Archives - Community First 杏吧原创 University Tue, 27 Nov 2018 16:00:23 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Video: Hear my voice: Including community voices at post-secondary institutions /communityfirst/2018/video-hear-my-voice-including-community-voices-at-post-secondary-institutions/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=video-hear-my-voice-including-community-voices-at-post-secondary-institutions Tue, 27 Nov 2018 16:00:23 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=8083 On Thursday, November 22, 2018 CFICE presented Hear my voice: Including community voices at post-secondary institutions.

In this webinar, presenters shared some of their experiences and strategies for bringing community voices more fully into the post-secondary sphere.

The webinar touched on:

  • How Abbey Gardens has advocated for community voices at Trent University
  • How, as a faculty member, Peter has advocated for community voices at 杏吧原创 University
  • How the Harris Centre at Memorial University works to connect the Newfoundland and Labrador communities with the people and resources at Memorial University

Video Link

If you missed out on the day-of presentation, not to worry. We鈥檝e made it accessible below.

You can also access the presenters’ PowerPoint presentations:

A community organization’s perspective advocating for community voices

A professor’s perspective advocating for community voices

An engagement centre’s perspective advocating for community voices

Presenters

Heather Reid works as the Operations Director of Abbey Gardens, a not-for profit charity providing economic and recreational opportunities for Haliburton County.聽Heather has a background in Recreation Management, Outdoor Education, Small Business, and Community-Based Research. She gained experience brokering projects between the university and community in Nova Scotia at Acadia University. Upon moving to Haliburton, she was the program coordinator and then director at the U-Links Centre for Community Based Research. In 2013 Heather took on the role of Operations Director at Abbey Gardens and continues to foster relationships with the university through her current position.

Peter Andr茅e is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Science. His research focuses on international and Canadian environmental politics, the political economy of agri-food systems, and community-based responses to the challenges of food security and agricultural sustainability. He is co-editor of 鈥淕lobalization and Food Sovereignty: Global and Local Change in the New Politics of Food,鈥 to be published by University of Toronto Press in March 2014. He is also author of 鈥淕enetically Modified Diplomacy,鈥 on the global politics of regulating genetically-modified crops and foods, published by University of British Columbia Press.

Amy Jones is the knowledge mobilization coordinator with the Leslie Harris Centre of Regional Policy and Development at Memorial University of Newfoundland. Amy helps make research, teaching and public engagement at Memorial relevant to the people of Newfoundland and Labrador through creating connections and facilitating effective partnerships. Amy delivers the Thriving Regions Partnership Process, which engages communities and provides funding and supports to faculty, staff and students to build meaningful research partnerships for thriving social and economic regions.

Moderator: Dr. Michelle Nilson is an associate professor with the Faculty of Education at SFU, where she teaches in the Educational Leadership programs. Her research and scholarship is inspired by questions concerning the nexus between postsecondary institutions, their environment, and the social, physical, and political. Her current work is a critical examination of student financial aid and teacher education policies and their implications for access, equity, and postsecondary student participation. Her research draws on her previous experience as an administrator of several large National Science Foundation and Ford Foundation grants that fostered opportunities for building networks and communication between various stakeholder groups. Her early days were spent in Detroit, Michigan, where she taught high school mathematics and middle school science.

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CCEC Roundtables: Creating a Community of Practice /communityfirst/2018/ccec-roundtables-creating-a-community-of-practice/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=ccec-roundtables-creating-a-community-of-practice Tue, 19 Jun 2018 12:00:45 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=7591 By Chelsea Nash, Communications Research Assistant

In-depth discussions were a big feature at the Brandon CCE Regional Roundtable.

As the CFICE project approaches 2019鈥攖he end of the project鈥攖he Community-Campus Engage Canada (CCEC) team has been working hard to keep an eye on the future and explore how best to advance community-campus engagement (CCE) across the country.

Eight regional roundtables hosted by CCEC this spring across the country have been key to enhancing networks, sharing community-campus successes, and identifying gaps and needs in community-campus engagement in Canada.

CCEC, formerly Aligning Institutions for Community Impact (AICI), is one of five working groups in Phase II of the CFICE project, and is working to establish a nation-wide network of community-campus engagement practitioners, advocate for funding policies and practices that better support a community-first approach, and pilot a Community-First self-assessment system and impact framework for the Canadian context.

