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Www.cupp.org.uk Academics and community partners researching wellbeing. What’s the point of doing it together? Angie Hart Academic Director, Community.

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Presentation on theme: "Www.cupp.org.uk Academics and community partners researching wellbeing. What’s the point of doing it together? Angie Hart Academic Director, Community."— Presentation transcript:

1 www.cupp.org.uk Academics and community partners researching wellbeing. What’s the point of doing it together? Angie Hart Academic Director, Community University Partnership Programme (Cupp)

2 What’s the point? What does it look like? Things I’ve learnt along the way Lessons from you www.cupp.org.uk

3 ‘Better knowledge’ Reaction against 19 th century Hummboldtian construction of knowledge ‘knowledge transfer’ www.cupp.org.uk

4 Gibbons on knowledge production ‘applied, problem-centred, trans- disciplinary, heterogeneous, hybrid, demand-driven, entrepreneurial, network-embedded’ www.cupp.org.uk

5 Knowledge exchange ‘The sites of (scientific) problem formulation and negotiation have moved from their previous domains in government, industry and universities into the agora.... the public space in which ‘science meets the public and in which the public ‘speaks back to science’....the space, par excellence’ for the production of socially robust knowledge’ (Gibbons 2003:59). www.cupp.org.uk

6 emergence Hydrogen and oxygen are the elemental gases that make up water, but the ‘wetness’ of water is an ‘emergent property’ of the system not reducible to hydrogen or oxygen (Zajonc 2010, 81). www.cupp.org.uk

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8 The principles of emergence mean that over-controlling approaches will not work well within complex systems–that in order to maximise system adaptiveness, there must be space for innovation and novelty to occur (Ramalingam, Jones et al. 2008, 21). www.cupp.org.uk

9 ‘In terms of community it presents a challenge to universities to be of and not just in the community; not simply to engage in “knowledge-transfer” but to establish a dialogue across the boundary between the university and its community which is open-ended, fluid and experimental’ (Watson 2003 ) www.cupp.org.uk

10 Moral purpose, Civic role GUNI – Global University Network for Innovation Talloires CCPH – Community Campus Partnerships for Health www.cupp.org.uk

11 Disrupts status inequalities Wilkinson and Pickett The Spirit level Widening participation in its widest sense www.cupp.org.uk

12 Politically strategic www.cupp.org.uk

13 Rewarding for academics Public academic Nice little earner www.cupp.org.uk

14 Academic/university wins Research income and publication Chance to undertake research that is viewed as socially meaningful and valuable Chance to integrate the working practices of different parts of the university Act as role models to colleagues, other institutions and students Chance to develop an identity as a particular type of public academic

15 Rewarding for community partners www.cupp.org.uk

16 Community wins Getting critical friends Accessing robust evidence in relation to our work Acquiring a passionate partner to bounce ideas off Elevating the status of our work Resources Broadening out our network –increased social and organisational capital Improving the quality of our thinking

17 There isn’t one... www.cupp.org.uk

18 What does researching together mean? www.cupp.org.uk

19 PAR and its many guises Communities of practice Straight commissioning? Who’s involved in the meta conversations? www.cupp.org.uk

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21 Communities of Practice “…groups of people informally bound together by shared expertise and passion for a joint enterprise” (Wenger & Snyder, 2000) Emphasise sharing and mutuality No fixed boundaries between ‘experts’ and ‘non- experts’ Expectation that members will work across organisational and disciplinary boundaries Challenging current structures and hierarchies

22 www.cupp.org.uk Community of Practice Inter disciplinary Cross agency Collaborating for mutual benefit Exchange of knowledge between sectors Boundary spanning Shared passion

23 CoPs ‘boundary cross’ CoPs aim to be inclusive, to make connections and consolidate learning across potential lines of division in relation to joint enterprise. Boundary crossing causes people to look afresh at their own assumptions. Two ways CoPs facilitate boundary crossing: ‘boundary objects’ – e.g. language, artefacts ‘brokering’ – e.g. linking differing perspectives

24 Power dynamics between partners imbalance – commitment, resources and information power balance is fluid - imbalances ‘ebb and flow’ throughout the life of the project. (

25 Models of partnership Friends, lovers, marriage, partnership registration (see Hart and Wolff) Other possible ones: Client-patron Service provider Outreach worker Master/mistress-slave Expert-client Mentor or teacher Gardener-plant

26 Other more complex and dynamic…e.g. Ecological systems theories (Lerner and Simon) ‘Communities of practice’ (Hart and Wolff)

27 www.cupp.org.uk Partnership issues and challenges Creating a win / win Different agendas Brain Drain Being accessible and inclusive and yet scholarly Outcomes and not just outputs Importance of boundary spanning –overinvestment in individuals? Hybrid community of practice and work plan group ‘Don’t ask for permission, ask for forgiveness’

28 Bridging cultures Respectful of different knowledge/expertise ‘Click factor’ Know what you want from partnering Always prepare to translate and explain Confidence to be vulnerable Prepared to be taken down a peg or two Explicitly elevate community expertise Trust and be led by your ‘gatekeeper’ Emphasise ‘practice’ and relationships rather than organisational form or structure: ‘Communities of practice Don’t get stuck with one narrative

29 www.cupp.org.uk Cupp news Sign up for email updates www.cupp.org.uk “Community university partnerships in practice” Edited by Angie Hart, Elizabeth Maddison and David Wolff www.niace.org.uk/publications/C/comm-university.asp www.niace.org.uk/publications/C/comm-university.asp


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