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Assessing Community Using the Seven Capitals. RCCI Conference, April 2006 Kathy Tweeten, Director, NDSU Extension Center for Community Vitality Margaret Tweten, Northeast District Director, NDSU Extension Service. Goals .
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Assessing Community Using the Seven Capitals RCCI Conference, April 2006 Kathy Tweeten, Director, NDSU Extension Center for Community Vitality Margaret Tweten, Northeast District Director, NDSU Extension Service
Goals • To provide an overview of a community assessment process used in three North Dakota communities. • To propose a way to connect institutions of higher education and their students to local communities and to each other.
Assessment Framework • Two pilot communities • Watford City – 1,400 population • Devils Lake – 7,200 population • One connecting two universities and the community • Hillsboro – 1,500 population
Process • On-line survey – social capital (SurveyMonkey) • Leadership interviews • Leadership meetings • Secondary research- • Review of past planning reports • Review of 3 months on news papers • Review of Census and other data
Reporting Watford City (see resource notebook for sample report) By: Dr. Cornelia Flora, NCRCRD Arion Thiboumery, graduate student
Findings and Use • Watford City • Affirming • Good balance of capital • Used in next planning effort • Devils Lake • Affirmed • Questioned • Planned to be used with Chamber
Observations & Questions • Both communities have great resources: • Difference – • investment of resources • broad based empowered leadership • resident interest Questions: • Does community size make a difference? • What factors/characteristics do progressive communities have in common?
Dissertation Proposal • Enhancing the Socio/economic Success of Rural Communities in North Dakota
Statement of Purpose • The purpose of this study is to investigate the relationship between development of community capitals and socio/economic success of rural communities in North Dakota
Problem Overview • The future of rural America depends on decisions made by citizens, businesses, county governments, state legislatures, and Congress. While much of the activity is local, many of the challenges in rural areas are common across the United States. • In addition, rural leaders are seeking to understand how to revitalize their economies and are looking for models that will help them decide what investments are most effective in improving rural quality of life and economic well-being.
Problem Overview • Rural America leads the nation in: • Families living in poverty. • Rate of unemployment/underemployment. • Functionally illiterate adults. • Many college-educated rural residents move to urban communities. • Brain drain remains significant in rural areas.
Discussion of Significance • Rural leaders and policymakers can use the results of this research to design strategies for strengthening the quality of life within their communities and assessing their economies by examining and comparing their community assets against the community capitals model.
Critics of Rural Development • Should we continue to invest resources in depopulated states or follow the suggestions of the Popper’s (1987) in the Buffalo Commons Movement? • Rural residents portray as: • Destroying the land through soil erosion • Corporate farms polluting rivers • Farmers utilizing migrant workers for cheap farm laborers living in substandard housing • Rural companies that pay low wages • (Freshwater, 1999).
Literature Fields • Intangible Capitals • 1. Cultural capital • (Bourdieu, 1986; Kohn, 1963; Lareau, 2002; Vidich & Bensman, 1968) • 2. Human capital • (Becker, 2002; Flora, 1999; Schultz, 1961) • 3. Political capital • (Hunter, 1953; Mills, 1956; Polsby, 1960)
Literature Fields • Intangible Capitals • 4. Social capital • (Coleman, 1988; Kaufman, 1959; Putman, 1993, Toqueville, [1835] 1956) • A. Bonding Social Capital • B. Bridging Social Capital
Literature Review • Tangible Capitals • 1. Built capital • (Weber, 1968) • 2. Financial capital • (Weber, 1978) • 3. Natural capital • (Lewontin, 2000)
The difference between a community that is not losing population, increasing jobs, increasing assets and wealth, can be explained by which capitals they mobilize and how they invest them.
Proposed Method - Qualitative • Select two communities in North Dakota to compare or contrast (case study) • Constant • Population – 1,000+ • Socioeconomic Indicators • Local newspaper • Health care facility • Maintaining or growing population • Financial services • Retail services • Completed community planning process
Proposed Methods • Conduct community capacity assessment mapping via e-survey (web-monkey) • Cultural Capital • “Our community sees itself as part of a greater region and considers the needs of all communities within that region in our planning” • Source: Flora
Proposed Methods • Focus Group Interview – (10-15) • Selection – utilize snowball effect • Interview of decision makers • Case study comparison/contrast • Mix methods of qualitative and quantitative
Connecting to Others – Goal 2 • Model for other institutions • Critical Pieces • Connections between institutions • Funding ???? • Connections in local community
Challenges • IRB’s • Funding • Faculty buy-in • Student involvement • Time constraints • Change in leadership • Research bias
Reporting back to local audience Erickson - Handbook of Research Teaching in M.C. Wittrock
Margaret Tweten -- margaret.tweten@ndsu.edu (701)780-8229 Kathleen Tweeten – kathleen.tweeten@ndsu.edu (701)328-9718