Archives - Community First ÐÓ°ÉÔ­´´ University Mon, 27 May 2019 20:36:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 Video: Increasing Student and Non-Profit Readiness for Community-Campus Engagement Placements /communityfirst/2019/video-increasing-student-and-non-profit-readiness-for-community-campus-engagement-placements/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=video-increasing-student-and-non-profit-readiness-for-community-campus-engagement-placements Fri, 01 Feb 2019 16:29:30 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=8185 On Thursday, January 31, 2019, CFICE and Community-Campus Engage Canada, with the support of , University of Toronto’s , the , and presented Increasing Student and Non-Profit Readiness for Community-Campus Engagement Placements.

This webinar explored student, campus and community capacities and readiness for mutually beneficial placements and partnerships within the context of community-campus engagement.

The guiding question for this webinar was: How can the CCE movement increase student experiential learning and community research opportunities from the undergraduate to doctorate levels while also supporting non-profit readiness and capacity to include students and to be involved in co-designing or leading research and engagement work?

Webinar participants learned how community-campus practitioners—Faculty, Students, and Community leaders—are supporting efforts that help address this question. Presenters also identified concrete suggestions for how we can increase student- community placements for mutual and societal benefit in Canada.

Video Link

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

You can access some student and non-profit readiness tools below. Note: The training modules mentioned in the video are not yet available to the public but will be hosted on the Trent Community Research Centre’s website.

Presenters

Moderator, Isabelle Kim, Director, University of Toronto Centre for Community Partnerships (CCP): Isabelle and her team at the CCP work in partnership with students, staff, faculty, communities, and non-profit and public organizations to catalyze and sustain socially-responsive CEL and CER. Isabelle will moderate the discussion, and focus the questions for presenters on student and non-profit organizations’ perspectives on: critical issues of access and preparedness to participate in CEL/R opportunities; and the kinds of structures and systems needed to sustainably and equitably increase these opportunities in a way that will result in positive impacts for both student learning and community.

Stephen Hill, Associate Professor, Trent University – Stephen has been the academic lead for CFICE’s Student Pathways working group. With financial support from Trent University and eCampus Ontario his team created new open-access community-based research and experiential training modules for students as a means of teaching students the necessary skills for working in a community-campus engagement project.

Lisa Mort-Putland, Executive Director of Volunteer Victoria and National Board member, Volunteer Canada – Lisa will share Volunteer Victoria and Volunteer Canada’s experiences with the increasing national demand for student-community placements and ideas on how to increase and support non-profit readiness to include students while increasing the sector’s role in influencing higher education research and engagement.

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Infographic & Guide: The Process of Successful Community-Campus Engagement /communityfirst/2018/infographic-guide-the-process-of-successful-community-campus-engagement/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=infographic-guide-the-process-of-successful-community-campus-engagement Wed, 03 Oct 2018 12:00:19 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=7885 ​In partnership with CFICE, U-Links has developed a manual and the purpose of this document or access the FRENCH version here) is to guide community organization staff as they begin to create research-oriented relationships with university faculty. The goal of these relationships is to maximize the effectiveness of the non-profit organization through the creation of evidence-based decision making.

Nonprofit community organizations often have service-related questions but few resources to answer these questions. For example, an organization might want to know whether a specific intervention or program is providing the desired outcome. The lack of unbiased answers to such questions makes it difficult for an organization to make the best, or perhaps most economical, decisions about the future direction of the organization.

University faculty have a need to engage in research to meet the university’s promotion and tenure requirements. More and more often faculty members are seeking projects that will make meaningful contributions to the community in which they live and work. They are seeking opportunities to engage in what is known as Community-Based Research. Faculty are recognizing that the outcome of such projects is more likely to result in change when the question, or problem statement, arises from the community. As such they are seeking research partnerships initiated by community organizations.

Other faculty, while themselves not Community-Based Research practitioners, may be able to support a research project undertaken by their students, whether as course-based projects or as graduate or undergraduate thesis projects.

Some universities and colleges have well-developed departments that engage community organizations in this process and utilize the resulting projects to provide students with real-life experiences in the surrounding community. Others are just beginning to develop the process.

To help you set up your first (or next) community-campus engagement partnership, , or click on the infographic below, which outlines the basic steps you can follow for a successful community-campus engagement partnership.

