958 results on '"community needs"'
Search Results
52. Rural Higher Education: Realities & Opportunities. A Special Supplement to the Rural Matters Podcast Series
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MDRC and MDRC
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What works to help rural students succeed in higher education? In fall 2020, MDRC partnered with Rural Matters and Ascendium Education Group to produce a four-part podcast series called "Rural Higher Education: Challenges & Opportunities." The series gathered experts from across the country to examine the realities of rural life and to address the educational challenges facing rural communities, such as low college enrollment rates, inadequate access to broadband internet, and lack of funding for rural education. This report summarizes the podcast series and focuses on four main issues: How are rural colleges adapting to the coronavirus pandemic? How are states approaching public-private partnerships to improve educational outcomes? What is the impact of racial diversity in rural America? How are communities and colleges pursuing economic development and preparing students for jobs in the modern economy? The four reports include: (1) "COVID-19 and Rural Higher Education: Rapid Innovation and Ideas for the Future;" (2) "West Virginia's Climb: A Statewide Education Collaboration That Centers on Rural Communities;" (3) "Recognizing Diversity in Rural America: College Access Strategies in Rural Communities of Color;" and (4) "Innovation, Technology, and the Future of Rural Colleges."
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- 2021
53. Transforming an Educational Community in Guatemala Using the Plan Do Study Act Cycle
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Daniel, Mayra C., Wasonga, Teresa, and Burgin, Ximena
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This case study with educators from a school in an urban low socioeconomic neighborhood near Guatemala City, Guatemala, explored the effectiveness of the Plan, Do, Study, Act cycle (PDSA) to guide teachers' professional development at a Pre-K-K public school (Langley, 2009). This three-year study focused on developing teacher leaders and researchers through self-reflective accountability. Findings documented institutional problems requiring immediate and long-term attention and ways to involve families in extending literacy instruction at school to the home front. Study results highlight the need for effective and empowering literacy methods to be used in Guatemala and suggest the country's teachers wish to support students' critical thinking and create democratic classrooms.
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- 2021
54. Community-Based Research in Practice: Faculty Reflections on a Collaborative Approach to Teaching CBR with a Variety of Community Partners
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McGovern, Jen, Mele, Marie, and Ragudaran, Sanjana
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This essay highlights a collaborative approach to teaching a university course on community-based research while working with a variety of community partners. As part of a broader research project, the course involved faculty from a range of disciplines as well as community sponsors from public and private sectors. Working with a complex array of stakeholders proved challenging at times, yet yielded rewards for the students and the professors teaching the course.
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- 2021
55. Pedagogical Keys to Inclusion and Democracy in a Basque Country School: Gaining Knowledge from the Educational Project at Antzuola Herri Eskola
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Karrera Xuarros, Inaki, Basasoro Ciganda, Maitane, and Arguiñano Madrazo, Andoni
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The main objective of this collaborative study of a qualitative nature is to delve into the pedagogical keys of the educational project at "Antzuola Herri Eskola" (Antzuola Public School). This educational centre is a public nursery and primary school in the Basque Country with more than 40 years of innovative pedagogical experience in which the participation of students, the involvement of the educational community, as well as democratic values and well-being have become the hallmarks of the programme. In order to achieve the objective, a content analysis and information triangulation has been carried out through the participation of three focus groups composed of the key people in charge of the project and leaders of the innovation process. Moreover, the school's own teaching publications have also been analysed, after which all of the information was arranged into different categories. The information obtained and its subsequent analysis reveal the key strategies implemented by the team of professionals at the school in promoting an inclusive and democratic educational centre that fulfils the needs of its community and current society. Furthermore, the voices of the teachers themselves demonstrate how they have implemented these key strategies into their teaching practice, and the transformations they have had to make at the curricular, organisational, and attitudinal levels.
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- 2023
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56. Responsive, Adaptive, and Future-Centred Leadership in Response to Crisis: Findings from Australia, Fiji, and New Zealand
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Striepe, Michelle, Thompson, Pauline, Robertson, Sylvia, Devi, Mohini, Gurr, David, Longmuir, Fiona, Taylor, Adam, and Cunningham, Christine
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The COVID-19 pandemic has caused major disruption to education and highlighted the importance of effective leadership during times of crisis. This paper considers the impact of the pandemic on school leaders in Australia, Fiji, and New Zealand. A secondary analysis of data from five interpretivist, qualitative studies was conducted. The aim of the study was to investigate the similarities and differences between the leaders' experiences across school settings, states/provinces, and countries. Our findings place renewed importance on understanding the role of schools within the community and the vital role school leaders play in helping schools respond to volatile and dynamic circumstances. The findings show how leaders' roles and responsibilities adapted to respond quickly and effectively to the urgency of the crisis, regardless of the context. Furthermore, common practices such as attending to wellbeing and providing clear and timely communication were revealed. The analysis also revealed some interesting nuances in the leaders' responses because of the duration of the crisis, the particular needs of the community, and government requirements. Papers like this provide insights into what leaders do and how schools and systems might prepare and support leaders to lead during times of crisis.
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- 2023
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57. Movement and Solidarity: Community Mobilization to Mitigate the Adverse Impact of COVID-19 on Families with Young Children Receiving Care from Early Childhood Systems
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Nayak, Sameera S., Scoglio, Arielle A .J, Mirand, Daphney, Oates, Andie, Rabow, Maya, and Molnar, Beth E.
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Emerging research indicates an immense burden on children and families related to the COVID-19 pandemic. This study uses data from semi-structured interviews and focus groups with early childhood service providers (n=19) to demonstrate the pandemic's impact on families with very young children and early childhood services in two high-need communities in Massachusetts, USA. We found that although the pandemic has worsened existing inequities and severely limited resources for young children and families, community mobilization in response to the crisis and innovative strategies stemming from resilience were developed quickly. Findings highlight the usefulness of early childhood systems of care in crisis responses and leveraging public-private cooperation to serve the needs of diverse families with young children. Lessons learned are applicable to global settings with high pre-pandemic inequities and can be used to develop stronger models of crisis response within the early childhood sector in preparation for future crises.
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- 2023
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58. A Glocalized Bilingual Policy Implementation in a Junior High School in Taiwan
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Sia, Yi-Syuan and Chern, Chiou-Lan
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Bilingual education is burgeoning in Asia, and most bilingual practices are impacted by national language policies. However, top-down policy implementation and bottom-up practices may spark mismatches, constraints, or possibilities. Taiwan was selected as a research context to investigate the perceptions of administrators and teachers (including subject teachers and both native and non-native teachers of English) at a junior high school. Building on Ricento and Hornberger's language policy and planning framework proposed in 1996, this paper examines to what extent the school implemented these policies and discusses the interplay between the administrators' and teachers' policy implementation and the underlying forces that fuel policy implementation. The data revealed a three-dimensional model of schoolwide policy implementation (i.e. the individual, team, and organisation levels) that impacted and synergised one another. The synergy and pedagogical innovation of the professional learning community are crucial to a school's reform. The authors conclude with implications for policy and practice.
