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Where is the Scholarship in the Scholarship of Engagement

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Title: Where is the Scholarship in the Scholarship of Engagement


1
Where is the Scholarship in the Scholarship of
Engagement?
  • Lorilee R. Sandmann, University of Georgia
  • University of Southern Indiana
  • January 5 , 2004

2
The Scholarship of Engagement
  • the academy must become a more vigorous partner
    in the search for answers to our most pressing
    social, civic, economic and moral problems, and
    must reaffirm its historic commitment to what I
    call the scholarship of engagement.
  • Boyer, E.L.. (1996). The Scholarship of
    engagement. Journal of Public Service Outreach
    1(1), 9-20.

3
  • What is engagement?
  • What is scholarship?
  • What is the scholarship of engagement/public
    engagement?
  • What are the standards of scholarship?
  • What are the systems to support the scholarship
    of engagement?

4
An Engaged Institution
  • is fully committed to direct, two-way interaction
    with communities and other external
    constituencies through the development ,
    exchange, and application of knowledge,
    information and expertise for mutual benefit.
  • Stepping Forward As Stewards of Place, AASCU,
    2002

5
Values/Norms of Engagement
  • Place-Related
  • InteractiveRespectful/Collaborative
  • Mutually Beneficial
  • Integrated
  • Dedication to Learningemphasis on values of
    community, responsibility, stewardship, and
    mutual concern

6
Making a Place for the New American Scholar
  • Rather than fostering careers in which faculties
    are disconnected from society, American higher
    education institutions can form new models that
    encourage faculty to engage in multiple forms of
    scholarship throughout their academic career.
  • Need a new reward system that cultivates
    knowledge anchored in practice, a reworking of
    the tenure system, and continuous review of
    senior faculty.
  • Rice (1996). New Pathways Working Paper (No. 1).
  • Washington, DC American Association for Higher
    Education.

7
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8
Ewert, 1999
9
  • What are the ways that USI demonstrates it is an
    engaged institution?

10
What is Scholarship?
  • Scholarship is original intellectual work which
    is communicated and the significance is validated
    by peers. Scholarship may emerge from teaching,
    research or other responsibilities. Scholarship
    may take the many forms including, but not
    limited to research contributing to a body of
    knowledge, development of new technology,
    materials, or methods integration of knowledge
    or technology leading to new interpretations or
    applications creation and interpretation in the
    arts.
  • Oregon State University, 1999

11
Scholarship
  • To move from the realm of teaching. research or
    service to scholarship essential elements the
    faculty member must document include
  • Broad dissemination to others of the results
  • Peer Review
  • Use or adoption by colleagues at other
    institutions

12
Forms of Scholarship
  • Scholarship of Discovery
  • Scholarship of Integration
  • Scholarship of Application
  • Scholarship of Teaching
  • Boyer, E.L. (1990). Scholarship Reconsidered
  • Priorities of the Professorate. San Francisco
    Jossey-Bass.

13
Scholarship of Engagement
  • Term that capture scholarship in the multiple
    aspects of teaching, research, and/or service.
    This type of scholarship engages faculty in
    academically relevant work that simultaneously
    fulfills the campus mission and goals as well as
    community needs. Engagement is a scholarly
    agenda that incorporates communities issues and
    which can be within or integrative across
    teaching research and service.
  • National Review Board for the Scholarship of
    Engagement

14
Scholarship of Engagement
  • Scholarly boundary crossing
  • Scholarship in engagement
  • Engagement in teaching
  • Engagement in research
  • Engagement in service
  • Scholarship guided by an engagement ethosconnect
    in coherent, thematic, scholarly ways

15
  • Unpack Service!

16
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17
  • I, my colleagues, and discipline never came to
    fully know and understand my work because it
    needed to be reported as either teaching,
    research or service. It had to fit in only one of
    the boxes
  • David Cooper
  • Professor American Thought and Language
  • Michigan State University

18
  • Were doing something unique, and we dont want
    to document it in a traditional way. My outreach
    activities are not meant to be a substitute for
    traditional research scholarship. They represent
    a new paradigm.
  • Warren Rauhe
  • Professor, Landscape Architecture
  • Michigan State University

19
  • The opportunity to delve deeply into the
    political and philosophical implications of our
    work, to revise and refine our documentation in a
    genuine community of scholars will serve as a
    model of inquiry and reflection in my career.
  • P. Schechter
  • Professor, History
  • Portland State University

20
  • While outreach scholarship is situated in the
    swamp, one can take a scholarly approach to the
    swamp and not get buried in it!
  • Cheryl Rosaen
  • Professor,Teacher Education
  • Michigan State University

21
The Result?
  • A fairly conventional and stable approach to
    scholarship, is today a fertile evolving,
    multifarious, and even contested environment.
  • Scholars need to recognize, understand, and
    respect multiple ways of knowing, interpreting,
    and practicing.

