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- Indiana State University Announces Online Community Engagement Journal
- New Format and Editorial Focus for the Journal of Higher Education Outreach & Engagement
- Research Universities Deepen Commitment to Engaged Scholarship with Strategies for Community Research
- New Publication Announced: Journal of Community Engagement and Scholarship
- MSU Outreach and Engagement Receives 'Excellence Award for Innovations'
- A New Carnegie Classification Arrives
Past Events
Video Presentations
Dwight E. Giles, Jr., Ph.D.
Professor, Higher Education Administration, University of Massachusetts, Boston -- Senior Associate, New England Resource Center for Higher Education (NERCHE). View the speaker biography
Forty Years in the Academy: Service-Learning's Pioneers, Programs, and Promise
Dr. Dwight Giles, a leading expert on service-learning, will review service-learning's evolution from obscure pedagogical practice to institutional priority. Dr. Giles will reflect on the journey from the margins to the mainstream as service-learning has matured, both nationally and at MSU.
The history of service-learning over the past 40 years provides a richly woven tapestry with many strands including pedagogy, educational reform, community engagement and outreach, institutional transformation, and social concerns. While service-learning and, more recently, civic engagement have emerged as national and international phenomena, the true history of this movement is found in local programs on specific campuses.
As one of the oldest continuous service-learning programs in the country, the Center for Service-Learning and Civic Engagement at Michigan State University is an instructive case study for understanding the broader landscape of university and community relationships and for mileposts for where this journey might go in the future.
Paul Spicer, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, American Indian and Alaska Native Programs, Department of Psychiatry -- Director, American Indian and Alaska Native Head Start Research Center, School of Medicine, University of Colorado. View the speaker biography
Community-Based Participatory Research on American Indian and Alaska Native Health
The American Indian and Alaska Native Programs in the University of Colorado’s School of Medicine, in existence since 1985, have a diverse portfolio of research, training, and technical assistance. This talk provides a history of the programs’ growing commitment to community-based participatory research.
Dr. Spicer presents examples of how he and his team are extending this commitment through their work in genetics, child development, alcoholism, and obesity.
Kelly Ward, Ph.D.
Associate Professor, Department of Educational Leadership & Counseling Psychology. View the speaker biography
Tami Moore, Ph.D. Candidate
Doctoral Student, Higher Education and Cultural Studies, College of Education. View the speaker biography
Faculty at Work as Teachers, Scholars and Community Members: The Practice of Engaged Scholarship
Conversations about engaged scholarship have largely focused on research projects and outcomes with a community orientation. The challenge of focusing on projects is that it leaves many faculty members both confused about how such an approach fits with promotion and tenure guidelines and concerned about adding a community orientation to an already full plate of academic work. In Faculty Service Roles and the Scholarship of Engagement (2003), Ward offers an integrative model, whereby faculty ground their traditional roles in meeting community needs. The session includes findings of a recent research project that offers portraits of engaged scholars as a way to shift conversation about community engagement from projects to the practice of engaged scholarship at research universities. The study explores motivations for integration, challenges to crafting an integrated scholarly practice, strategies employed in achieving integration, and campus climate issues surrounding engaged scholarship at research universities. This workshop offers an opportunity to examine these findings, consider their contribution to the outreach and engagement movement, and reflect directly on personal practices of engagement and integration. The session is designed to help faculty think creatively about their work in the community in ways that complement traditional teaching, research, and service roles.
Jeff Grabill, Ph.D.
Information Technology and Community-Based User Research (November 14, 2006). View the speaker biography
The Expertise and Complexity of Citizen Knowledge Work
This talk is based on a study of an existing data democratization effort called CACVoices, and includes a public Web site that hosts both a powerful set of databases and other types of public information. It is an example of a common type of community network that aggregates information, tools, and IT capacity for "the public." Citizen and community-based organizations in nearly every community rely on networks like CACVoices to do their work.
In doing this research we have learned that the work of individuals and groups within these organizations constitutes a type of "knowledge work." However, while complex information technologies are readily available to such users, it is unclear how well the tools support expert knowledge workers in these new contexts. This study is one attempt to provide evidence about a common but largely invisible area of human-computer interaction -- community-based knowledge work. In this talk we discuss our results and report on our attempts to design new tools to support community-based knowledge work.
Sarena Seifer, M.D.
Achieving the Promise of Authentic Community-Academic Partnerships: Taking our Work to the Next Level (September 19, 2006). View the speaker biography
Community-Based Participatory Research: Addressing Community Health Concerns and Meeting Promotion and Tenure Guidelines
This presentation focuses on the definition, rationale and key components of community-based participatory research (CBPR) and its contributions to understanding and addressing health issues. A continuum of approaches to involving communities as partners in health research will be described. Trends in funding for CBPR and resources available to support CBPR will be highlighted. Strategies for documenting CBPR for promotion and tenure review will be offered. This session will be particularly relevant to health sciences faculty members and administrators.
From Community Service to Community-Engaged Scholarship to Partnerships for Social Change
How do we combine the knowledge and wisdom of communities and academic institutions to solve the major health, social and economic challenges facing our society? How do we ensure that community-driven social change is central to service-learning, community-based participatory research and community-higher education partnerships? This presentation provides a snapshot of what we know about community-higher education partnerships, highlighting critical issues and trends, posing key questions for the future, and sharing resources to support community-engaged scholarship and community-academic partnerships.
Julie Ellison, Ph.D.
Between Hope and Critique (April 27, 2006). View the speaker biography
Between Hope and Critique
Both on and off campus, animated networks in the humanities and arts are making the passion for social change central to the theory and practice of public engagement. Students and faculty in the cultural disciplines are committed to social agency in creative and humanistic practice. They bring a mix of passion and skepticism to this endeavor. The work of leaders in the "engaged imagination" movement—including Robin Kelley, George Sanchez, Sekou Sundiata, and Lani Guinier, among others—is defi ned by a love of ideas, a resolute pursuit of theory-building, and a willingness to weave critique and practice in ways that advance collaboration with community partners.
This complex approach involves a balance among hope and critique, theory and action. These artists and scholars display core commitments to "freedom dreams" (Kelley), "magical realism" (Guinier), "dream states" (Sundiata) and "dream[s] of a multiracial democracy" (Sanchez). Their focus on diverse creativity for the public good marks a historical moment in the imagination of social change. They—and we—are part of a growing community of people eager to exchange program models, test their rhetoric against skeptical listeners, foster translations across specialist vocabularies, and strengthen learning.
* The video presentations are encoded in MOV/RM/WMV/ACX streaming format. These file types can be viewed using media players such as: Windows Media Player, QuickTime Player, Real Player, or Winamp Media Player.
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