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- 2023
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59. Beckoning a New Post-COVID Higher Education Engagement Agenda: Lessons from Nelson Mandela University COVID-19 Responses
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Bazirake, Joseph Besigye, Hamukuaya, Hashali, Chauke, Tinyiko, Mngadi, Anele, and De Raedt, Amy
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The COVID-19 pandemic set higher education institutions on an unprecedented path requiring of them to identify alternative strategies and implement various initiatives to sustain their academic projects. With the widespread devastation of the pandemic, the purpose of universities within their communities were again in the spotlight. A sensibility of the intertwinement between the local university and the community was also reemphasised in the pandemic's wake, with the recognition of COVID-19 as a crosscutting problem. This paper examines Nelson Mandela University's engagement initiatives during the pandemic to underline its fundamental strategic undertakings within its positioning as a "transformative, responsive university in service of society". Through an interpretive paradigm, the paper presents lessons from a qualitative, explorative case study inquiry of Nelson Mandela University reports during the pandemic. The findings indicate that the initiatives deployed by the university during the pandemic strengthened its overall community engagement strategy.
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- 2023
60. Indigenous Elders' Wisdom and Dominionization in Higher Education: Barriers and Facilitators to Decolonisation and Reconciliation
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Kennedy, Andrea, McGowan, Katharine, and El-Hussein, Moham
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Decolonisation in higher education requires congruent social processes that support human rights and inclusive knowledge generation. While often discussed, the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada's. "Calls to Action," and similar reports published over several decades, have yet to disrupt existing power structures and shift government or popular relations with Indigenous peoples. To explore why reconciliation seems to be idling, we sought local Indigenous Elders' guidance, who in addition to offering support, advised a westernised research method combined with decolonised knowledge mobilisation to satisfy the 'two worlds' of academic expectations and Indigenous community needs. Subsequently, we undertook a grounded theory study with academics from a Canadian university. Interviews and surveys revealed the social process of dominionization, the entrenched ownership of expertise that maintains westernised academic privilege over decolonisation efforts. Before seeing these results, the Elders prayed together and shared observations presaging researchers' findings. Elders expressed how their guidance is rarely treated as relevant. This paper provides insight to the social processes that obstruct and support decolonisation in the academy and begins to explore how social innovation through co-learning and meaningful consultation with Elders raises opportunities for positive disruption.
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- 2023
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61. Strategies for Social Participation of Universities in the Local Community; Perspectives of Internal and External Beneficiaries
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Bagherianfar, Mostafa and Dolati, Aliakbar
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Purpose: Social participation of university refers to the creation of knowledge and participatory processes with local communities in solving community problems in order to achieve sustainable development. Identifying the university's social participation strategies was the main purpose of the present study. Design/methodology/approach: In order to achieve this aim, the qualitative method was used. The study area is Semnan province and Semnan University. The statistical sample included two groups of internal beneficiaries of the university (including staff, deputies and faculty members of the university) and external beneficiaries of the university (including managers and experts of local organizations, education, province and municipality). The sampling was purposefully performed based on the theoretical saturation criterion, holding an interview with 29 participants. Data analysis was performed in three stages of open, axial and selective coding. Findings: The results of the research showed that the university can participate with its local community in developing the university vision according to the needs of the local community, holding workshops and scientific conferences, concluding joint research contracts, expert and researcher exchange, environmental leadership training, participatory management and teamwork, indigenous manpower, institutionalizing regional participation, solving community issues and problems, creating associations and non-governmental companies in the community, mission orientation, directing education and research towards solving problems and meeting the real needs of the province according to land management, supervising research activities, conducting comprehensive studies in the field of mineral potentials, organizing workshops for farmers' awareness, monitoring the employment of graduates, creating and developing new fields according to the needs of the province and region, educating citizens and cultural zing to reduce production and segregate household waste, opening the university's social space for the growth and supply of youth, educating the province's handicrafts to housewives, especially in the deprived areas, sensitizing programs in the field of environmental protection, and reviewing educational content based on the community needs. Originality/value: Biosocial and economic policy of universities was another result of the present study. The university intends to make citizens aware of social and environmental problems and to provide the necessary education in the fields of air pollution, soil salinity, drinking water supply, cultivation pattern refinement, agricultural mechanization, and waste and waste management. The university should also promote entrepreneurship among students and faculty members and attract economic resources to the university through innovation and commercialization circles, and develop the province's economic infrastructure in various fields of tourism, agriculture, industry and mining.
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- 2023
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62. The Six Priorities: How to Find the Resources Your School Community Needs
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ASCD, Torres, Luis Eladio, Torres, Luis Eladio, and ASCD
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In this provocative and timely book, Luis Eladio Torres challenges a common assumption: that education is the "first priority" for families, including those who are raising their children in low-income, high-need communities. Instead, he argues that these families must confront daunting challenges in five other areas--food, shelter, safety, health, and access to technology--before they can focus on their children's education. To make his case, Torres draws on his experience as the award-winning principal of an elementary school in the Bronx and as a leader in New York City's community schools network. A community school focuses on educating the whole child, supporting families, and extending its reach into the larger community--both by tapping into resources the community can offer and by providing a range of social and health services to that community. "The Six Priorities: How to Find the Resources Your School Community Needs" demonstrates how leaders in challenging education environments can improve their schools through a "community-matching process" that consists of four steps: (1) Identifying the gaps between what is available and what is necessary for a school and its community to function well; (2) Specifying needs, including prioritizing and distinguishing needs from wants; (3) Telling your story, as a way to gain support for the effort to close the gap and address the needs; and (4) Establishing strategic partnerships with individuals, organizations, and agencies that can provide resources and expertise. To help you implement the process in your own school, this insightful guide includes a downloadable community-matching worksheet. The goals of this process are clear: to reduce the shocking inequities between impoverished communities and their wealthier counterparts; to help disadvantaged students succeed; and, ultimately, to steer them toward productive lives beyond the classroom. The need has never been greater.
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- 2023
63. Community Orientation: An Overlooked Pillar of Market-Oriented Higher Education Institutions
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Shahira El Alfy
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The research explores community orientation (CO) perceptions and their potential outcomes within a higher education context. The study follows a three-step approach that draws from service marketing, organization theory, and higher education literature. Subsequently, a qualitative approach is adopted to develop the research model, followed by a quantitative approach to test the model. Content analysis is used to analyze qualitative data, while factor analysis, correlation, and regression are used to analyze the quantitative data. A scale to measure CO is developed and tested as an integral part of the research model. CO explains 38% of the variance in academic service quality. Quantitative research findings show that CO has a significant direct and indirect effect on academic service quality through students' service role (SSR). Findings open a research path towards revisiting market orientation in HE and adaptation, testing, and CO scale refinement. The study develops and tests a model in which CO has a significant effect on enhancing academic service quality and students' role in service provision using a mixed-method research approach. Findings guide managers on improving academic service quality and students' service role and bring to managers' attention the value of community orientation to HEIs.