Infographic created by Kristina Reed, CFICE Communications Research Assistant

]]> Building learning pathways for students to become competent community-based researchers /communityfirst/2018/building-learning-pathways-for-students-to-become-competent-community-based-researchers/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=building-learning-pathways-for-students-to-become-competent-community-based-researchers Thu, 13 Sep 2018 20:02:57 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=7852 by Mystaya Touw, Graduate Research Assistant, Student Pathways Working Group

A woman stops her bike at a street corner to check for oncoming traffic.The CFICE Student Pathways Working Group is mapping and reviewing the curricular pathways for students. Why? Because findings in Phase I of CFICE suggested that, while senior undergraduates at Trent University are offered the opportunity to pursue community-based research (CBR), they often lack experience, skills and necessary competencies to effectively work with community groups.

Community-based learning can be very different from the traditional academic research with which students are familiar. Conventional prerequisites such as having completed a certain number of courses or surpassing an academic average threshold are not always good predictors of a student’s ability to do a quality community-based research project. This has, at times, resulted in research that was not useful to community partners or, in some cases, compromised the relationship between the campus and community partner.

Existing courses and co-curricular experiences are available to improve skills in community-based research, yet there is little guidance for students to follow a scaffolded pathway of learning. This led our working group to consider the ways that universities can better prepare students so that they can be successful community-based researchers. This includes everyone from incoming high school students, through undergraduates, up to graduate students.

How is it being developed?

The research team includes Mystaya Touw, Stephen Hill, Jim Blake, and Taylor Mackey. We’ve reviewed the literature on curriculum mapping, along with literature on curriculum specific to community-based research, service learning, and civic education. We then identified a list of core competencies for CBR through one-on-one interviews with staff, faculty, students, and community members. This list was continually revised based on new research or feedback, including comments from CFICE meetings.

We next looked for examples of comprehensive community-based research programs at other institutions, including some high school opportunities, scholarship programs, and Canadian post-secondary examples. Then, we compiled our existing Trent University curricular and extra-curricular opportunities relating to community engagement and research. Using all of this information, we are attempting to create a plan for a community-based research curriculum pathway for students to follow at Trent University by looking for gaps, and ideas to help fill these. We have outlined a set of course work and experiences that help students become effective community-based researchers.

What will be the end result?

The result of our work will be a report reviewing the literature on curriculum mapping and community-based research, examples of other programs, as well as exploring the skills and competencies required for CBR and strategies for assessing these. We also compiled a list of curricular and extra-curricular opportunities for students at Trent that relate to or support CBR. Finally, we will make recommendations about how to improve and expand on existing opportunities to further develop the undergraduate curriculum and student experience in CBR at Trent, and other institutions.

How will this work help students, professors, and community organizations at Trent?

There is a renewed commitment to community-based research that is driven both internally and externally. Ontario universities, for example, are being encouraged and incented by the province to incorporate more experiential learning opportunities, including community-based research, into their degree programs. Trent has stated in their Strategic Mandate Agreement with the province that graduating students will leave having at least one meaningful experiential learning opportunity. This creates pressure on the in Haliburton, and the in Peterborough to expand the number of students working with community partners.

The increasing number of students involved in community-based research, combined with the identified need to improve students’ preparation, creates challenges. By surveying the literature and landscape, looking to identify best practices and learning outcomes for community-based research, our work provides faculty and instructional designers with a starting point for curriculum mapping, course development and redesign. Ultimately, by successfully supporting and developing students community-based research skills, we are also supporting communities.

(From left to right) Tessa Nasca, Katie Caddigan, Nadine Changfoot, and Jason Hartwick meet to discuss the ANC Peterborough Project.

Students Tessa Nasca and Katie Caddigan, Professor Nadine Changfoot, and community member Jason Hartwick discuss a community-campus project in Peteroborough.

How will this work help campus-community engagement practitioners at other universities?

We hope our report helps to prepare and engage students in community-based research, particularly at the undergraduate level. There is not a robust literature surrounding undergraduate curriculum for community-based research, so we also hope to publish some of this in the academic literature.

Hopefully, this report will be a useful tool for other institutions to examine their curricular and extra-curricular community engagement opportunities. The goal is to improve institutions’ service to students by better providing them with tools and opportunities. This in turn helps communities by creating knowledgeable, engaged students who are prepared and excited to work with their communities.

When will the curriculum mapping report be ready?

Our draft report is just about ready for review by colleagues and others at Trent and the CFICE network. The goal is for a final version to be complete this fall and shared through the CFICE website. We’re also presenting our work at the Council of Ontario Universities in October.

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Community-Campus Engagement Funding: A Community Perspective /communityfirst/2018/community-campus-engagement-funding-a-community-perspective/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=community-campus-engagement-funding-a-community-perspective Mon, 06 Aug 2018 12:00:01 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=7697 Portrait of Jim Blake, Community Co-lead of CFICE's Student Pathways Working Group.What’s the difference for a community organization between receiving community project funding versus community-campus engagement project funding? What makes community-campus engagements challenging with respect to funding? What opportunities does community-campus engagement funding provide to community organizations?

