BOOKS FOR TEACHERS, ADMINISTRATORS, AND POLICYMAKERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Community Partner Guide to Campus Collaborations Set Six- and twelve-copy sets
Enhance Your Community By Becoming a Co-Educator With Colleges and Universities
- Publisher
Stylus Publishing - Published
15th April 2015 - ISBN 9781620362716
- Language English
- Pages 140 pp.
- Size 7" x 10"
- Images 16 tables, 18 figures & 22 pull-out texts
- Publisher
Stylus Publishing - Published
15th April 2015 - ISBN 9781620362723
- Language English
- Pages 140 pp.
- Size 7" x 10"
- Images 16 tables, 18 figures & 22 pull-out texts
“Interacting with colleges can be confusing and frustrating. We learned the hard way through trial and error over the years. This Guide has great strategies for developing effective collaborations from the outset so that resources are leveraged for education and improvement.”—Sheila, Boys and Girls Club
“VERY strong and well-written chapters with lots of gold that I think community organizations will find very helpful.”—Melia, Hands on Greater Portland
“The format and visual cues make the Guide easy to scan for quick tips and ideas. Also, the information is comprehensive regarding research-based practices, but the writing is friendly and engaging for all non-profit sectors and community agencies. Lots of practical examples.”—Juan, Immigrant Empowerment
* Discover Campus Resources for Identifying Volunteers and Service-Learners
* Decode Confusing Language, Terminology, and Acronyms of Academe
* Decipher Your Academic Partner’s Goals for Community-Based Learning and Research
* Devise Empowering Learning and Serving Experiences for Students and Clients
* Design Sustainable and Enriching Relationships for Enhancing Communities
Based upon years of field experience, this Guide is addressed to you, whether your non-profit has experience of working with university interns or volunteers but wants to deepen and increase the effectiveness of the relationship; whether your agency is starting to explore how to improve client services through a campus collaboration; or whether you work for an NGO interested in partnering with universities across borders to effect positive change and draw attention to the challenges, resources, and needs of your community.
This Guide offers insights and strategies to leverage student learning and community empowerment for the benefit of both parties. Recognizing both the possibilities and the pitfalls of community-campus collaborations, it demystifies the often confusing terminology of education, explains how to locate the right individuals on campus, and addresses issues of mission, expectations for roles, tasks, training, supervision, and evaluation that can be fraught with miscommunication and misunderstanding.
Most importantly it provides a model for achieving full reciprocity in what can be an unbalanced relationship between community and campus partners so that all stakeholders can derive the maximum benefit from their collaboration.
This Guide is also available in sets of six or twelve, at reduced prices, to facilitate its use for planning, and for training of leaders engaged in partnerships.
The Community Partner Guide to Campus Collaborations
Six Copy Set
978-1-62036-271-6, $87.00
The Community Partner Guide to Campus Collaborations
Twelve Copy Set
978-1-62036-272-3, $150.00
"The authors of Community Partner Guide to Campus Collaborations effectively present an orderly guide for non-academic organizations to begin to develop mutually beneficial partnerships with post-secondary institutions.
- Reflective Teaching Journal
This book speaks clearly to both academic and non-academic organizations. The authors’ illustrations demonstrate a breadth of experience working within both types of organizations and their writing style is welcoming to readers who may be unacquainted with how community group and college partnerships work together to produce significant student learning outcomes.
Their manual, written specifically for helping non-academic people navigate the post-secondary world, also benefits academics interested in connecting their students to experiential learning opportunities."
1. INTRODUCTION
Considerations for Connecting With Colleges
Clarifying Confusing Terminology
Creating Enriching Collaborations for Community Enhancement
Conclusion
2. EXPLORE POSSIBILITIES
Calling on Your Networks for Co-Education
Connecting With Campus Offices
Conduits of Connection: AmeriCorps
College Websites
Checking in With Clubs
Convening With Other Campus Communities
Collaborating With Faculty Courses and Community-Based Research
Conclusion
3. ESTABLISH RELATIONSHIPS
Characteristics and Contexts of Enriching Collaborations
Crossing Cultural Boundaries
Common Agreements
Conclusion
4. ENGAGE FACULTY
Comprehending Faculty Work Life
Communicate Co-Educational Goals
Create Objectives and Expectations
Co-Construct Content, Assignments, Activities, and Timelines
Compare Experiences for Improvement
Conclusion
5. EMPOWER STUDENTS
Cultural Preparation
Constructive Controversy
Career and Life Coaching
Condensed Connections: Empowering Students During Short-Term Service
Conclusion
6. EVALUATE IMPACT
Create Assessment Methods for Impact and Iteration
Collect and Analyze Meaningful Data for Learning, Enhancement, and Scholarship
Civic Improvement Through Dissemination and Celebration of Accomplishments
Conclusion
7. SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
Collaborations for Community Enrichment
Collaborations for Academic Excellence and Engaged Scholarship
Continuums of Co-Education and Conclusions
REFERENCES
APPENDIX
Organizations
Handbooks and Guides
Literature
INDEX
Christine M. Cress
Christine M. Cress is Professor of Educational Leadership, Higher Education Policy, and Community Engagement at Portland State University. She received her Ph.D. from UCLA and was a Fulbright Senior Scholar at Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey. She has conducted professional trainings on curricular integration and the scholarship of service-learning at scores of colleges in North America, Europe, Japan, India, and Nepal. Earlier in her career, she was an academic and career adviser at Western Washington University, Whatcom Community College, and Northwest Indian College. For the last twenty years at PSU, she has directed Master and Doctoral degrees and a fully on-line Graduate Certificate in Service-Learning including facilitation of short-term international service-learning and COIL/Virtual Exchange classes in India, Japan, Morocco, and Turkey. Her cultural privilege is primarily northern European American with Cherokee (non-tribal affiliation) and Sene-Gambian heritage. She is a first-generation college student, adoptee and adoptive parent, and member of a multi-racial lesbian family. These myriad social positions influence her scholarship which addresses intersectionality, systemic oppression, and equity-centered education and community engagement.
Stephanie T. Stokamer
Stephanie T. Stokamer is Associate Professor of Civic Engagement and Director of Applied & Experiential Learning at Pacific University, where she leads the McCall Center for Civic Engagement. With a doctorate in educational leadership from Portland State University, she has facilitated and administered undergraduate and graduate community-based learning programs since 2005. Her scholarship focuses on service-learning and civic engagement, particularly with respect to pedagogical practices and faculty development. She is an AmeriCorps*VISTA alum and former National Service Fellow for the Corporation for National and Community Service. Stephanie comes to this work as a committed ally and accomplice for social justice, with identities rooted in her experience as a cis-gender, heterosexual woman of Anglo heritage.
Joyce P. Kaufman
Joyce P. Kaufman Professor of Political Science and Director of the Center for Engagement with Communities at Whittier College. She is the author of A Concise History of U.S. Foreign Policy, 2nd ed. (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2010) and NATO and the Former Yugoslavia: Crisis, Conflict and the Atlantic Alliance (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2002), and co-editor of The Future of Transatlantic Relations: Perceptions, Policy and Practice (with Andrew M. Dorman) (Stanford Security Studies, 2011). She is also the author of numerous articles and papers on U.S. foreign and security policy. With Kristen Williams, she is co-author of Women and War: Gender Identity and Activism in Times of Conflict (Kumarian Press, 2010) and Women, the State, and War: A Comparative Perspective on Citizenship and Nationalism (Lexington Books, 2007).