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- 2023
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64. The Effects of Learning Modality on Student Reading Growth during the Pandemic
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Fitzsimmons, Renee Estelle
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The purpose of this study was to dive into one school district's different learning modality options during the pandemic and analyze their reading growth using the Northwest Evaluation Assessment Measures of Academic Progress (NWEA MAP) as a metric for comparison. The researcher looked at one school district's response to their community's needs and the difference between their two learning environment options. The researcher examined potential relationships and considered each program's growth in reading scores to determine if there was statistical significance when comparing this district's programs (remote and hybrid in-person) to the national reading growth average. This study also compared in-district growth between their remote and hybrid in-person programs, as well as among the subgroups of gender, and students with and without Individual Education Plans (IEPs).The study showed significance between the hybrid in-person program when compared to the nation. This district's hybrid in-person reading growth scores were higher than the national average by 1.15 RIT points with a p-value of .018. The district's hybrid in-person program also outperformed its remote counterpart by 3.51 RIT points with a p-value of .008. The subgroups of gender and students with and without an IEP in this study also proved significant as males in the remote program had 4.75 fewer RIT points of growth than their hybrid in-person peers with a p-value of .017. Results for students with IEPs, especially in the remote program, also showed significance as students without IEPs had a mean growth score of 3.07 RIT points, while students with IEPs had a RIT mean score decrease of -5.20 with a p-value of .007. Lastly, the study found a significant decrease in reading RIT score growth, specifically for students in the remote program. Students without an IEP in the remote program grew 1.66 RIT points while students with IEPs in the remote program had a RIT mean score decrease of -14.67 with a p-value of .006.Through the research and data analysis, recommendations for educators and also for future research include maintaining in-person school settings for younger students as much as possible, ensuring adequate, and appropriately trained adult support for students to facilitate engagement and accountability, and taking measures to deliver the highest quality, research based, instruction to students. Results of this study are intended to help inform members in the field of education to make data informed decisions, both in the elementary reading realm, as well as any higher education organization interested in learning more about online learning environments and reading growth. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
65. A Case Study Involving External Stakeholder Perceptions of Factors Related to Effective Community College Civic Engagement Initiatives
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Matthew David Little
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The purpose of this case study was to understand external stakeholder perceptions regarding factors related to effective community college civic engagement. The theory guiding this study was empowerment theory, as it allowed for exploring community-academic partnerships through a lens focused on community psychology, linking individual well-being with the larger social and political environment. Purposeful and convenience sampling were used to identify and select 18 highly qualified members of the Riverside Chamber of Commerce. Data collection and analysis were ongoing, emergent, and interrelated processes. Sources of data included individual document analysis, semi-structured interviews, and focus group discussions. Data analysis involved examining, tabulating, testing, and recombining evidence to produce empirically based findings until theme saturation occurred. The findings of this study were organized into three themes, including community needs, resources, and relationships. The researcher allowed for data triangulation, seeking to understand complex social phenomena while retaining a holistic and real-world perspective. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
66. Making a Difference in the World through Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics: A Phenomenological Study of the Lived Experiences of Graduate Students Engaging in STEM-Based Academic Service-Learning
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Aaron Kyle Hackman
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This phenomenological study sought to understand the lived experiences of graduate students engaged in STEM-related Academic Service-Learning (AS-L). For the purposes of this study, Academic Service-Learning is a form of experiential learning whereby students complete a service project as a component of a specific course. This study looked at these student AS-L project experiences at the graduate level as a component of STEM-based courses. While the impact of Academic Service-Learning on the undergraduate experience is well documented, there is no research to date on the graduate experience, much less on graduate students in STEM fields. By understanding the lived experiences of graduate students in STEM-based Academic Service-Learning, this study attempts to fill that gap. The research questions that guided my study were: (1) What types of project-based experiences are graduate students performing in their Academic-Service-Learning designated courses? (2) What are the lived experiences of graduate students who are conducting AS-L projects in the community as a component of a STEM-based AS-L course as perceived by students, faculty, and community partners. (3) What are the lived experiences of the community partners who are hosting the students for their AS-L projects. The study included 16 participants, comprising of 7 students, 6 faculty, and 3 community partners. The feedback shared for this study was collected through semi-structured interviews lasting approximately 30-45 minutes and took place electronically. Data was then analyzed through two rounds of coding: (1) In Vivo coding followed by (2) Axial Coding. Several themes emerged in response to the research questions. The emergent themes associated with answering the first research question about the types of AS-L projects are: project location, regionally focused, course / project relationship, opportunities to make recommendations, and working while completing the project. The emergent themes associated with answering the second research question about the lived experiences of graduate students involved in STEM-related AS-L projects are: overall positive experiences, learning the needs of the community, obtaining experiential learning experiences, enhanced employability / career growth, and enhancing skillsets. Finally, the emergent themes associated with answering the third research question about the lived experiences of community partners who host STEM-related AS-L students are their motivations for hosting AS-L students and their approach to supervising students. The findings presented in this phenomenological study may be helpful for students looking to increase their skillsets. This study may also be helpful for faculty and institutions of higher education looking for ways to increase student success and deepen connections with the greater community. Finally, this study may also be beneficial for the community organizations looking to grow their own skillsets and talent base. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
67. Situating the Social Practices of Postsecondary Career and Technical Education within Wyoming's Rural Cultural Communities
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Rosemary T. McBride
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Despite the fact that Career and Technical Education (CTE) prepares students for high-wage careers and in-demand jobs (Gordon & Schultz, 2020), it silences the voices it aims to empower by focusing on career alignment rather than community. This dissertation examines perceptions in rural communities in Wyoming to determine how CTE programs can better integrate training with local needs. Using a meta-aggregative research synthesis, the first manuscript synthesized the findings from multicultural education approaches across diverse settings in CTE classrooms over the last twelve years. In the second manuscript, a transformative variation of the Delphi technique was used to assess consensus and dissension among community experts in Wyoming, asking what they believe needs to be taught in postsecondary CTE. The third manuscript examined focus group data from 37 faculty members at five rural-serving community colleges (RSCCs) in Wyoming to analyze how relationships contribute to feelings of connectedness and isolation and to transformative teaching and learning. The RSCC focus groups reveal that faculty act as system conveners to facilitate STEM student transfers. In this dissertation, cultural responsiveness in CTE programs has been shown to increase student engagement, strengthen knowledge application, and facilitate rural STEM student transfer. Moreover, expert panelists identified workforce training based on labor force data but disagreed on how inequities can be addressed. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
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- 2023
68. Around the Corner, across the Globe: Developing Global Citizens through Civic Engagement
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Nickitas, Donna M. and Pontes, Nancy M. H.
