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CommunityBased Learning and Research: Principles for Partnerships

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Title: CommunityBased Learning and Research: Principles for Partnerships


1
Community-Based Learning and ResearchPrinciples
for Partnerships
  • Lynchburg College
  • Center for Community Development and Social
    Justice (CCDSJ)
  • Lisa Whitaker, Associate Director, CCDSJ
  • Director, Bonner Leaders Program
  • June 2005
  • Bonner Foundation 15 Year Celebration and SLI

2
Introduction
  • Hello! Welcome!

3
Todays Presentation
  • Briefly describe LC the CCDSJ
  • Briefly define EL, S-L, and CBR and put them in
    the context of a continuum
  • Describe 2 complementary models for community
    engagement Assets-Based Community Development
    (ABCD) Community-Based Research (CBR)
  • Outline the principles benefits of CBR and why
    these are critical to effective campus-community
    partnerships
  • Describe specific CBR projects brokered by the
    CCDSJ
  • Share processes for implementing CBR initiatives

4
Lynchburg College
  • Private, coeducational, liberal arts college in
    Lynchburg, Virginia founded in 1903
  • 1934 undergraduate students and 314 graduate
    students 133 FT faculty members
  • Historical commitment to service in the community
  • LC recently selected for The Princeton Review
    College Guide The Best 361 Colleges 2006
    Edition

5
Center for Community Development and Social
Justice (CCDSJ)
  • Founded in 1998 by Dr. Tom Seaman, Sociology
    professor, a beloved applied researcher
  • Became a Community Outreach Partnership Center
    (COPC) in 1999 (via grant funding from the Jesse
    Ball duPont Fund and HUDs Office of University
    Partnerships)
  • Additional grant funding for CCDSJ initiatives
    provided by the Kauffman Foundation, the Bonner
    Foundation, the Dolan fund, Genworth
  • Endowment from private family
  • Institutionalized in 2004

6
Areas of Work - COPC
7
ABCD Asset-Based Community Development
  • Form community advisory board
  • Primarily neighborhood residents
  • Also city government, non-profit, and college
    representation
  • All partners agreed to learn work from the
    philosophy of ABCD
  • Agreed that all projects must be community-led

8
A change of role for the college!
  • Under the principles of ABCD, the colleges role
    takes a back seat --- this can be difficult ?

9
Guiding principles for community engagement ABCD
  • The Asset-Based Community Development (ABCD)
    Model (Kretzmann McKnight, 1993)
  • The principles of the ABCD model require a clear
    commitment to discovering a communitys
    capacities assets rather than focusing on a
    communitys needs, deficiencies problems.

10
Working from an ABCD orientation
  • Principle Utilize an asset orientation instead
    of a deficiency orientation (utilizes asset
    mapping, including individuals, associations, and
    institutions then connecting them)
  • Principle Projects are community-driven, not
    determined externally
  • Principle Residents are empowered to make
    decisions for their community they must be
    involved at project inception and throughout

11
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12
The CCDSJ What Were Working On
  • Building the capacity of nonprofits, neighborhood
    organizations, and people by linking the
    resources of the college to the community
  • Youth Development initiatives
  • (Young Champions, Key Communicators, Success By
    6, Lead Remediation)
  • Bonner Leaders Program
  • Community-Based Research
  • Social Entrepreneurship
  • Collaborating on campus (SERVE, EL Task Force,
    Institutional Effectiveness, others, to
    facilitate SL courses, specific S-L projects,
    development of a Civic Engagement minor)

13
LCs Commitment to Experiential and
Community-Based Learning
  • Strategic Plan Goal I-2 One hundred percent of
    graduating seniors will have participated in an
    experiential learning program during their tenure
    at LC by 2008. (Current rate is 65.)
  • Experiential Learning task force defining EL, SL,
    criteria approval for SL course designation
  • Bonner Leaders Program in its 2nd year (college
    federal work-study funds, Americorps Awards,
    operating budget, BF grant)
  • CCDSJ, SERVE (Students Engaged in Responsible
    Volunteer Experiences) offices working together
    to facilitate service-learning projects on campus
  • VP of Institutional Effectiveness working to
    assess impact of EL initiatives on students and
    community

14
Experiential Learning
  • Experiential learning is a philosophy and
    methodology in which educators purposely engage
    with learners in direct experience and focused
    reflection in order to increase knowledge,
    develop skills and clarify values.
  • (http//www.aee.org/faq/nfaq.htmee, Sept. 15,
    2004)

