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Engaging Minds, Building Community: Facilitating Community Engagement in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources Kate Westdijk, M.S.

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Presentation on theme: "Engaging Minds, Building Community: Facilitating Community Engagement in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources Kate Westdijk, M.S."— Presentation transcript:

1 Engaging Minds, Building Community: Facilitating Community Engagement in the Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources Kate Westdijk, M.S. March 15 th, 2008 University Education in Natural Resources Conference

2 Rubenstein School in Action: Cambridge Elementary School Garden (Photo credit: Jessica Ridgeway)

3 Rubenstein School in Action: Recovery and Restoration of Altered Ecosystems (Photo credit: Marty Illick)

4 Rubenstein School in Action: Workshops at the Jericho Research Forest

5 What is Community Engagement? research service teaching community service - learning community - based research (Figure adapted from Bringle et al., 1999) Building MindsBuilding Community

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7 Partnership with the campus-wide service-learning office (CUPS) Context One of 10 colleges and schools w/in The University of Vermont (UVM). Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources (45 faculty, 500 undergraduate students, 100 graduate students)

8 How can we support community engagement in the Rubenstein School? Research Questions: What’s currently being done? (faculty scholarship) What are current attitudes? What are the barriers? What can be done to facilitate community engagement activities? How can these data inform decision-making and action? (Westdijk & Koliba, under review)

9 Research Methods Combined Quantitative and Qualitative Instruments - Interviews (n=10; tenured=5, tenure-track=2, lecturers=2, research & extension=1) - Online Survey (38/45 respondents; 84% response) Faculty perceptions as unit of measurement

10 Results: What’s currently being done? 80% of respondents conduct research with the community (n= 28). 100% of respondents serve on community boards and/or offer workshops, technical assistance, etc. (n=38) 74% of respondents teach or have taught community- based courses (n=38)

11 Fun Faculty interested and supportive of community engagement in the School Results: What are the opportunities? Motivations: Improved Student Learning Improved Public Decision-Making Supportive Leadership Doesn’t conflict with scholarship responsibilities Increasing Public Awareness

12 Results: What are the barriers? Time Constraints (Photo credit: Walter Poleman) “For a faculty member, we’re already working at 150%. So, something’s got to give. If we do more community service, we need to do less of something else.” - Assistant Professor

13 Results: What are the barriers? Time Constraints (Photo credit: Walter Poleman) - matchmaking/ communication - “high stakes” teaching and research - new methods/ pedagogy

14 Results: What are the barriers? Disincentives in RPT process “I think that the service learning process should be valued highly... And I think it is at this university, from the top... Where the rubber really hits the road, though, is in the committees that evaluate people for reappointment and tenure, and it really depends on the people on the committees.” - Lecturer and PhD Candidate

15 What can be done to facilitate community engagement and optimize its benefits? Needs Differ Depending on Level of Engagement Need for Coordination, Structure, and Integration Community Engagement is a Priority Aim is Institutionalization

16 What can be done to facilitate community engagement and optimize its benefits? Day to Day Support Curriculum Level Planning (for Service-Learning) Guide Policy Development Bottom Up Top Down Documentation and Multi-Constituency Evaluation Strategic Planning

17 What’s next for the School? Full-time Staff “Coordinator of Community-Based Learning” Participation in New England Campus Compact’s “Engaged Department” Initiative University of Vermont Accreditation process in 2008-09 reporting to the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) Other research on student experience NEW Office of Experiential Learning

18 What’s working for us? Focus on Faculty Use Action Research Provide Decentralized AND Centralized Support Link Service-Learning to Career Development in the Natural Resources

19 More Information and Resources for Administrators and Faculty Action Research Tool and Article (pdf) Full Report with Recommendations (pdf) UVM CUPS office: www.uvm.edu/partnerships RSENR Office of Experiential Learning: www.uvm.edu/envnr/partnerships State Campus Compact: www.compact.org/state Contact: katherine.westdijk@uvm.edu; (802)-656-5480

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21 Action Areas: What is CUPS? The University of Vermont office of Community- University Partnerships and Service-Learning (Photo credit: Carlson) Foster UVM-Community Partnerships Support Faculty and Curriculum Development Promote Student Leadership Development Guide Development of University Policy Pursue Research and Evaluation

22 How can we maximize community engagement in the Rubenstein School? My Research: RSENR Community-University Partnerships Coordinator What’s currently being done? What are current attitudes? What’s working? What isn’t working? What can be done to facilitate and expand community engagement? (New Graduate Assistantship)

23 What is Community Engagement? Community-Based Problem-Solving –Service-Learning A form of experiential education in which students engage in activities that address human and community needs together with structured opportunities intentionally designed to promote student learning and development. Reflection and reciprocity are key concepts of service-learning." (Jacoby, 1996) –Community-Based Research A partnership of students, faculty, and community members who collaboratively engage in research with the purpose of solving a pressing community problem or effecting social change. (Strand, et. al., 2003)

24 The Rubenstein School and Community Engagement “…we are a School committed to dissolving boundaries: between the classroom and the natural world, the laboratory and the field, our School and the rest of this University; between teaching and research, student and professor, learning and service, environmental and social issues, science and humanities, knowledge and policy, academy and community, and the campus and the whole world beyond.” - Dean Don Dehayes excerpt from RSENR report


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