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Nursing educators wrestle with preparing the future nursing workforce to meet the needs of underserved, vulnerable populations in marginalized communities who suffer significant health disparities and social injustices. This article illustrates the integration of engaged civic learning (ECL) within a social justice framework that prepares baccalaureate nurses as global citizens to provide culturally congruent health care around the corner in local communities and learning abroad programs across the globe. Multiple partnerships with local organizations were strengthened, with ECL integrated across the nursing curriculum and aligned with local needs of community housing, schools, churches, shelters, and fitness centers. The nursing faculty at Rutgers School of Nursing-Camden collaborated with language professors to develop a Spanish for Health Professions program to increase communication between students and the high percentage of Spanish-speaking populations served locally and globally. A mixed-methods design evaluated program outcomes using descriptive data, student reflections, and the Global Perspective Inventory (GPI) to assess students' experiences and global learning related to learning abroad during their college experience. Results from presurveys to post-survey results showed significant improvement (p < .05) in global learning in 16 of 35 question items. As students journey from entrance into nursing school until graduation, ECL develops them into engaged global citizens.
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- 2020
69. Remote and Rural Placements Occurring during Early Medical Training as a Multidimensional Place-Based Medical Education Experience
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Ross, Brian M., Cameron, Erin, and Greenwood, David
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The Northern Ontario School of Medicine delivers medical education aiming to improve the health outcomes for persons living in Northern Ontario, including those in underserviced rural and geographically remote communities. Second year students experience rural medicine and living during two four-week long placements set in remote and rural communities (RRCP) supervised by local physicians. This place-based approach to medical education aims to equip learners with the skills and dispositions needed to work there successfully. The goal of the study was to develop a better understanding of RRCPs from different perspectives: Institutional, community-preceptors and students. Data was collected by review of institutional documents, semi-structured interviews, and questionnaires to obtain information about the aims of each group. A place-based educational framework informed the analysis which developed themes and sub-themes using a constructivist approach. The aims of each group were in five themes, social accountability, community engagement, integrated learning, forming the rural clinician, and living in place as a rural clinician. Differences were, however, apparent in terms of emphasis and perceived relevance, with these being related to the perceptual, political, ideological and social dimensions. For example, the finding that students did not value extra-clinical learning about or within the wider community can be viewed as students having a different place-relationship with the community than their teachers in terms of the social dimension. The data suggests that curricula should include consideration of the various ways students and teachers interact with placement communities with the aim of gaining understanding of, and bridging the gap between, their different expectations.
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- 2020
70. The Role of NGOs in Supporting Education in Africa
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Brophy, Michael
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Non-Government Organisations (NG0s) which support education in Africa may use different titles such as Council or Trust, are almost always Non-profit organizations. They differ in size, ranging from small local organisations through to large internal multinationals. When founded they will often reflect the ideas, objectives and views of their founders. Funds for new NGOs especially smaller organisations were, and still are, likely to come from supporters, small charities and foundations. Their activities are likely to focus either on specific areas for example village schools or supporting specific causes such as school children with disabilities. Funding for many NGOs has changed significantly from their early years. Many now receive large proportions of their funding from governments. However many NGOs perceive their work to be guided by the principals of neutrality and impartiality. Governments however may view the NGO education programmes they fund as being part of a "counter insurgency strategy" or as one of their "combat teams". Governments and international funders such as the European Union often now prefer to support consortia where a number of NGOs and multilateral organisations join together to work on a single project. There are significant benefits but also some significant problems.
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- 2020
71. Community-Engaged Research as Enmeshed Practice
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Bay, Jennifer L. and Yankura Swacha, Kathryn
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This article presents an experiential model for community-engaged research that understands communities as living meshworks of embodied human beings, material circumstances, and affective environments. We first trace how community organizations and academics must increasingly respond to a push for hard data. Using an analysis of a national research study on hunger as an example, we then show how this "data imperative" can lead to collecting more and more measurable data on community members without addressing their human-based concerns. The meshworks approach that we suggest emphasizes recognizing participants' most immediate needs as articulated by participants. As meshworks-inspired research has to be contingent and contextual within the meshworks of the community in which it takes place, we offer examples of what such research can look like in various community settings. Finally, we present a heuristic that community agencies and researchers can use to evaluate their own projects as meshworks while also gathering hard data.
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- 2020
72. Brokering Community-Based Research: Evaluating the Impacts of U-Links Centre for Community-Based Research on a Rural Canadian County
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Amon, Emily, Hill, Stephen, Blake, Jim, and Gage, Marie
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We evaluate how the U-Links Centre for Community-Based Research (U-Links), a nonprofit organization that brokers research for community-based organizations with postsecondary institutions in Haliburton County, Ontario, has impacted this rural region of Ontario. Our approach uses contribution analysis and realist evaluation as layered tactics within one program evaluation. Data came from interviews with community partners (n = 26), interviews and focus groups with U-Links committee members, internal document review, and personal observations by the authors. We describe U-Links' theory of change for how community-based research impacts community, discuss traits of successful community-based research, and suggest a set of five factors that may enable and affect positive community outcomes: relevance, rigor, reach, relationships, and resources.
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- 2020
73. Building on Strengths to Address Challenges: An Asset-Based Approach to Planning and Implementing a Community Partnership School
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Scott, Diane L., Sharma, Rashmi, Godwyll, Francis E., Johnson, Jerry D., and Putman, Tim
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This article explores the planning and implementation process for a community partnership school for a historically low-performing elementary school using an asset-based community development approach. We offer insights into the community needs assessment process that enabled four key community partners to identify needs and projects for the school and surrounding community. The community partnership school draws its strength from four local organizations assimilating their expertise and resources on focal areas for community engagement. Beyond organizational resources, the partners also developed local networks and resources that could be useful for the community. Building on the asset-based community development model, insights and challenges are presented for others seeking to employ a similar approach to mobilize assets for student success and community engagement.
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- 2020
74. Using Human-Centered Design to Connect Engineering Concepts to Sustainable Development Goals
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Mueller, Jenna L., Dotson, Mary Elizabeth, Dietzel, Jennifer, Peters, Jenna, Asturias, Gabriela, Cheatham, Amelia, Krieger, Marlee, Taylor, Baishakhi, Broverman, Sherryl, and Ramanujam, Nirmala
- Abstract
Background: Engineering design is widely recognized as a field that can generate key innovations for complex problems, such as those elucidated in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, engineering design training is not widely accessible to the global community, particularly to people experiencing the challenges that the SDGs are striving to address. Purpose: This manuscript describes the Ignite program created by the Center for Global Women's Health Technologies (GWHT) at Duke University, which uses the human-centered design framework to apply engineering design concepts to address specific challenges associated with the SDGs. Design/Method: Undergraduate students participate in a design course (BME 290) to learn how to create and deliver a technological solution to increase access to light at night, which is a significant challenge in many communities around the globe. A subset of the undergraduate students partnered with an energy-poor community in which they implemented a curriculum based on the skills learned in BME 290. Results: Since 2014, 110 Duke students have taken BME 290, and 22 of those students traveled internationally, collectively teaching 275 students in Kenya, India, and Guatemala. Students in Kenya formed an engineering club and taught the curriculum to an additional 52 peers. Duke students also trained 15 other university students, both in the United States and Guatemala, who have taught the curriculum to an additional 150 students in Guatemala, which illustrates the scalability and sustainability of the curriculum across countries, communities, and cultures. Conclusions: By integrating human-centered design and the SDGs into engineering curricula and targeting communities that work with women and girls, we believe the Ignite program can impact three of the SDGs -- renewable energy, quality education, and gender equality.