15
Experiential Learning at LC Includes
  • Service-learning courses
  • Social entrepreneurship internships
  • Bonner Leaders Program
  • Study Abroad (inc. the model UN and model EU
    simulations)
  • Academic internships
  • Student teaching
  • Nursing clinical placements
  • Undergraduate research
  • Creative contributions, such as to the Student
    Art Show the Agora
  • Community-Based Research with a non-profit agency

16
Service Learning
  • Field-based experiences facilitate many forms of
    learning and development service adds the
    dimension of giving back to the community -- of
    making giving a part of how students define
    themselves. Service-learning is a form of
    field-based experiential learning with the added
    dimension of social contribution.
  • Eyler Giles, 1999

17
Service Learning
  • Additionally, service learning
  • combines service objectives
  • with the intent that the activity
  • change both the recipient and the provider of the
    service.
  • This is accomplished by combining service tasks
  • with structured opportunities that link the task
  • to self-reflection, self-discovery,
  • and the acquisition and comprehension of values,
  • skills and knowledge content.
  • - National Service-Learning Clearinghouse
    website www.servicelearning.org/article/view/10/1
    /35/

18
EL and SL Differentiated
  • Therefore, not all experiential learning is
    service-learning, but
  • all service-learning is experiential learning.

19
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20
As the continuum progresses, there is
increasing
  • Academic intensity
  • Integration of knowledge skills across
    disciplines
  • Development of personal and interpersonal
    awareness skills
  • Understanding of social justice issues and
    movement along a continuum toward embracing
    diversity (beyond developing tolerance)
  • Relationships with community partners intensify
    (strengthen)
  • Development of professional skills (project
    management, research, leadership, working in
    teams, public speaking other forms of
    professional communication, meeting facilitation,
    coalition building, and so on)
  • Specification of individual values
  • Feelings of self-efficacy in many areas in
    particular, with regard to ones ability to
    effect change/development of a practical
    idealism

21
An embassy for the community
  • Appropriately, nearly all offices on most
    campuses can be described as being primarily
    student-centered, so there is a need not only for
    a broker, but for an advocate, on campus for
    community interests
  • Community, in this case, can be defined as the
    people living in the area surrounding the college
    community, and the organizations that serve those
    peoples needs in an effort to improve quality of
    life
  • This does not conflict, but serves to enhance,
    institutional goals for students development and
    learning

22
An embassy for the community (contd.)
  • All service-learning initiatives require some
    level of partnership with members of the
    community
  • Developing and maintaining effective
    university-community partnerships is critical for
    community-based learning and research projects
    healthy partnerships lead to
  • the most significant positive effects for all
    partners (students, community members, faculty,
    and the institution)
  • These partnerships require specific knowledge and
    skills
  • There is a growing need, as these initiatives
    increase, to evaluate the impact they have on the
    community, as well as the impact on student
    learning and development

23
Relationships
  • Like most human endeavors, success in
    community-university partnerships
    (community-based learning and research projects)
    is directly related to the quality of
    relationships
  • The embassy for the community on campus serves
    to
  • Create protect partnerships so students
    faculty continue to have access to various
    options in the community to work with nonprofits
    and neighborhood residents
  • Prevent the development of negative public
    relations about the college in the community (and
    oftentimes, create much goodwill and positive
    PR) avoid the elephant memories
  • Not all projects will be wildly successful, but
    long-term partnerships continue to learn and
    evolve each partner appreciates learns about and
    appreciates the others limitations
  • Help create a campus culture that reflects a
    widely-held awareness of and respect for
    university-campus partnerships

24
  • So how do we enter these relationships?
  • Two complementary models provide us with some
    very useful principles
  • Assets-Based Community Development (Kretzmann
    McKnight, 1993)
  • Community-Based Research Model (as outlined by
    Strand, Marullo, Cutforth, Stoecker, Donohue,
    2003), a process informed supported by Bobby
    Hackett at the Boner Foundation)

25
CBR Briefly Defined
  • Community-based research is
  • collaborative,
  • change-oriented
  • research that engages
  • faculty members, students, and community members
    in projects that address a
  • community-identified need.