As David Peacock, an academic co-lead with the CCEC put it, 鈥淐CEC is an emerging national network and community of practice for strengthening Canadian communities. It increases the capacity for partnership work and support for social infrastructure to create ethical partnerships.鈥

The regional roundtables, which were hosted in Toronto, Saskatoon, Vancouver, St. John鈥檚, Halifax, Brandon, Haliburton County, and Ottawa, offer an important site for CCEC to gain insight into local community contexts in order to inform the future work of CCEC.

The goals of the roundtables

The focus of the roundtables has been to identify shared goals, expand regional and national networks, and advance community-campus engagement across the country as a collective. The roundtables are one step in the working group鈥檚 mission to connect a community of practice.

While advancing all of Canada鈥檚 communities is the goal, an important component has also been identifying the nuanced and unique differences that occur in the many communities and contexts across the country.

Michelle Nilson, an academic co-lead with CCEC, described the thinking behind the roundtables: 鈥淲e thought it would be really useful to learn more about the ways in which community-campus engagement is manifested in the different communities. And not just to go in and look at what鈥檚 happening, but also to ask them about how to develop. What are the strengths that exist in each of the communities; what are their cultural assets?鈥

CFICE members Michelle Nilson, Peter Andree and David Peacock, pose together at the Engage! 2017 conference.

CFICE members Michelle Nilson, Peter Andree and David Peacock.

Dr. Nilson said, 鈥渢he big picture is that we鈥檙e better together as communities and campuses,鈥 and the roundtables are one step on the path to enhancing those relationships and informing the larger conversation about community-campus engagement.

The role of the roundtables is pragmatic, too. Dr. Nilson, who is also working to consolidate the results of the roundtables into a report, said, 鈥渋n order for us to continue to pursue that kind of work and to continue to be funded, we have to be able to demonstrate the ways this work is making a difference in our communities, for our students, and on our campuses.鈥

The purpose behind the report

The report will consist of three parts. The first will report on each roundtable individually, so as to account for 鈥渢hose unique nuanced differences that we saw across each of the different roundtables,鈥 Dr. Nilson said.

The second part will identify any consistent themes or commonalities across all the roundtables, 鈥渞ecognizing that each roundtable doesn鈥檛 necessarily represent an entire region,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut that it might.鈥 Collecting a wide range of information means the CCEC team can identify areas they can explore further.

Finally, the last part of the report takes into account feedback from the participants at the roundtables themselves, so that the CCEC team can reflect on their own best practices.

Looking forward: results to inform the future

Dr. Nilson said one overarching theme she is seeing come out of the roundtable discussions is a desire for a national network for community-campus engagement. Dr. Nilson pointed out that professional networks and formal frameworks for capacity building are in place in the United States and the UK, but that 鈥渨e don鈥檛 really have a national strategy for CCE鈥unding and capacity have been an overwhelming theme across the provinces and communities we鈥檝e engaged with,鈥 she said.

The attendees of the Vancouver CCE Regional Roundtable decided to start a regional Community of Practice.

At this point, what that framework will end up looking like is unclear, 鈥渂ut people definitely want to connect and鈥re definitely interested in having some sort of coordinating body,鈥 Dr. Nilson said. Whether that looks like a series of online webinars, an annual conference, or something else entirely, is yet to be seen.

There have also been common traits that practitioners and stakeholders say are key to successful CCE. Strong trusting relationships built on open communication are consistently pointed to as an important pillar to a successful partnership. And, 鈥渉aving a champion鈥 for the partnership, someone that makes decisions, advocates for the project, and whom with the buck ultimately stops has been identified as another key theme. This person might be political 鈥渋n the true sense of the word,鈥 said Dr. Nilson, in that they are well-networked with the people and institutions that can provide crucial assistance to a project in the form of funding, for instance.

鈥淚 would really love to see us develop a process by which we could determine our future together and that is inclusive, that is purposeful, intentional, and that is deeply meaningful for communities and for the campuses,鈥 Dr. Nilson said, pointing out that campuses does not refer exclusively to universities.

She hopes the lasting impact of the roundtables and the resulting report will 鈥渂e a mirror to the communities that participated, and to give back to them and the work they鈥檝e contributed.鈥

Beyond that, 鈥渨e certainly hope that will inform the larger conversation about how we as a society would like to move forward with this kind of work and to help inform and shape these kinds of conversations in impactful ways鈥elebrating the successes for sure, but also considering what experiences we can learn from and areas we can grow in.鈥

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