement activity, the philanthropic informational interview, in a philanthropy general education class and asked whether it could generate outcomes similar to service-learning. Data were drawn from student reflections (n=145) from 9 online course sections between spring 2020 and summer 2021. Thematic analysis identified 8 learning outcomes: engaging with social issues, nonprofit solutions to social issues, insights into nonprofits’ innerworkings, philanthropy as everyone’s responsibility, enhanced empathetic understanding, value-driven career inspiration, developing interview skills, and building career capacities. These outcomes align with research about service-learning and suggest that the philanthropic informational interview can be a meaningful alternative to service-learning in some situations.en-USCovid-19 teachingInformational interviewLearning outcomesNonprofit and philanthropic studies educationService-learning“The interview inspired, shocked, and moved me”: Philanthropic informational interviews as a pandemic alternative to service learningArticle