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- 2020
75. Service Based Learning as a Tool to Develop Undergraduate Skills in Needs Assessment
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Lanier, Jacqueline and Wodika, Alicia
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Purpose: A primary responsibility in health education is to assess community health needs, which is often a difficult skill to master for the entry level health educator. This article outlines the outcomes of a long-term study of an undergraduate needs assessment course where students completed a real-world assessment with a community partner focusing on action and service-based learning. Methods: Through student reflections, survey of community partners, and instructor reflection, outcomes of the course are reported from multiple views. Results: Students showed improved problem-solving, better understanding of community and needs assessment process, and better understanding of importance of teamwork skills in this context. Conclusion: By navigating a real community health assessment, students benefited from a deeper learning experience. Community partners benefits included assistance in program planning and prioritization of health programs and events. Recommendation: This method is beneficial to both students and partners but it is important to prepare students well for this challenging work.
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- 2020
76. Supporting Community Connections: Experiential Student Philanthropy and Engaged Learning in Social Work
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Nikzad-Terhune, Katherina and Taylor, Jessica Averitt
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Community engagement and philanthropic learning have gained traction in university settings as a method to help prepare students for both workplace competency and citizenship. Experiential student philanthropy is a learning method that offers students an opportunity to examine community and social issues and nonprofit organizations while providing them with the unique opportunity to invest funding in nonprofit organizations. This study examined the impact of an experiential student philanthropy project in a graduate-level social work course at Northern Kentucky University (NKU) through the use of a pretest and posttest administered to involved students. The results indicate that incorporation of the Mayerson Student Philanthropy Project (MSPP) with this class ultimately strengthened learning outcomes as related to both course engagement and community engagement.
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- 2020
77. The Power of Place-Based Legacies in Advancing Reengagement with Community
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Fritz, William and Iwama, Ken
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The degree to which urban and metropolitan colleges and universities can have a positive impact on their respective communities is heavily influenced by the nature and extent of their connectedness to, and alignment with, civic need. Drawn from the experiences and outcomes of the College of Staten Island's Legacy Trilogy initiative, a comprehensive educational and community engagement campaign exploring and leveraging the college's Legacy of Institution, Legacy of Place, and Legacy of Mission, this article proposes that higher education institutions can increase connectedness and alignment with their surrounding metropolises by embracing their deep and intricate social and economic place-based histories. Engaging with legacy in this uniquely personal and purposeful way can not only give more meaningful shape and added dimension to institutional identity, it can also empower colleges and universities to become more impactful to the communities they serve. [Note: The issue number (2) shown on the PDF is incorrect. The correct issue number is 4.]
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- 2019
78. Higher Education's Role in the Support of Diverse and Ever-Changing New American Cities: Exploring Buffalo
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Conway-Turner, Katherine S.
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Urban institutions are typically located in diverse and vibrant cities. This diversity has changed over the decades, thus requiring campuses to address the complexity that is seen as these new American cities evolve. In this article the city of Buffalo is discussed as a city that manifests a continuous change in population diversity with a significant increase in the immigrant and refugee populations. The ways that Buffalo State College has evolved its outreach to support immigrants, refugees, and new Americans is discussed, approaches that include ways to support entry and success within the city school systems, support for families and adults learning the English language and preparing for citizenship exams, convening and support to navigate their new location, and assistance in business efforts. Extensions of the mission of urban institutions to support these new members of city communities allows campuses to participate fully in addressing the needs of this important segment of our cities. Immigrant and refugee families add to the vibrancy and economic success of our communities and facilitating their adjustment, integration, and success within our cities not only provides needed support for new American families, but adds to the current and future economic and social success of the community where they now call home. This is an important aspect of the urban anchor mission.
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- 2019
79. A Comparison of IHEs and Non-IHEs as Anchor Institutions and Lead Agents of Promise Neighborhoods Projects
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Impellizeri, Whitney and Lee, Vera J.
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Place-based initiatives, such as the federal Promise Neighborhoods grant, attempt to coordinate interventions, supports, and services with a myriad of organizations to targeted communities. Although Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs), inclusive of academic medical institutions, are among the most overall researched anchor institution, Non-Institutions of Higher Education (NIHEs) have led more Promise Neighborhood grants since the inception of the program in 2010. Therefore, this study compared the revitalization efforts proposed by IHEs (n = 5) and NIHE (n = 5) in their applications for Promise Neighborhoods grants awarded between 2016 and 2018. Although similarities existed within and across the applications from NIHEs and IHEs, namely focused on improving academics and health/wellness, the specific interventions, supports, and services proposed by each lead institution largely reflected the individual needs of the targeted communities. The findings from this study illustrate how IHEs and NIHEs are similarly positioned to effectuate change within their communities. Implementing place-based initiatives requires anchor institutions to allocate considerable time and resources in order to adapt to the current needs of the community in real time. Therefore, future lead agents of Promise Neighborhoods should seek to promote an environment that fosters on-going collaboration and mutual trust across and within multiple stakeholders, while also exploring sustainability efforts to extend gains made beyond the duration of the grant.
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- 2022
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80. Moving beyond the Boilerplate: Reflections on Equity-Centered Reviewing for Granting Organizations
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Marshall, Stefanie L. and Salter, Amy O.
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This essay centers on the voices of leading scholars in science and STEM education on how equity can and should be centered in reviewing proposals for granting organizations. As the decisions made as a result of the reviewing process significantly impact the future directions of the field, we recognize the urgency in considering how equity is considered in this process. Through their experiences, four researchers offer the science and STEM community a "call to action." The scholars interviewed highlighted that equitable reviewing and funding research and professional development will require changes within the science education and STEM funding ecosystem. Three overarching themes include (1) changing the ideologies and culture of science and STEM education research funding will require centering the needs of the communities being served; (2) institutions and granting organizations should adopt equity-focused and holistic rubrics and models; and (3) we each have an individual responsibility to employ equity during the review process. Thus, this essay has the potential to both inspire and provide explicit examples of how we can all center equity as we strive to transform the future of science and STEM education.
