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Meet Why to Do It
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1. Meet the Carnegie Classification for Community Engagement June 13, 2008
2. Meet Why to Do It—Serves Multiple Purposes Use for classification, development and institutionalization of engagement
Useful for applying or preparing to in the future—either way helpful
Highlights areas to improve, framework itself helpful as an indication of where to focus—the development does not stop with classification!
Connects to other assessment strategies
Connects to accreditation—North Central Higher Learning Commission, WASC,SACS, NEASC,
Collaborate UNC system, New England, CSU web support,
3. Advantages of Using Carnegie Affirms and documents diversity of approaches to community engagement
Recognizes good work while encouraging on-going development
Legitimacy of Carnegie
Accountability strategy
Catalyst for change
Organizational development strategy
Institutional identity and market niche
5. Self Study Process Focuses institution-wide attention
Assures public of institutional quality
Supports institutional improvement
Creates critical data sets and on-going record keeping
Facilitates decision making and planning
Spurs institutional strategic change
6. Models for Assessing Community Engagement at the Institutional Level
7. Assessment
“Quality and outcomes can best be measured through structured assessment activities that generate and use “information about performance so that it is fed back into the system from which it comes to improve that system.”
Barbara Cambridge (1999). Effective Assessment, in Bringle, et al., Colleges and Universities as Citizens.
8. Frameworks Kellogg Forum
Committee on Institutional Collaboration and NASULGC
Furco Rubric for Institutionalizing Service-Learning
Gelmon Rubric Capacity for Community Engagement
Holland Matrix on Relevance to Mission
Campus Compact
- Wingspread Statements
- Indicators of Engagement
- MN Campus Compact Civic Engagement Indicators
NCA – Higher Learning Commission
Carnegie Elective Classification – Community Engagement
9. Tools/ Instruments Michigan State University OEM
IUPUI
Other campus based efforts – see the National Service-Learning Clearinghouse for examples (servicelearning.org)
Carnegie Classification Framework
10. “ Despite our commitment to community engagement, we had not previously compiled information about the many types and examples of community engagement that occur here. The self-study tells us that we have much to celebrate. It also provides us with a tool for analyzing where we can further increase and improve our efforts.”
11. “The Carnegie process is now informing university-wide strategic planning and is being turned into a set of recommendations. It has revitalized attention to the core urban mission of the institution and created widespread energy to deep community engagement.”
12. Meet the Classification…Origin And Purpose Of The Carnegie Classification Developed in the early 1970’s by the Carnegie Commission on Higher Education to inform its research program
A tool for simplifying the complexity of US higher education
Based on empirical data on what institutions do
Later published for use by others “conducting research on higher education”
13. Rethinking The Classification Responding with several independent parallel classification schemes
Providing new flexibility and responsibility
A multidimensional approach using multiple lenses
Better matching of classification to purpose
14. Elective Classification for Community Engagement An elective classification is one that relies on voluntary participation by institutions, and does not include the full universe of institutions.
The term, community engagement, is proposed because it offers the widest coverage, the broadest conception of interactions with community, and promotes inclusivity in the classification.
15. New Elective Carnegie Classification – Community Engagement Community Engagement describes the collaboration between higher education institutions and their larger communities (local, regional/state, national, global) for the mutually beneficial exchange of knowledge and resources in a context of partnership and reciprocity.
16. Intentions of Classification of Community Engagement Affirmation and documentation of the diversity of campuses and their approaches to community engagement
Indicators that recognize the “good work” that has been done while encouraging ongoing development toward the ideals of community engagement
Encouragement of inquiry and learning in the process of documentation
17. Intentions (continued) Instrumentation and documentation that provide useful information for institutions
Documentation that describes the scope of institutional engagement
A framework that builds on current work of other organizations for a shared base of measurement or documentation
A documentation process that is practical and makes use of existing data
18. Inaugural Classification Process(2006-2007) Letters of Intent Received (4-06) 145
Applicants Approved (4-06) 107
Applications Received (9-06) 88
Classified Institutions (12-06) 76
19. Classification Distributions 5 Curricular Engagement
9 Outreach Partnerships
62 Both Areas
Total: 76 Institutions
20. Newly Classified Institutions 44 public institutions
32 private institutions
36 doctoral granting institutions
21 masters colleges and universities
13 baccalaureate of arts and sciences
5 associate’s (community) colleges
1 specialized institution with arts focus
21. Observations: Strength and Consistencies Mission – Vision – Values
Marketing – catalogs, websites
Celebration, awards
Budgetary support
Infrastructure
Strategic Plan
Leadership – Chancellor, Pres.
