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Integrating Public Policy CBR into a Civic Engagement Minor

Integrating Public Policy CBR into a Civic Engagement Minor. for the Bonner/FIPSE Civic Engagement Academic Initiative conference November 5, 2006 Lisa Whitaker Center for Community Development & Social Justice Lynchburg College. Overview.

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Integrating Public Policy CBR into a Civic Engagement Minor

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  1. Integrating Public Policy CBR into a Civic Engagement Minor for the Bonner/FIPSE Civic Engagement Academic Initiative conference November 5, 2006 Lisa Whitaker Center for Community Development & Social Justice Lynchburg College

  2. Overview • A few facts about the minor (more details in your notebook) • Very brief history of CBR at LC • Existing & new courses in the minor that have a CBR component • How the new public policy emphasis in CBR changes the conversations we have • Some very recent examples & lessons learned from the brokering process with public policy CBR projects

  3. Why civic engagement? • By civic engagement we mean to become citizens in a democracy who are caring and involved, regardless of partisan ideology • We strive to help our students (and ourselves) become wise, not just smart • Our most cherished traditions strongly indicate it is wise to be compassionate and to care about the lives of others • Care not just in our hearts, but in our actions (activism)

  4. The CCDSJ at LC • Center for Community Development & Social Justice created in late 1990’s by Dr. Tom Seaman • COPC (HUD’s OUP) • Jessie Ball duPont funding also helped establish the COPC • Institutionalization in 2005 • Bonner program since 2004-05

  5. Continuum of Engagement • SERVE (voluntarism) • Service-learning (CCDSJ) • Bonner program and Civic Engagement minor (these span the continuum) • Social entrepreneurship internship • Community-based research (and policy activism)

  6. Minor in Civic Engagement at LC • 21 credits (6 credits overlap Gen Ed rqrmnts & 1 credit overlaps with BLP course rqrment) • Housed in the Political Science Department • Utilizes 19 credits of existing coursework with some adaptation (GS 220, Capstone) • Created two new 1-credit courses: • Introduction to Civic Participation and Community-Based Research • Putting Civic Engagement in Perspective

  7. Existing Courses in the CE Minor with a CBR Component • SOC209 – Applied Sociology – the professors teaching this course for the last 3 years have incorporated CBR projects, although not all will have a clear emphasis on public policy • Examples of projects: Meals on Wheels, Detox Data, Buprenorphine, Perception of Youth Gangs • GS220 – Exploring Social Entrepreneurship • Elements being added: • Defining public policy • News summaries & policy brief items (esp. “scope of the problem”) in the area the student has identified and researched as “the one change you would like to make in the world” • www.policyoptions.org

  8. Two New Courses • (NEW) GS307 – Introduction to Civic Participation & Community-Based Research • Historical roots of CBR • Principles of CBR • Differences between CBR & traditional research • The “purple book” text • Community partnerships & ABCD model • Identifying community & policy-maker needs for studies (nonprofit directory update while identifying their project) • (NEW) GS430 – Putting Civic Engagement in Perspective • Reflective course for all graduating students in the minor (from various majors) to come together to share their experiences as they complete their capstone projects • Builds collegiality • Forum for sharing & developing strategies for completing CBR projects • Cross-disciplinary discussion/analysis of the policies & models they’re encountering • Talking to students in GS 220 and GS 307

  9. Capstone is CBR Project • Capstone Course or GS311 (Ind. Study) • Research proposals are approved by the CE minor steering committee • Actual project is underway; will likely include policy analysis and/or research into best practice models • Total: 6-9 credits or more of CBR is integrated into the minor

  10. Other CBR Connections • Bonner Leaders Program (CBR as direct service) • Independent Study option for all students • New Student-Faculty Research Coordinator position (Dr. Allison Jablonski) works with the CBR project broker (CCDSJ) • Student Scholar Showcase – new Experiential Learning category (CBR projects can also be entered as straight research) • Variety of courses not in the minor have integrated CBR (Advanced Research Methods in Sociology, Population Studies, and others)

  11. Student Focus Group • “The minor brings together courses across disciplines and capstones too.” • “It covers issues in today’s world.” • “The minor would fill a gap at LC and you would be DOING in the community.” • “It’s very Bonneresque and I would have taken it.” • “I like the community project – real world – at the end.”

  12. Student Feedback • Challenges: • Nursing and education majors with credit intensive courseloads found it a bit daunting but were also among the most interested • “Although this would be very helpful and relevant, it would be very difficult to add into a 4-year program.” – Nursing student • Our response was to allow substitutions for the research methods course • Student feedback will continue to be important to the evolution of the minor

  13. The Public Policy Focus: Changing the Conversation • Before Public Policy CBR, primarily interviewing & surveying exec directors of non-profits (Nonprofit Directory) for research ideas • Now, talking with policy makers, advocates, neighborhood groups, & organizers more often (in addition to non-profits) • Great conversations: Policy-makers & policy-influencers enjoy being asked about the issues they really care about – often leads to unexpected connections • Example: The city manager/urban planner & the environmental scientist (“all growth is good” vs. low impact development contracts

  14. Changing the Conversation • Non-profit folks can “glaze over” a bit when you mention public policy research • probe re: regulations, laws,& best practices • Grassroots organizers may call you a “policy wonk” • probe for their ideas by asking what kinds of information would be powerful in their work • emphasize the passion of students rather than the academics

  15. Other Sources for Project Ideas (Community-Generated) • New grant projects underway • SA in pregnant women • Policy questions such as: When should women be at risk of losing their kids? How do we treat them for SA & make sure they’re getting prenatal healthcare when laws require mandatory reporting? • Funding allocation for Virginia shelters • DHCD as somewhat silent partner • Long-term project • Never overpromise • Jail Diversion Alliance • Great project, early bumpiness (students with lots of initiative can scare the partner) • On all grant initiatives, identify & work with the evaluator

  16. Learning from Dad • The most important qualities (also great for this kind of work) • Generosity & ability to concentrate

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