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- 2022
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81. Shaping Equitable Early Childhood Policy: Incorporating Inclusive Community Engagement Frameworks into Expanded Data Strategies. Fact Sheet
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Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP), Hardy, Alycia, and Fortner, Alyssa
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Data collected from across the child care and early education (CCEE) field, both during and prior to COVID-19, have been critical in helping policymakers identify and scale public resources to meet the increasing needs of children, families, early educators, and providers. Much of the data collected throughout the global health crisis has shown how the pandemic exacerbated long-standing inequities for communities with low incomes. As states seek to implement strategies to identify and address these inequities, program administrators and researchers must expand data strategies beyond disaggregating outcomes by race/ethnicity. The authors propose a set of recommendations for expanding data strategies. When coupled with equitable community engagement frameworks, these expanded data strategies can have a lasting impact on how states support the range of CCEE needs across communities--and specifically within communities of color. [For the full report, see ED617028.]
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- 2021
82. A Case for Integration of the North American Rural Social Work Education Model for Philippine Praxis
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Kutschera, P. C., Tesoro, Elena C., Legamia, Benigno P., and Talamera-Sandico, Mary Grace
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Rural social work education and practice in North America underwent a revival in recent decades and remains a valid praxis and pedagogic model for the 21st Century. The paper posits through rigorous literature review and analysis there are numerous elements central to North American (U.S. and Canadian) and Commonwealth of Nations (U.K., Australia, etc.) rural social work that make this framework significantly germane to Filipinos. These include the necessity to function in an environment of marginal or stressed community, personnel resources and educational opportunities. Significantly, the generalist practice model comprises the core of North American rural social work; it also predominates in Philippine methodology. Both frameworks require robust client and social justice advocacy roles encouraging awareness of needs and aspirations of at risk populations. Indeed, social work researcher Thelma Lee-Mendoza reports that historically modern Philippine practice originated and is primarily organized from North American models. Rural social workers in the West, like their Philippine counterparts, are more typically generalists and innovative environmental operators. Daily they rely on profound survey and calculation of services and innovative ways to make them meaningful. The paper concludes by urging creative international and transnational research with a view towards optimizing service delivery.
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- 2019
83. Reinvigorating the Pipeline: Insights into Proposed and Approved Charter Schools
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National Association of Charter School Authorizers
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This first-ever look at the national charter school pipeline--what schools are being proposed and by whom--reveals a diverse sector, with a tremendous variety of applicants and school models. Working with Public Impact, National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NACSA) collected and analyzed nearly 3,000 charter school applications submitted to authorizers, located in 20 states, that oversee nearly two-thirds of all charter schools nationally. The analysis shows the significant impact authorizers have in shaping the public education landscape across the country.
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- 2019
84. 3D/VR in the Academic Library: Emerging Practices and Trends
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Council on Library and Information Resources, Grayburn, Jennifer, Lischer-Katz, Zack, Golubiewski-Davis, Kristina, Ikeshoji-Orlati, Veronica, Grayburn, Jennifer, Lischer-Katz, Zack, Golubiewski-Davis, Kristina, Ikeshoji-Orlati, Veronica, and Council on Library and Information Resources
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This volume, comprising eight chapters from experts in a variety of fields, examines the use of three-dimensional (3D) and virtual reality (VR) technologies in research and teaching, and the library's vital role in supporting this work. 3D modeling, 3D capture techniques, and VR enable faculty and students to engage with highly detailed 3D data--from cultural heritage artifacts to scientific simulations--in new ways. As 3D and VR projects scale up and move outside of the specialist disciplines where they have existed for decades, many academic libraries are taking the lead in supporting such projects because they are already centers for collaboration, instruction, research, and collection preservation. The volume seeks to prompt greater awareness for library professionals as they develop programs that use 3D and VR technologies and work to integrate changing scholarly demands and conventions with existing library services and policies. Chapters cover 3D content creation, VR visualization and analysis, 3D/VR-based educational deployment, and 3D/VR data curation, providing a snapshot of professional objectives and workflows that have developed around 3D/VR. Titles in the volume include: (1) Introduction. 3D/VR Creation and Curation: An Emerging Field of Inquiry (Zack Lischer-Katz, Kristina Golubiewski-Davis, Jennifer Grayburn, and Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati); (2) Collaborative and Lab-Based Approaches to 3D and VR/AR in the Humanities (Victoria Szabo); (3) 3D Cultural Heritage Informatics: Applications to 3D Data Curation (Will Rourk); (4) Virtual Reality for Preservation: Production of Virtual Reality Heritage Spaces in the Classroom (Zebulun M. Wood, Albert William, and Andrea Copeland); (5) Using 3D Photogrammetry to Create Open-Access Models of Live Animals: 2D and 3D Software Solutions (Jeremy A. Bot and Duncan J. Irschick) (6) What Happens When You Share 3D Models Online (in 3D)? (Thomas Flynn); (7) Building for Tomorrow: Collaborative Development of Sustainable Infrastructure for Architectural and Design Documentation (Ann Baird Whiteside); (8) 3D/VR Preservation: Drawing on a Common Agenda for Collective Impact (Jessica Meyerson); (9) CS3DP: Developing Agreement for 3D Standards and Practices Based on Community Needs and Values (Jennifer Moore, Adam Rountrey, and Hannah Scates Kettler); and (10) Conclusion. 3D/VR: Stakeholders, Ecosystems, and Future Directions (Zack Lischer-Katz, Kristina Golubiewski-Davis, Jennifer Grayburn, and Veronica Ikeshoji-Orlati). [Foreword by Christa Williford.]
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- 2019
85. Enhancing Teacher Education and Community Learning Center Programs through Critical Participatory Action Research
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Coles-Ritchie, Marilee, Eggington, Kalani, and Valdez, Trina M.
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This paper describes the impact of using Critical Participatory Action Research (CPAR) to enhance a campus-community partnership. The key stakeholders, who are also the participants, share how learning from the reflective journals, collaborative sessions, and interview data analysis transformed their practice. The collaborative partnership was designed to allow prospective teachers from a School of Education at a U.S. liberal arts college the opportunity to teach Diverse language learners (DLLs) who were attending a summer program at a nearby community learning center. The teacher educators responsible for teaching the prospective teachers, the director of the community learning center, and a student researcher joined the project as collaborative participant researchers. Together they analyzed the data collected from various participating groups, which included their own work and reflections, as well as those of the prospective teachers and prevention specialists who were employed by the community learning center. The findings from this study revealed that all participants benefited from the campus-community partnership because it was built on trust, mutual respect, reciprocity, and the use of shared language among key stakeholders. This CPAR project provides specific ideas and steps implemented to develop a well-functioning and reflective partnership between a community learning center and a local college. Examples of the specific praxis involved in such partnerships are often absent from the literature.
