Enacting the Vision: Institutionalizing Civic and Community Engagement on Campus
A cohort of senior campus leaders committed to operationalizing and sustaining civic and community engagement across their institutions.
This cohort focuses on leaders enacting strategic and intentional planning about community engagement on campuses.
Since 2020, ADP and Collaboratory have invited AASCU members to join cohorts and participate in meetings to connect with others to form a community of practice; in 2020 and 2021, those cohorts focused on strategies for data collection. For the 2022-2023 academic year, the program focuses on bringing small teams from each campus together to organize and collaborate on implementing an institutional vision for community engagement. As an added benefit, all teams can connect to other institutional teams to share best practices, refine their strategies, and have professional development opportunities.
Who is participating?
- ADP member campuses
- Campus leaders looking to operationalize civic and community engagement across their institutions and who are actively working to identify the most sustainable path forward to support this work
- Senior leaders committed to prioritizing inclusive community engagement as a foundational aspect of their institutional mission, strategy, and infrastructure
Benefits of this program
- Define inclusive community engagement, sharing effective strategies and approaches
- Ensure institutions create more equitable and responsive relationships with community partners
- Build infrastructure to support and sustain deep, pervasive, and integrated partnerships
- Use data to deepen work with community partners and identify the most effective partnerships and models to address pressing issues in the community
- Better tell the institutional story of engagement qualitatively and quantitatively
Cohort membership
impact
Key data captured in Collaboratory from the 2021-2022 cohort
2,681
published activities
3,300
community partners
894
course sections
57,586
involved students
8.1 M+
hours contributed by those students
$844 M+
total funding for engagement and service
Key data captured in Collaboratory from the 2020-2021 cohort
2,324
published activities
2,834
community partners
637
course sections
74,903
involved students
10.3 M+
hours contributed by those students
$1.7 B+
total funding for engagement and service
Institutional civic engagement activity examples
Several years of assessments indicate that the Town Hall Meeting improves students learning of course content, changes students’ self-perception from an identification with high school notions of schooling as too often boring and meaningless to a college appropriate identification of schooling as relevant and part of students’ development as adult participants in a democracy, improves students’ civic participation, and increases students’ self-esteem.
Explore more on the institution's Collaboratory site.By considering the city’s rich history in civil rights and economic justice, as well as the even more powerful desire for civility that has impacted our ability to have deep, community-wide discussion of the area’s struggles, this program explores the different traditions of participation that drive public policy, governance, and citizen engagement.
Explore more on the institution's Collaboratory site.Students in the Gender Institute for Teaching Advocacy program work to compile a digital library including information related to various organizations throughout the state.
Explore more on the institution's Collaboratory site.Professional practice internship on voter registration, marketing, and increasing voter turnout among youth voters.
Explore more on the institution's Collaboratory site.our stories
Cohort Webinar
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