26
The Ultimate Knowledge
  • Its not Its not Its
    Fishin
  • Rocket Science! Brain
    Surgery! For Understanding!

27
The Ecstatic Researcher!Researchers all over the
country respond with glee
28
CBR Model (Strand, Marullo, Cutforth, Stoecker,
Donohue, 2003)
  • CBR is different from traditional academic
    research and different from charity-oriented
    service learning
  • CBRs three central features
  • It is a collaborative enterprise
  • It seeks to democratize knowledge
  • Ideally, CBRs goal is social action

29
1. It is a collaborative enterprise
  • The partnership is key
  • Both work, both learn
  • Establishing trust and respect is primary
  • Shared power and shared responsibility
    (death of the theres-only-one-expert-here
    syndrome and the ivory tower)
  • Communicating well, listening well
  • Empathizing with each others plight (e.g., the
    problems/limitations each encounters in their
    organization)

30
Collaboration (contd.)
  • The best practice model were relying on notes
    that it is absolutely critical to include the
    community in at least two research stages
  • - Identifying the research question
  • - Making decisions about how the results will
    be used

31
Roles Responsibilities of Partners Engaged in
CBR
  • Please see handout

32
2. CBR Seeks to Democratize Knowledge
  • CBR challenges the basic assumptions about
    knowledge itself
  • What constitutes valid knowledge
  • How it is produced, and by whom
  • And who controls it

33
2. CBR Seeks to Democratize Knowledge (contd.)
  • In CBR, researchers are challenged to
  • Demystify the research language and make it
    user-friendly
  • Consider a variety and multiplicity of data
    collection methods, including developing
    unconventional ones
  • Consider creative and unconventional ways to
    share study results

34
3. Ideally, CBRs Goal is Social Action
  • CBR is committed to social justice
  • Empowerment of disadvantaged (stigmatized,
    marginalized) groups is an overarching goal
    (i.e., transfer knowledge and skills to the
    community partner so that the organization or
    group may become self-sufficient and
    research-capable)
  • Social change is a primary goal
  • CBR often challenges the structures of privilege
    and hierarchy

35
3. Ideally, CBRs Goal Is Social Action
(Contd.)CBR Projects Work Toward Social Change
and Social Justice and the Research Results Are
Applied Toward These Ends.
  • CBR is community-centered
  • The community is not a dead frog
  • The communitys goals objectives
  • are viewed as primary
  • Byproducts of a community-driven process benefit
    faculty and/or students

36
This community-centeredness does several
things
  • 1. Reduces community mistrust
  • 2. Acknowledges the importance of the issue
  • Without taking away from student learning or
    faculty development
  • it simply acknowledges that homelessness, youth
    gangs, mental illness, early education, living
    with disabilities, difficulties when aging, etc.
    require that the college partners primary
    commitment be to the community (above publishing,
    for example), and
  • 3. Offers respect and compassion from the start
  • For both the victims and/or those working in the
    trenches.

37
Comparing Traditional Academic Research
Community-Based ResearchPlease see handouts
titledExhibit 1.1. A Comparison of Traditional
Academic Research and Community-Based Research-
and - Figure 8.3. Traditional University and
Community Influences on CBR
38
CBR projects
  • See list on file

39
Reasons for Doing Community-Based Research
  • Dr. Robert Weisbuch, President of the Woodrow
    Wilson National Fellowship Foundation, and a
    wonderful advocate for all things humanities,
    asks
  • Do we reliably thrill our charges with the
    plenitude?
  • Are we diving into the wonderworld ?
  • Have we departed from rote learning and relic
    knowledge?
  • Please share some examples of what comes to your
    mind
  • when you hear these phrases
  • (at your own institution and elsewhere).

40
  • Weisbuch also articulated that the goal,
    especially of small, liberal arts colleges which
    began as church-related schools, should be to
  • use learning to make the world better enacting
    knowledge
  • And that what were after is scholarly
    citizenship and the capacity for thinking beyond
    the self.

41
  • Education is much more than a matter of
    imparting the knowledge and skills by which
    narrow goals are achieved. It is also about
    opening the childs students eyes to the needs
    and rights of others.
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama

42
CBR is enacting knowledge
  • We should judge faculty members not by how many
    committees theyre on, but by their capacity to
    enact knowledge, to engage the world beyond the
    college.
  • Do you agree or disagree with this statement?
  • If you agree, what are you willing to implement
    to mitigate the barriers to implementing CBR
    projects? What kinds of barriers exist on your
    campus?

43
Barriers (group list)
44
Action Planning
  • Steps to take

45
Thank you!
  • For copies of the presentation, related
    information, or just to chat share ideas
  • Lisa Whitaker
  • Center for Community Development Social
    Justice
  • Lynchburg College
  • 1501 Lakeside Drive
  • Lynchburg, VA 24501
  • Phone (434) 544-8156
  • Email whitaker_at_lynchburg.edu

46
Why Do CBR? (From the college partners
perspective)
  • 1. Some say its better research
  • Lack of relationships produced lack of trust and
    poor results
  • Participatory validity checking often shows us
    how much we would have missed
  • We get to test our research in action, find out
    if it was helpful, useful