22
  • How does the faculty community at USI define
    scholarshipand the scholarship of engagement?

23
Dilemma
  • Viewing scholarship broadly but evaluating it
    narrowly

24
Quality...
  • in any area should be rewarded, but mediocrity,
    even if it is published, should not.
  • Maynard Mack,
  • Metropolitan Universities

25
QualityEvaluation Criteria
  • Goals/questions
  • Context of theory, literature, best practices
  • Methods
  • Results
  • Communication/dissemination
  • Reflective critique
  • National Review Board Scholarship of Engagement,
    2000

26
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31
Recognizing Excellent Engagement Scholarship
  • Study Purpose Identify aspects of assistant
    professor promotion and tenure packets
    (documentation) associated with positive
    promotion recommendations
  • General Conclusions
  • Outreach forms of teaching, research, and service
    are increasingly accepted (as legitimate) in
    promotion
  • High quality performance and accomplishment is
    more important than the proportion of outreach.
  • Promotion Packet Guidelines
  • Knox. A. (2001).College Teaching

32
  • For the project, I was looking at my work to
    demonstrate the scholarship. Now I am using an
    understanding of scholarship to guide my work.
  • Jim Lloyd
  • Professor, Veterinary Medicine and Agricultural
  • Economics, Michigan State University

33
  • What criteria does USI use to evaluate faculty
    scholarly work and contributions?

34
You cant put lipstick on a bulldog.
35
System to Support Scholarship of Engagement
  • Develop a learning community
  • Common understanding of terms
  • Rationale of reasons and rewards
  • Other models adapted
  • Collaborative
  • Processes that are rigorous, reliable, understood
    by traditionalists, yet appropriate
  • Capacity building
  • Culture change and alignment

36
  • Is there room for diverse genres of scholarship
    to be supported/maintained? Can past research
    practices by honored while supporting the
    scholarship for the public good? Is there
    collective will?
  • How do faculties come to be motivated to use a
    reciprocal/community-collaborative approach?
  • How can faculty and partners be best prepared to
    work together toward mutually beneficial ends?
  • What is appropriate and sustained institutional
    infrastructure to support scholarly engagement?
  • Others

37
Institutional Alignment at MSU A Seven Step
Process
  • Defining outreach
  • Defining and operationalizing quality outreach
  • Engaging support
  • Leading departmental chair and faculty forums
    addressing outreach scholarship
  • Aligning institutional planning
  • Aligning evaluation of faculty work
  • Documenting quality outreachfaculty and
    institutional level

38
www.scholarshipofengagement.com
39
  • Basic Resources
  • Boyer, E. T. (1990). Scholarship reconsidered
    Priorities for the professoriate. San Francisco
    Jossey-Bass.
  • Boyer, E. T. (1996). The scholarship of
    engagement. Journal of Public Service and
    Outreach 1(1) 9-20.
  • Driscoll, A. Lynton, E. A. (1999). Making
    outreach visible A Guide to documenting
    professional service and outreach. Washington,
    DC American Association for Higher Education.
  • Driscoll, A, Sandmann., L.R. (2001). From
    maverick to mainstream. The scholarship of
    engagement. Journal of Higher Education Outreach
    and Engagement 6(2) 9-19.
  • Fear, F. A., Rosaen, C., Foster-Fishman, P.
    Bawden, R.J. (2001). Outreach as scholarly
    expression a faculty perspective. Journal of
    Higher Education Outreach and Engagement 6(2)
    21-34.
  • Glassick,C.E., Huber, M.T. Maeroff, G. I.
    (1997). Scholarship assessed Evaluation of the
    professoriate. San Francisco Jossey-Bass.
  • Schön, D. A. (1995). Knowing-in-action the new
    scholarship requires a new epistemology. Change
    (Nov.-Dec.) 27-34.
  • Zahorski, K.J. (Ed.). (2002). Scholarship in the
    postmodern era New venues, new values, new
    visions. New Directions for Teaching and
    Learning, No. 90. San Francisco Jossey-Bass.

40
Future
  • the experience of engagement will become the
    pathway to a fresh interpretation of the 21st
    century. This conception rests on the rethinking
    of the core of the academy, namely, the nature of
    scholarship itself.
  • Judith Ramaley, NSF, 2002

41
Lorilee R. Sandmann
  • The University of Georgia
  • College of Education
  • 413 Rivers Crossing Bldg.
  • Athens, GA 30602
  • 706.542.4014
  • sandmann_at_uga.edu
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