In this podcast, we sit down with Jim Blake, the Community Co-lead of CFICE’s Student Pathways working group. Jim shares his experience with community-campus funding, including the challenges that come with funding laden with academic language, managing the expectations from a variety of different funding sources, and how sometimes funder’s expectations don’t line up with what’s feasible in a small community organization. Listen to our podcast or read the transcript below for more!

Community-Campus Engagement Funding: A Community Perspective Podcast Transcript

[Music begins]

Chelsea: Hello, and thank you for joining us. This is a Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement (CFICE) podcast. My name is Chelsea and I am really excited to introduce this series on Campus-Community Engagement Funding, where we sit down with people from community organizations, students, and administrators, to get their perspectives on the ins and outs of CCE funding.

We’re here with Jim Blake to get his perspective on Campus-Community Engagement funding. Jim is the Community Co-lead of the Student Pathways working group, and has been with the CFICE project since the end of 2017. Thanks for joining us, Jim.

The first question I’m hoping to ask you is what do you wish you’d known about funding before participating on a CCE grant project like CFICE.

Jim: I guess I’ve spent the last 25 years finding funding in the community so that we can do community-based research in relationship with the university. So our organization is an independent organization which manages the relationship between the community that has questions it wants answered, and the university and the professors and students who want to do research in the community. So the structure of the funding that came through CFICE is all organized, as many things are through SSHRC, in a very academic way, with academic language. You know, we’re going to take this person’s time, and it’s going to get back-filled by this, or whatever. That kind of stuff just does not happen in a small not-for-profit organization. Basically, you’ve got people, and if you’re going to use more of their resources, then you need funding to be able to make that happen. So, after lots of conversations, and a very understanding co-lead at the university, and working with the folks in CFICE, we figured it out and made it happen. I must say it was quite…convoluted and confusing. But that’s just from a community perspective. And the way that universities do their funding is very different from the way that community organizations do their funding. We get some funding from Trent University to be able to do our work, and the rest of the money comes from the community. And, with the university basically we have a memorandum of understanding, they’ll provide a certain amount of money, and we in turn will do x y and z, engage so many students, have so many community projects, those kinds of things. Once we get that MOU done, it’s a very simple process, to be able to do that.

Chelsea: In your experience, what do you find is similar and what do you find is different between community project funding on its own and then the campus-community partnership funding for community partners. Like you said, there was a lot of academic language and those sorts of things, is that a main difference?

Jim: I look at all funding in the same way. Some funding comes with expectations, and other funding is just…somebody makes a donation, so they don’t have the same expectations and you aren’t writing reports and delivering outcomes and those kinds of things. There’s a whole spectrum of things that need to be done and need to be delivered. I think as long as the funder has an understanding of the capacity of the organization that it’s funding, and it’s not too convoluted, then I don’t really see that much difference.

One of the wonderful things about the funding through this program is that it has allowed us to have master’s students embedded in the community, so embedded RAships in the community for a number of years. That has made a world of difference in the kind of research we are able to do in our community.

Chelsea: What’s a funding challenge that you’ve experienced in a CCE partnership, and how did you overcome it?

´³¾±³¾:ÌýThe funding challenge was that funding would come to our organization, the idea being that they would buy hours of our staff, and then those hours would be back-fllled by someone else. But when you have a small community, you only have two staff, you can’t bring in somebody to back-fill four hours. It just doesn’t work. It probably works in a university or academia, where those hours are allocated to someone else. You know professors work that way, and so their teaching load is lowered and their research load is increased and somebody else takes a…it just does not work in a small organization. There is very little opportunity for back-filling. My thinking is the whole idea of community engagement, is that if you really want to engage not-for-profit organizations, you’ve got to look at how they actually operate: How they fund their programs; what is it you want to accomplish; and what’s the best way to do that. And we’ve been able to figure that out after having conversations. It’s actually all great. One of the wonderful things about the funding through this program is that it has allowed us to have master’s students embedded in the community, so embedded RAships in the community for a number of years. That has made a world of difference in the kind of research we are able to do in our community. So having that kind of funding, and then through that, we’ve been able to get matching funding from community organizations to be able to do that. So that flexibility to make that happen and get access to that incredible resource on an ongoing basis is extraordinary.

…in terms of [having] the funding be as effective as possible, if the idea is to have organizations community-engaged and [doing] community-engaged research, you’re going to make the funding model as simple as possible so the organization can spend its time doing its work, instead of reporting on the money.

Chelsea: Is there anything else you’d like to add about funding from a community organization’s perspective, in your experience?