47
Why Do CBR? (Contd.)(From the college partners
perspective)
  • 2. Its Better for Students
  • Book learning is incomplete
  • CBR surpasses service learning
  • More later on students making a contribution of
    substance and skills they gain
  • 3. It Helps the Community
  • Relevant work, sharing our knowledge and skills
  • Doesnt exploit the community to serve students
    and enhance the colleges reputation

48
Why Do CBR? (Contd.)(From the college partners
perspective)
  • 4. It feels good
  • Being truly useful, part of social change
  • Can reinvigorate career, relationships with
    students
  • Building new relationships
  • And yes, some financial incentive
  • The Continuum of Motivations
  • Putting community before the institution, before
    the students, before our career motivations?

49
Research Characteristics
  • Conventional
  • The researcher is an outside expert
  • Relationship with the community is limited and
    task-oriented
  • Objectivity (distance) is paramount
  • CBR
  • Everyone is a teacher, learner, and contributor
  • Multifaceted, informal, sometimes long-term
    relationship
  • Objectivity does not equal accuracy

50
While were talking about the research process
  • 1. Identifying the problem (community)
  • 2. Construction of the research question
    (partnership)
  • 3. Developing research instruments (college
    partners with a step for community approval, or
    partnership)
  • 4. Collecting and analyzing data (partnership)
  • 5. Interpreting results (partnership)
  • 6. Producing the final report (college partner
    with community approval, or partnership)
  • 7. Identifying action plans or next steps
    (partnership)
  • 8. Implementing initiatives (community or
    partnership, especially if intern/social
    entrepreneur is on-site)

51
Characteristics of CBR
  • Questions raised in CBR
  • transcend disciplines.
  • It favors flexibility and creativity.
  • It is user-friendly research,
  • not shelf research
  • the use of creative media
  • (video, art, community theatre, or song
  • to present results is encouraged)

52
Characteristics of CBR (contd.)
  • The research is not only useful, but a plan for
    how it will be used is integrated early in the
    process.
  • An inter- and multi-disciplinary approach is
    characteristic. Its normal in CBR to be
  • out of your element or comfort zone.
  • Its not just about knowing,
  • its about knowing how
  • How to facilitate a discussion, do
  • conflict resolution, support participation,
  • build knowledge from peoples experiences, etc.

53
Student Involvement in CBR
  • Not required
  • Certainly encouraged
  • May involve one student or an entire class
  • May slow the research process down
  • May be helpful in unanticipated ways (i.e.,
    students are non-threatening beginners
    questions are often enlightening)
  • Enormous potential for students professional and
    personal development

54
Community-Based Learning Experiences for Students
  • The best ones allow students to
  • Do meaningful work
  • Exercise initiative
  • Have important responsibilities
  • Engage in varied tasks
  • Work directly with practitioners or other
    community members
  • Connect their experience to course content

55
CBR Benefits to Students
  • Provides field work study made real
  • Applied learning and citizenship building
  • Is sometimes especially beneficial for C
    students (action-oriented, take it seriously)
  • Builds self-efficacy
  • Making a real, tangible contribution
  • Service to community
  • Imparts Civic Education
  • Awareness of the non-profit option for career
    development
  • Developing concern, compassion for social welfare
    and local constituents
  • Positive impact on retention

56
CBR Student Skill Enhancement
  • The capacity to think critically about social
    policies and conditions
  • The ability to access and evaluate information
  • The skill to work with others on projects that
    recognize and require multiple contributions
  • Build a sense of political efficacy that
    encourages taking on the challenge of active
    citizenship in a participatory democracy
  • Researcher competencies

57
College Perspective Whos Involved
  • Faculty only (1 or more faculty from one or more
    institutions CORAL Network as multi-institutional
    model)
  • Faculty 1 student with faculty as primary
    investigator and student as research assistant or
    co-investigator
  • Student as primary investigator with faculty as
    engaged supervisor
  • CBR as class project
  • Entire class
  • Student team

58
Examples of Information CBR Might Produce
  • Your Project Compass How the studys results
    will be used
  • Possible Uses of the Information
  • To fine-tune a program model
  • To provide information to prospective funders
  • To improve direct services to better meet
    constituents needs
  • Collect data to describe the existence of a
    social condition (and its qualities --- i.e., we
    know stigma and poverty exist but what do they
    really look like?)