Faculty Development
24. Relationships with Community: Improvements Needed Assessing community perceptions of institutional engagement
Promoting community involvement in the institutional agenda
Ensuring mutuality and reciprocity in community partnerships
25. Tips from Recently Classified Institutions Identify leadership for project
Customize to advance campus goals
Build upon institutional research/processes
Identify multiple purposes
Use as motivation for change or new directions
Conduct interviews, scan websites, develop instruments, etc.
Block out time and resources
26. Meet the Framework…
27. Framework Foundational Indicators
Categories of Community Engagement
28. The first stage – meeting these Foundational Indicators 1. Institutional Identity and Culture
2. Institutional commitment
These indicators must be demonstrated by both required and optional documentation.
29. Indicator: Institutional Identity and Culture Documentation Examples:
missions (institutional, departmental)
marketing materials (brochures, etc.)
website
community perceptions
celebrations, recognitions, events
30. Indicator: Institutional Commitment Documentation Examples:
executive leadership
strategic plan
budgetary allocations (internal/external)
infrastructure (Centers, Offices, etc.)
community voice in planning
faculty development
assessment/recording mechanisms
31. Indicator: Institutional Commitment (continued) Documentation Examples:
promotion and tenure policies
transcript notations of student engagement
student “voice” or leadership role
search/recruitment priorities
32. The second stage – selecting a category of Community Engagement
Curricular Engagement (5 institutions)
Outreach and Partnerships (9 institutions)
Both (62 institutions)
The documentation process is extensive and substantive, focused on significant qualities, activities, and institutional provisions that insure an institutionalized approach to community engagement.
33. Curricular Engagement …teaching, learning, and scholarship engage faculty, students, and community in mutually beneficial and respectful collaboration. Their interactions address community-identified needs, deepen students’ civic and academic learning, enhance community well-being, and enrich the scholarship of the institution.
34. Examples Of Curricular Engagement Service learning or Community-based
learning
Internships
Community Leadership programs
Community-based capstones
Faculty scholarship related to curricular engagement
35. Outreach and Partnership Outreach focuses on the application and provision of institutional resources for community use with benefits to both campus and community.
Partnership focuses on collaborative interactions with community and related scholarship for the mutually beneficial exchange, exploration, and application of knowledge, information, and resources (research, economic development, capacity building, etc.).
36. Examples Of Outreach and Partnerships Professional Development Centers
Program evaluations
Collaborative Libraries, Museums
Extension courses
Co-curricular service
Partnerships
Scholarship related to outreach and partnerships
37. Using Carnegie… Questions???
38. What was hardest to answer? Issues?What strategies need to be employed to make needed changes?How can intermediaries and networks help?
39. Meet Contacts & Resources…
Carnegiefoundation.org
driscoll@carnegiefoundation.org
Lorilee Sandmann sandmann@uga.edu
James Zuiches
James_Zuiches@ncsu.edu
40. www.compact.org/resources/ Carnegie Applications, examples of the 2006 successful Carnegie applications for Community Engagement.
Campus Compact. (2004). The community’s college: Indicators of engagement at two year institutions. Providence, RI: Campus Compact.
Campus Compact. (2001). Assessing service-learning and civic engagement: Principles and techniques. Providence, RI: Campus Compact.
41. http://www.pdx.edu/cae/ A Guide to Reciprocal Community-Campus Partnerships, a introductory guide to describing, developing and sustaining reciprocal partnerships. The guide provides understandings and practices that emerged from Portland State University’s Partnership Forum that brought together higher education and community partners to study partnerships.
www.ccph.info Achieving the Promise of Authentic Community-Higher Education Partnerships: Community Partners Speak Out, a comprehensive report from Community/Campus Partnerships for Health and the 2006 Wingspread Summit to advance authentic community-higher education partnerships. The report contains observations of today’s partnerships, analysis of “what’s working” and “what’s not,” challenges, and a vision for the future.
www.communityengagedscholarship.info The Community Engaged Scholarship Toolkit from Community/Campus Partnerships for Health is to provide health professional faculty with a set of tools to carefully plan and document their community-engaged scholarship and produce strong portfolios for promotion and tenure.