Jim: Our organization, our role is to be that broker in the community. It’s not an easily fund-able program. Research organizations aren’t necessarily, it’s not that easy to go to the community and say, ‘will you donate money to a research organization?’ So, it’s a constant challenge finding all the little pieces of funding to be able to put all that together in one package and make that work. So sometimes we’re maybe dealing with 10 different funding streams and having to report out on all of those things. So my thoughts in terms of to have the funding be as effective as possible, if the idea is to have organizations community-engaged and community-engaged research, you’re going to make the funding model as simple as possible so the organization can spend its time doing its work, instead of reporting on the money.

Chelsea: Thanks for sharing your perspective, Jim. Definitely a lot to think about. This has been a Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement Podcast, where we talk about Campus-Community Engagement funding. We have two more instalments in this series coming up, where we hear from students who have worked with the CFICE project for a long time, and one of the administrators of the CFICE project, who’s had a big role in the funding of this multi-year project.

Talk to you then.

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TrentU Master’s Candidate Emily Amon studies the effectiveness of Community Based Research /communityfirst/2018/trentu-masters-candidate-emily-amon-studies-the-effectiveness-of-community-based-research/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=trentu-masters-candidate-emily-amon-studies-the-effectiveness-of-community-based-research Thu, 02 Aug 2018 12:00:00 +0000 /communityfirst/?p=7729 Portrait of Emily Amon, RA with the Student Pathways working group.CFICE Research Assistants (RAs) are making waves in community-based research! Emily Amon, an RA with the Student Pathways working group, was recently profiled by Random Acts of Green as a way of highlighting her Master’s research on community impact.

An excerpt of the article is included below, and you can read the full piece !

TrentU Master’s Candidate Emily Amon studies the effectiveness of Community Based Research

Emily Amon is a passionate community-based researcher.

She has completed THREE environmental science community research projects during her Bachelor of Environmental Sciences and Studies undergraduate degree at Trent.

Her current project as a Masters of Sustainabilities Studies Candidate at Trent University is focused on community-based research. This type of research involves working with a diverse range of partners to help gather different perspectives, contribute expertise and share decision making.

Emily is exploring how student research can be used to drive community activismÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýinfluence sustainable community changes.  At the heart of all social and environmental movements, groups of people have worked together to achieve common goals.Ìý It is important to understand the process of how people band together to create meaningful changes.Ìý

Community groups with research needs are partnered with Trent students to complete community-based research projects through Trent’s experiential education programs, facilitated by both U-Links Centre for Community Based Research (for projects in the Haliburton Region), and the Trent Community Research Centre (for projects in the Peterborough Region).

Students have completed a wide variety of projects with far reaching impacts from:
  • Waste audits at the landfills in Algonquin highlands that led to a new recycling program
  • Water quality monitoring projects which have engaged cottagers and improved awareness of environmental concerns around their lakes
  • The establishment of community gardensÌý²¹²Ô»åÌýnature education programs
  • Improving operations for the local farmers markets

Emily’s research focuses on what happensÌý³Ù´Ç the community after the student completes the research and how positive changes continue in the area.

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Plain Language Podcast: Dahl Forest Wetlands Report /communityfirst/2016/plain-language-podcast-dahl-forest-wetlands-report/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=plain-language-podcast-dahl-forest-wetlands-report Thu, 28 Jan 2016 15:25:14 +0000 http://carleton.ca/communityfirst/?p=3013 Based on the report, Herpetiles of the Dahl Forest Wetlands, CFICE’s latest podcast highlights some unique facts about the frogs, snakes and turtles you might see on a Dahl Forest hike. Located in Haliburton County, this 500-acre nature reserve straddles 2.7 kilometres of the nearby Burnt River, revealing highly diverse habitats, flora and fauna.

Download a copy of the .ÌýPodcast written and recorded by Lily Haines, CFICE Knowledge Mobilization RA.Ìý

This report was created by Trent University, U-Links, and the Haliburton Highland Land Trust with the support of CFICE’s (Peterborough/Haliburton). Download a copy of the report by clicking on the image below.

Image of the Dahl Forest Wetland Report front page, featuring a large green frog peeking up from the surrounding green water.

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How Community-Campus Partnerships Can Help Renew Local Economies /communityfirst/2013/how-community-campus-partnerships-can-help-renew-local-economies/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=how-community-campus-partnerships-can-help-renew-local-economies Wed, 03 Apr 2013 18:59:30 +0000 http://carleton.ca/communityfirst/?p=460 March 23, 2013

Edward Jackson, Principal Investigator for CFICE presented “: How Community Campus Partnerships Can Help Renew Local Economies” to the Annual U-Links Celebration of Research Fleming College, Haliburton

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