59
Current Projects
  • 1) A study of the effectiveness of an
    experiential, adventure-based education program
    that the CCDSJ is sponsoring for 8th graders in a
    local alternative school
  • 2) A partnership with the Mental Health
    Association to survey and analyze the public's
    attitudes (in two cities and four counties) about
    mental illnesses to determine the prevalence and
    types of existing stigma, and then to design an
    action plan to reduce it
  • 3) An inner city neighborhood study of attitudes
    about youth gangs and an assessment of the assets
    the community has to deal with them, the results
    of which will be reported to the Lynchburg Safe
    Neighborhoods Steering Committee which has begun
    implementing a federal (OJJDP) comprehensive
    youth gang model.

60
A Sampling of Current CBR Project Opportunities
61
More Current CBR Project Opportunities
62
Project Steps
  • 1. Express Interest (general or specific, no
    matter) call Lisa at x8156 or email
    whitaker_l_at_lynchburg.edu
  • 2. Meet with Community Partner and CCDSJ Discuss
    research ideas possible methods any past,
    similar research done
  • partner and CCDSJ roles
  • determine if partnership will work
  • identify research question(s)
  • set next meeting.

63
Project Steps (contd.)
  • 3. Partnership Research Design Process
  • Determine needs of community partner
  • Determine how previous research will influence
    project (if at all)
  • Determine how the studys results will be used
    --- this is your PROJECT COMPASS
  • Determine the project start date and goal date
    for completion

64
Project Steps (contd.)
  • 3. Partnership Research Design Process (contd.)
  • Determine the research methods to be used,
    materials needed, other resources needed (student
    involvement?)
  • Complete form for CCDSJ use Funding Guidelines
  • Determine if IRB needs to approve the study
    (exempt, expedited, or full review)

65
Project Steps (contd.)
  • 4. Work with Partner to Gather Data, Observations
  • 5. Write Study Results
  • Include recommendations for how the results can
    be used by the community most effectively
  • Include an Abstract or Executive Summary
  • Present a draft to the community partner for
    editing and final input (if not composing
    together)
  • 6. Present the Study Results

66
Links related to CBR
  • Articles at www.bonner.org
  • http//www.umich.edu/mserve/ucomm/brochures.html
  • http//comm-org.utoledo.edu/research.htm
  • Recommended Books
  • Community-Based Research and Higher Education by
    Strand, Marullo, Cutforth, Stoecker, Donohue
    (2003, John Wiley Sons)
  • Wheres the Learning in Service Learning? by
    Eyler Giles (1999, Jossey-Bass, Inc.)

67
  • External Funding
  • Civic Engagement minor (FIPSE/Bonner grant of
    7500)
  • Jesse Ball duPont Fund
  • New Directions grant included funding for
    start-up of the CBR initiative 118,000
  • EL grant project (faculty/course development)
    89,000
  • Bonner Foundation grant for BLP 5,000
  • Another Area, literally(!),
  • of LC commitment
  • Moving CCDSJ, Bonner Leaders, SERVE, Study
    Abroad, Career Development, Social
    Entrepreneurship, Academic Advising, and Westover
    Honors Program into one area (one-stop shopping
    for EL)

68
  • Public Uses for the Humanities
  • Riches for the Poor Bard College program that
    offers people living in the cycle of poverty
    access to the humanities (a moral alternative to
    the streets) --- works somehow.
  • Journal of Common Knowledge Project Peace of
    Mind to foster cross-cultural understanding
    after Sept. 11.
  • Humanities at Work program _at_ WWFoundation
    created 40 positions in corporations around the
    nation for Humanities PhD.s See more at
    www.woodrow.org
  • Analyzing social phenomena (e.g., Harry Potter)
  • - Bring Arts and Sciences together as a pair of
    shoes (hard and soft disciplines tempered by one
    another)
  • - The best form of character education is by
    example.

69
CBR Its Origins
  • Are reflected in the terms used to describe it
    Action research, participatory research, popular
    education, participatory action research, and
    others
  • Popular Education (PE) Model Paolo Freire
    (1970) Education as a political tool to effect
    social change (learning raises social
    consciousness)
  • The work of the Highlander Folk School (now the
    Highlander Research and Education Center) founded
    by Myles Horton in TN in 1933.
  • Participatory Research (PR) Model, which mainly
    grew out of liberation struggles in the Third
    World over the past few decades and adapted to
    research with traditionally disadvantaged persons
    in North America

70
CBR Its Origins (contd.)
  • PR and PAR (Participatory Action Research)
    approaches are rooted in a critique of
    traditional Western social science research,
    whose rigidity, presumed objectivity, and
    authority of researchers and research expertise
    undermine community development efforts (Hall,
    1992 Park, 1992).
  • Translation Bad feelings/poor relationships
    often developed
  • Action Research approach (Kurt Lewin, 1948) had
    some influence as well
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