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Creating Meaningful Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships in College Access Research. September 13, 2004 Council for Opportunity in Education Session #32. Outline of Session. Overview of key questions Research and curriculum design Research and program design- SummerTIME
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Creating Meaningful Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships in College Access Research September 13, 2004 Council for Opportunity in Education Session #32
Outline of Session • Overview of key questions • Research and curriculum design • Research and program design- SummerTIME • Research and product design- CHEC-List • Options for creating partnerships • Question and Answer Session
Key questions: • What does it mean to do research? • How do findings inform curriculum and program design?
SummerTIME Seminar(Tools Information Motivation Education) • How did the research process lead to the creation of SummerTIME? • U.S. DOE study designed to determine what makes an effective college preparation program • Collaboration with 12 high schools, multiple stakeholders
Major findings • Preparing for College text (researchers) • Case studies (practitioners, students & families) • Monograph [available on website] (researchers and practitioners)
How findings informed curriculum • Year 1: Writing the personal statement (academic rigor) • Year 2: Articulating a college plan (guidance) • Year 3: Building your college network (social support networks)
Lessons learned re: collaboration • Intended goal: to give back –but we learned so much at the same time • Insight into how complicated application process is • Insight into challenges practitioners face (follow-up, programming, family involvement) • Good PR for future research • Increased visibility on campuses -reciprocity
The CHEPA CHEC-list(Creating Helpful Environments for College-going) • How did the research process come together to create a “practical” use product? • Our research context • Previous and on-going research in large, urban high schools serving mainly students of color • A university level research center with project team members • Established contacts with local practitioners
Useful Collaborations • Collaborating with researchers • Creating a writing group • Discussing our visions • Collaborating with practitioners • Organizing focus groups • Integrating new ideas • Working with multiple stakeholders
Creating the CHEPA CHEC-list The CHEPA CHEC-list is a booklet that includes research based practical suggestions for counselors as they work on issues of access with three key stakeholders: Students Families Other counselors
Creating the CHEPA CHEC-List • Results of the collaboration • A document that intersects research, practice, and the voices of those involved in college access • Continued and new partnerships with a number of key constituents • View the CHEC-List at: http://www.usc.edu/dept/chepa • Challenges and opportunities • Locating informed collaborators who could participate over time • Finding a time for all collaborators to work together • Sorting through multiple options for translating research to practice
Creating Partnerships • University research centers • Practitioner organizations • Useful texts
Facilitator Information Dr. Myron Pope, Assistant Vice President of Student Services, University of Central Oklahoma, Mpope5@ucok.edu Zoë Blumberg Corwin, Research Assistant, Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis, University of Southern California, zcorwin@usc.edu Kristan M. Venegas, Research Assistant, Research Assistant, Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis, University of Southern California, kristanv@usc.edu