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- 2019
86. Integrating Social Justice Advocacy into Mental Health Counseling in Rural, Impoverished American Communities
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Crumb, Loni, Haskins, Natoya, and Brown, Shanita
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This phenomenological study explored the experiences of 15 professional counselors who work with clients living in impoverished communities in rural America. Researchers used individual semi-structured interviews to gather data and identified four themes that represented the counselors' experiences using the Multicultural and Social Justice Counseling Competencies as the conceptual framework to identify the incorporation of social justice and advocacy-oriented counseling practices. The themes representing the counselors' experiences were: (1) appreciating clients' worldviews and life experiences, (2) counseling relationships influencing service delivery, (3) engaging in individual and systems advocacy, and (4) utilizing professional support. The counselors' experiences convey the need to alter traditional counseling session delivery formats, practices, and roles to account for clients' life experiences and contextual factors that influence mental health care in rural, impoverished communities. Approaches that counselors use to engage in social justice advocacy with and on behalf of rural, impoverished clients are discussed.
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- 2019
87. The Development of Multimedia and Activities to Promote Products Made by State Enterprise Communities in the Bangmod Project 4.0 through Community-Based Learning
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Thamwipat, Kuntida, Princhankol, Pornpapatsorn, and Deeyen, Naphat
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This research was aimed to explore the demands of the people in the communities in order to develop multimedia and activities to promote products made by state enterprise communities in the Bangmod Project 4.0 through Community-Based Learning among undergraduate students of King Mongkut's University of Technology Thonburi, to examine the perception and the satisfaction of the local people regarding the multimedia and activities, to evaluate the work and to determine the satisfaction of the students towards Community-Based Learning. The tools in this study consisted of 1) the questionnaire on the demands of the local people regarding the multimedia and activities, 2) the multimedia and activities to promote products made by the state enterprise communities in Bangmod Project 4.0 which included offline and online contents as well as special activities, 3) the quality evaluation forms in terms of contents and media presentation, 4) the perception survey form, 5) the satisfaction questionnaire for the local people, 6) the self-evaluation form for students, and 7) the satisfaction questionnaire for students towards the community-based learning. There were two sampling groups as in 1) 22 local people out of 4 state enterprise communities which participated in Bangmod Project 4.0 and they were purposively chosen for this research, 2) 30 undergraduate students who enrolled in the ETM 358 Marketing Communications course which followed the community-based learning approach and these students were purposively chosen out of those who went to the field at least 4 times. The research results showed that the local people in the state enterprise communities expressed a level of demands on the multimedia and activities to promote their products for online and offline media as well as special activities. They wanted to promote 12 products. The quality of the multimedia and activities as evaluated by the experts in contents showed that the quality was at a very good level ([x-bar] = 4.67, S.D. = 0.20). The quality of the media presentation was at a very good level ([x-bar] = 4.87, S.D. = 0.24). The perception level of the local people about the multimedia and activities was at a high level ([x-bar] = 4.41, S.D. = 0.18) and the local people expressed the highest level of satisfaction towards the multimedia and activities ([x-bar] = 4.80, S.D. = 0.79). The students rated themselves at a very good level (83.72%) and their satisfaction towards the community-based learning was at the highest level ([x-bar] = 4.77, S.D. = 0.24). It can be concluded that the multimedia and activities to promote products made by state enterprise communities in Bangmod Project 4.0 through Community-Based Learning were of good quality and they could be used to promote the products of the local communities.
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- 2019
88. Supporting Community Leadership Development through ESL Classes: A Changemaking Initiative
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Alexandrowicz, Viviana, Andres, Aureen, Danaher, Carli, and Valdivia, Paz
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This article describes the process of teaching English as a second language to members of an underprivileged local community. This initiative was developed as a result of a collaboration between a community center and a university. Three 1st-year TESOL master's candidates volunteered to design and teach curriculum to immigrant community members on a weekly basis to meet their needs in ESL and in areas such as health, education, community, housing, leadership, and autonomy. The class consisted of Spanish- and Vietnamese-speaking senior citizens who were community leaders, and who needed the language, skills, and knowledge to be more effective in their leadership roles. A key goal was to create empowerment opportunities for these students to become changemakers and to advocate for themselves, their families, and their communities. In addition to improving their English, student outcomes included finding their voices in their 2nd language through discussions and through oral and written work, developing a sense of unity among class members, and gaining confidence to take action for the common good.
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- 2019
89. Specifics of Measuring Social and Personal Responsibility of University Students after Completion of a Service-Learning Course in Slovak Conditions
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Gregorová, Alžbeta Brozmanová and Heinzová, Zuzana
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This study at a university in Slovakia asked two questions: (1) Does completion of a service-learning course lead to changes in students' social and personal responsibility and their attitudes toward community service? (2) Are personal and social responsibility and attitudes toward community service correlated? Service-learning and the third mission of the university are almost unknown in Slovak higher education, and likewise no relevant test instruments adapted to Slovak conditions currently exist. Consequently, we adopted a scale from abroad--Conrad and Hedin's (1981) Social and Personal Responsibility Scale (SPRS). We also used qualitative research methods. Compared to a control group, the service-learning students had statistically significant higher posttest scores in the Social Welfare, Duty, Performance of Responsible Acts, and Global Responsibility subscales. The research results revealed a need for new measuring tools that are sensitive to the specific context of service-learning implementation in Slovakia.
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- 2019
90. Service-Learning in Courses of Psychology: An Experience at the University of Turin
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Maran, Daniela Acquadro, Craveri, Laura, Tirassa, Maurizio, and Begotti, Tatiana
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Interest in the implementation of service-learning (SL) in university courses in psychology has risen in recent years. SL allows the students not only to read and talk about social problems, but also to act upon them and thus to learn from practice as well. The aim of this work is to present the service-learning experienced in psychology courses at the University of Turin, Italy. The experiences--named "The Volunteer's Helpdesk" and "Service Learning: Urban Area Analysis and Proposals for Action"--were analyzed following the Comprehensive Action Plan for Service Learning (CAPSL) model proposed by Bringle and Hatcher (1996) for implementing SL in higher education. The work presented is intended to contribute to laying the foundation for a broader reflection on how to implement SL in university courses in psychology.
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- 2019
91. Exploring Excellency-Based Curriculum for Indonesian Primary Schools in Relation to the Social Community Environment
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Ilyasin, Mukhamad
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The purposes of this study are to see the vision and community needs of the excellency-curriculum of the primary Islamic schools, the curriculum integration between sciences and religious values for the primary Islamic schools, and to see continuous development maintained in the primary Islamic curriculum in East Kalimantan. This research uses a qualitative case study with a multi-site approach. The study assigned three Islamic primary schools SDIT (Integrated Islamic Primary School) Borneo 1, SDIT Borneo 2, and SDIT Borneo 3 in Samarinda, East Kalimantan Indonesia as the sites. This study involved 40 respondents, each school of which was selected 10 respondents, comprising one principal, two vice principals, and seven teachers. Respondents were selected using purposive sampling techniques. The results showed that excellency-based curriculum management increases the competitiveness within SDIT Borneo 1, SDIT Borneo 2, and SDIT Borneo 3. This works in several ways: an environmental analysis to determine the vision of the institution, a curriculum design that meets the needs of the community, the integration of science and religion, the strengthening of religious values, the development of life skills and students' personal development, and continuous improvement as an instrument in evaluation.
