Title: Engaging University and Community Partners for Positive Change
1Engaging University and Community Partners for
Positive Change
Presentation by Phil Nyden Loyola University
Chicago Center for Urban Research and Learning
2Overview
- CURL model
- barriers to university-community partnerships
- factors that break down barriers and facilitate
partnerships - what is the attractiveness to collaborative
research? to faculty? to students? to
universities? to community partners? - what strategies can be used to promote and/or
create strong, sustained partnerships?
Loyola University of Chicago
Center for Urban Research Learning
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5Loyola University of ChicagoCenter for Urban
Research and Learning (CURL)
6Collaborative Research Model
- not research on the community, but
research with the
community - recognizes knowledge in the university and
knowledge in the community - adds chairs at the research table
7Community as partners at all levels of research
- conceptualization
- designing the methodology
- collecting data
- analyzing data
- writing reports
- dissemination of results
8CURL Team-Based Research Action Projects
- faculty
- graduate students
- undergraduate students
- community organization leaders/
staff/members - CURL staff
9What are the barriers to effective
community-university partnerships?
10Barriers the discipline defines research
priorities
- university-based research focuses on
furthering knowledge in the
discipline - social change is not the primary goal
- the theoretical is favored over the practical
11Barriers Community-based research is seen as
biased
- without unbiased outside
researchers, data analysis
might be manipulated to
serve political ends - involving representatives of the population to
be studied in the research process raises
potential of bias in collecting data
12Barriers Community-based research is perceived
as parochial
- research is seen as limited in scope and less
powerful in its application
- traditional academic culture gives higher value
to the national or global than to the local
13Barriers Tenure and promotion guidelines
- publications and contributions to
the field favored over impact
on society - demonstrated contributions to the improved
quality of life in society not generally a
category on the balance sheet - indifference and even hostility to community
engagement
Loyola University of Chicago
Center for Urban Research Learning
14Barriers Communitys past experience with
university research
- only the object of research, not a participant in
research - limited practical relevance to community
development or improved service delivery - more of thumbs up/thumbs down evaluation research
of existing programs
??
Loyola University of Chicago
Center for Urban Research Learning
15On the other hand, there are factors that can
break down barriers and facilitate partnerships
16For the community, collaborative partnerships
have potential for building increased capacity
- gain familiarity with the research process knows
how to manage research - develop independent research skills
- improve practices in community organizations
17For the community, collaborative partnerships
have potential for building increased capacity
- move from research to action gets information
into hands of constituencies
18For the university, partnerships also build
capacity
- promote interdisciplinary
research - create a stimulating
environment for faculty and students - engage in research that is used and does not sit
on a library shelf - increase visibility of university in community,
region, nation, world
19For the university and the community,
partnerships are beneficial
- integrate university and community knowledge into
the learning environment - build an environment where learning takes place
in multiple directions - provide an understanding of connection among
knowledge, power, and social change - produce an understanding of what is possible.
20For university faculty, partnerships...
- provide a real environment for teaching and
learning - produce a dynamic learning environment with
challenges, unpredictability, constant
questioning (the qualities of a good classroom)
21For university faculty, partnerships...
- open the door to more research opportunities than
can be completed in lifetime - give access to significant research funding and
publication opportunities
22For university students, working in
university-community partnerships provide...
- an antidote for civic disengagement
- you can have an impact
- demystifies the policy
making process
23 For university students, working in
university-community partnerships helps to...
- gives a real face to social issues they are no
longer academic abstractions - see connections among disciplines
24A Closer Look at Center for Urban Research and
Learning (CURL)
25Support for team members
- faculty fellowships
- graduate fellowships
- undergraduate--fellowships and course credit
- community fellowships
- CURL staff
26Funding
- government-funded grants
- foundation-supported projects
- endowment
- leveraging university resources
- matching resources for faculty released time
- student fellowship awards and course credit
- volunteer time
27Examples of CURL Collaborative University-Communit
y Projects
28CURL Project What creates and sustains
racially/ethnically diverse communities?
- concept emerged from activist-researcher
discussions - solution-focused, not problem-focused
- policy maker and activist attention
- media interest in research
Center for Urban Research Learning
29CURL Project What creates and sustains
racially/ethnically diverse communities?
