Title: Evaluating the Success of CommunityUniversity Development Partnerships
1Evaluating the Success of Community/University
Development Partnerships
- Oregon State University
- The Engaged Campus Conference
- November 20, 2006
2Presentation Outline
- The current context of our work
- The growth of the movement
- The evolution of practice
- A typology of development partnerships
- Leading cases
- Emerging principles of of good practice
3Contemporary Urban Communities
- Increasing global competition
- Slow/no growth
- Industrial restructuring/income gap
- Continuing suburban sprawl
- Expanding areas of concentrated poverty
- Federal devolution/budget cuts/unfunded mandates
- Municipal overburden
4Community/University Partnerships
- Ascendancy of the partnership model
- Eds and Meds are major urban institutions
- Relative to other non-profits they are resource
rich (people, facilities, ) - Considerable internal /external interest in
engagement - Need for space and tax exempt status makes them
easy targets for partnership proposals - Third-party support for engaged scholarship
5Evolution of the Movement
- Phase I (Early 1980s)- Student Volunteerism
- Wayne Meisel/gtCOOL
- Phase II (Mid-1980s)- Service Learning
- Big Three/Campus Compact
(B,G,S) - Phase III (Early-1990s)- Universities as
Citizens - ACHEP
- Phase IV (Current)- Universities as
Steepled - Places,Thompson/Evans
6Growth of the Movement
7Types of Partnerships
- Exploitative- Campuses that use service to
reinforce their privilege - Expert- Campuses that provide useful research on
critical issues while paying little attention to
capacity-building - Empowerment- Campuses that pursue collaborative
inquiry and action to enhance local
problem-solving and community-building capacity
8Selecting Leading Cases
- Economically distressed communities
- Highly productive partnerships (S,M,I)
- Long-term relationships/institutionalized
- Increasingly complex projects
- Structural issues/proposed policy solutions
- Significant capacity building
- Institutional diversity
- Geographically balanced
9Methodology
- Literature review
- Interviews with key informants
- Listserve invitations
- Web-based survey
- Production of case studies
- Organization of search conference
10(No Transcript)
11Trinity College - Frog Hollow
- Small liberal arts school
- Recruitment challenges - neighborhood image/city
- Comm/univ relations gt presidential choice
12Trinity College - Learning Corridor
- Evan Dobelle consults local residents and
institutions - Develops a comprehensive redevelopment plan
focused on education, - youth/family wellness, community development,
and civic engagement
13Trinity College - Learning Corridor Implementation
- Trinity makes lead investment, others follow
- Creation of several new regional schools,
performing arts center, Boys Club, Montessori
School, new housing, and commercial development,
and coordinated approach to primary care - Transformative impact on TC, FH, Hartford, and SL.
14UPENN - W. Philly Initiative
- Student engagement
- Act of violence
- Honors seminar
- Focus on the transformation of public schools
- Long-term partnerships involving highest status
faculty/struggling schools - Mortgage guarantee/design assistance
15UPENN - Minority Business Development
- Significant campus expansion (300-500m)
- Set-aside for W. Philadelphia firms
- Establishment of minority business development
office - Successful in assisting W. Phil firms in securing
UPENN and other business
16UIUC - East St. Louis, IL
- From All-American City in 1957 to Americas
Soweto in 1986 - Victim of deindustrialization, suburbanization,
disinvestment, and devolution
17East St. Louis Action Research Project
- Launched by a small group of church women
inspired by Fannie Lou Hammer and led by Miss
Ceola Davis - Created a city-wide coalition of 40 religious
congregations working for change - Initiated a series of successful self-help
projects (Shugue Park -toddlers play space) - Decided it was time to rebuild ESLs economic,
social, civic, spiritual, and physical
infrastructure.
18Developmental Approach
- Participatory neighborhood plan
- Community clean-up
- Vest-pocket play spaces
- Housing Improvement
- Farmers Market
19The Parsons Place Project
- Followed two 5-year plans and dozens of projects
- Made possible by light rail
- Combination of community organizing, good
planning, development know how, and strong
coalition
20ESLARPs Impact
- 29 million mixed-income housing development, a
Montessori school, public park complex,
YouthBuild Construction Training, and a Charter
H.S. - Transformative impact on UIUC students and
faculty, professional education, ESL, and
planning profession
21Salish Kootenai - Pablo, MT
- Located north of Missoula
- Resource rich
- Tribe lost control of natural resources
- Few employment opportunities
- Women challenge local Native American high school
teacher and business man to create a college
22The Birth of a College
- Work with local industry to develop custom
tailored vocational programs (Heavy equipment,
trucking, nursing, education) - Assist tribal leaders in pursuing DOD set-aside
opportunities - Support tribal council efforts to regain control
of natural resources and to manage in a
sustainable manner - Creation of small business assistance center to
support Native American culturally-related
businesses
23Overcoming Barriers
- Formation of a regional transportation system
- Initiation of school transformation project
- Creation of culturally appropriate social work
program to address substance abuse
24Findings
- Build upon long-standing town/gown relationships
- Intensify in response to a clear threat
- All faced initial skepticism
- Advanced by presidential leadership
- Importance of bi-directional/boundary-crossers
- Enduring partnerships require clarity regarding
institutional self interest
25Findings, continued
- Build organically/developmentally
- Survive multiple melt downs
- Reflection is central to learning
- Address the policy/planning environment
- Importance of putting some institutional
resources on the bar - Universitys response to resident criticism is
critical - No optimal strategy/contingency approach
26Contingency Approach Analysis
- Individual / institutional strengths and
liabilities must be assessed - Economic and community development goals
- Task environment - partners, funders, regulators,
media, etc - Macro context - economic resources, distribution
of political power, race/class/gender differences
27Value of Reflective Practice
- Dewey, Lewin, Kolb, Schon, Forrester,
-
- -Orienting Theory
- -Concrete Action
- -Systematic Ref.
- -Active Exper.
28We Live in Challenging Times
- Disparities are deepening
- Growing skepticism of national leadership
- Significant criticism of university
- Requires more than service - commitment to
transformative education for s. justice - There are heroic examples
- We must act boldly!
29We must run, while others walk! J. Nyerere
- Our deepest fear is not that we are
inadequate our deepest fear is that we are
powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not
our darkness, that most frightens us. We ask
ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous,
talented, fabulous? Actually, who are you not
to be? You are a child of God. Your playing
small does not serve the world. There is nothing
enlightened about shrinking so that other people
wont feel insecure around you. We were born to
make manifest the glory of God that is within us.
It is not just in some of us it is in everyone.
As we let our own light shine, we unconsciously
give other people permission to do the same. As
we are liberated from our own fear, our presence
automatically liberates others.
30Contact Information
Kenneth M. Reardon Associate Professor/Chair Depar
tment of City and Regional Planning Cornell
University Ithaca, NY 14853 607-254-5378 kmr22_at_cor
nell.edu