- two-types of communities
- diverse by design
- diverse by circumstance (new immigrant groups)
- changing way advocates promote diversity
- connection to work on sustaining mixed-income
communities
30CURL Project Impact of Welfare Reform on
Mixed-Income Communities
- idea developed from breakfast meetings with
different community partners - linked CURL with advocacy organization and
traditional social service agency - three reports and impact on state legislation
31CURL Project Developing Culturally Sensitive
Approaches to Addressing Domestic Violence
- community organization was aware of CURLs other
collaborative work - needed evaluation of impact of its programs
32CURL Project Developing Culturally Sensitive
Approaches to Addressing Domestic Violence
- connection to national network of organizations
serving South Asian community - exploring expansion of project
- international
- organizations serving women in other ethnic
communities
33CURL Project Documenting Changes in Affordable
Housing
- gentrifying community
- arguments among developers, affordable housing
advocates, and city re extent of affordable
housing loss - CBO lobbied state representative to provide
funding for study
Loyola University of Chicago
Center for Urban Research Learning
34CURL Project Documenting Changes in Affordable
Housing
- advisory committee from all sectors of community
- data from report viewed as credible by all
involved - other communities interested in research
35Creating a regional network to promote
university-community/government partnerships
36Policy Research Action Group (PRAG)
- Created in the late 1980s
- developed from the grassroots by activist
faculty and community leaders - collaborative research model
- four universities
- more than 15 community partners
- over 175 collaborative projects
- www.luc.edu/depts/curl/prag
37Policy Research Action Group (PRAG)
- produced an environment of collaboration in
Chicago - collaborative and participatory research still
minority research approaches, but this provided
visibility and a support network - became a self-help network
- contributed to the development of more than six
collaborative centers in Chicago - if funding disappears, still have network now
38Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
39Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
- start small
- concentrate on projects that will produce
tangible outcomes, not just the process itself - develop interdependent partnerships
- accomplish end results that individuals or
individual institutions could not achieve on
their own - organize/match expertise to produce a sum that is
greater than its parts - recruit people who are committed to the project
and the process
40Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
- create a partnership culture
- everyone shares credit
- help each other promote work in their
work/institutional setting - open environment welcome new members to
partnership (individual/institutional) - create trust
41Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
- harness the tensions of university-community/gover
nment relationships - both academics and community activists willing to
criticize and arguethis is OK, it provides - different perspectives helpful in understanding
complex issues - a more complete knowledge base
- also, it is not community-driven research or
university-driven research its collaborative
research
42Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
- develop resources to sustain the collaboration
- political support (from institutional leaders)
- funding
- grants
- endowments
- income/funding from multiple sources
(diversification) - fellowshipsuniversity (faculty students) and
community - ongoing centers/networks
- staff dedicated to developing sustaining
collaboration - leverage other resources with what
funding/resources you do get
43Lessons learned in building and sustaining
partnerships
- understand that individuals are motivated to
participate by factors other than just money - collaborations enable participants
- to become part of social-change process
- to connect with like-minded colleagues
- to join a support network which provides guidance
on research projects
44Some strategies for building on strengths and
overcoming obstacles
- visibility and information sharing
- publications
- web presence
- reports
- books
- periodicals
45Some strategies for building on strengths and
overcoming obstacles
46Some strategies for building on strengths and
overcoming obstacles
- working groups
- researchers practitioners
- citywide or regional
47Some strategies for building on strengths and
overcoming obstacles
- doing political work within disciplines
- visibility of collaborative methods
- translating research for use by practitioners
- building a following of people experienced in
partnerships - emphasizing that this is research
with a constituency
48Strategies for change change hiring tenure and
promotion procedures/guidelines
- reduce discipline-bound control of faculty
personnel policies - increase university-wide incentives to promote
engaged scholarship. - creating a national and international networks of
peers to judge faculty doing collaborative
research - service as a primary, not residual, evaluation
category
49Strengthen existing or create new collaborative
centers that can serve multiple functions as
- institutional advocates for collaborative
research - places where multiple collaborative efforts can
be concentrated and made more visible - brokers of information and resources
- technical assistance centers for collaborative
projects
50Creating new collaborative centers that can serve
multiple functions as
- alternative socialization venues for faculty
students, and community partners - conveners of collaborative researchers to discuss
ongoing projects
Loyola University of Chicago
Center for Urban Research Learning
51Gains have been made in promoting collaborative
research in universities the community, but
there is still substantial work to be done.