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- 2019
92. Educating for Sustainability in Remote Locations
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Reading, Chris, Khupe, Constance, Redford, Morag, Wallin, Dawn, Versland, Tena, Taylor, Neil, and Hampton, Patrick
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At a time when social, economic and political decisions, along with environmental events, challenge the viability of remote communities, educators need to better prepare young people in these communities to work towards sustainability. Remote locations can be defined by their inaccessibility rather than just distance from the nearest services, while the sustainability construct encapsulates a range of community needs: environmental, social, cultural and economic. This paper describes experiences that involve innovative approaches towards educating for sustainability in remote locations in six diverse countries: South Africa, Scotland, Canada, United States of America, Pacific Island Nations, and Australia. For each, the nature of what constitutes a "remote" location, as well as the detail and challenges of the innovation are presented. Readers should consider how they might more suitably educate the next generation to protect, showcase and learn from/with the local knowledges and capacities of the people and environments in remote locations.
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- 2019
93. Empowering High School Students through Engagement in a Community Event
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Palazzo, Steven J., Sanman, Ella, and Bicknell, Laura E.
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Background: Obesity continues to afflict adolescents in underserved communities. It is difficult to understand how adolescents perceive empowerment over their health and the health of their communities. The purpose of our study was to describe the impact of the Healthy Heart Ambassador program on adolescents' perceived empowerment through the development and implementation of a community event. Methods: High school students designed and implemented a cardiovascular health promotion and disease prevention community event using knowledge acquired through participation in the Teen Take Heart program. The HHA program was created based on the Adolescent Empowerment Model, where participants chose a community event they felt would best deliver the cardiovascular health promotion and disease prevention information. Participants completed a post event survey to evaluate their sense of empowerment while participating in the program. Results: The AES addressed two domains and six attributes of psychological empowerment. The results suggest a sense of empowerment resulted from participating in the student-led community event. Conclusion: During the HHA event students were engaged with other students, teachers, and members of their community who attended the event. In addition, groups of students who did not normally interact with each other were cooperating and working as a team.
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- 2019
94. R&D Partnership: The CEE Story of the 'Comprehensive Movement'
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Katalin R. Forray and Tamas Kozma
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This research aims to explore the links between school development and the demands of local communities in present-day Central and Eastern European (CEE) societies, which before the sociopolitical turn of 1989/1990 were strictly centralized and monopolized by the communist parties and the governments. As an outcome of the Helsinki Process (since the mid-1970s), that rigorous centralization began to ease and changes such as the "Comprehensive Movement" emerged, allowing for more room to maneuver for local communities and more flexible government policy considering some local needs and demands. The authors aim to answer the question of how local communities try to enforce the influence on their schools in the new wave of educational centralization today. [This paper was presented at the European Conference on Educational Research 2019.]
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- 2019
95. Eliminating Barriers to Youth Sport in Greenville, North Carolina
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O'Brien, Emma, Warner, Stacy M., and Sartore-Baldwin, Melanie
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This case study helps students better understand barriers to youth sport participation that low-income families face and then offer solutions to alleviate some barriers and create a more inclusive sport community. The case focuses on the struggle that many sport organizations face when trying to increase diversity and inclusiveness, regardless of socioeconomic status. Greenville Recreation and Parks Department Development Intern Sarah identifies issues with the department's current financial assistance program and collects parents' feedback detailing community needs that are not being met. This case provides an opportunity for students to (a) examine how sport organizations unintentionally create barriers for some community members and (b) find innovative ways to reduce barriers to youth sport participation and create more inclusive systems.
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- 2022
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96. Unsettling Settler-Colonial Education: The Transformational Indigenous Praxis Model. Multicultural Education Series
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Pewewardy, Cornel, Lees, Anna, Minthorn, Robin Zape-tah-hol-ah, Pewewardy, Cornel, Lees, Anna, and Minthorn, Robin Zape-tah-hol-ah
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This book presents the Transformational Indigenous Praxis Model (TIPM), an innovative framework for promoting critical consciousness toward decolonization efforts among educators. The TIPM challenges readers to examine how even the most well-intentioned educators are complicit in reproducing ethnic stereotypes, racist actions, deficit-based ideology, and recolonization. Drawing from decades of collaboration with teachers and school leaders serving Indigenous children and communities, this volume will help educators better support the development of their students' critical thinking skills. Representing a holistic balance, the text is organized in four sections: Birth-Grade 12 and Community Education, Teacher Education, Higher Education, and Educational Leadership. "Unsettling Settler-Colonial Education" centers the needs of teachers, children, families, and communities that are currently engaged in public education and who deserve an improved experience today, while also committing to more positive Indigenous futurities. This book: (1) Introduces the TIPM as a structure that supports educators in decolonizing and indigenizing their practices; (2) Provides examples of how pathway-making across a variety of settings takes shape on the TIPM continuum; (3) Highlights a diverse group of authors who are making major contributions to the transformation agendas of Indigenous knowledge and ways of knowing; (4) Includes a brief summary of the TIPM dimensions with examples of the challenges that educators face as they expand their critical consciousness toward decolonization; (5) Follows Native oral traditions by sharing lessons, research, and personal lived experience. Identifies the deficit-based ideological underpinnings that frame Indigenous students' school experiences; (6) Employs a metaphor of wave jumping to illustrate how educators working to decolonize their practice can gain forward momentum with time and energy even while facing resistance; and (7) Provides a methodology to promote healing and cultural restoration of Indigenous peoples. [Foreword written by Tiffany S. Lee. Afterword written by Michael Yellow Bird.]
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- 2022
97. Promoting Self-Determination in Community Contexts: Experiences with Implementing the Self-Determined Learning Model of Instruction
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Evan E. Dean, Mayumi Hagiwara, Jennifer Jones, Kami Gallus, and Karrie A. Shogren
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This article describes a pilot project focused on creating opportunities for self-determination to enhance the community participation outcomes of adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities using the Self-Determined Learning Model of Instruction (SDLMI). The pilot project grew out of a partnership between researchers at a university and the state's developmental disabilities services system in their state and emerged from collaborative discussions of needs in the community. The purpose of the project was to (a) investigate effective ways to deliver the SDLMI in a community context and (b) identify the systemic changes needed to enable scaling-up of supports for self-determination. This article introduces a framework for implementing the SDLMI in the community and highlight lessons learned through community-based implementation.
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- 2022
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98. The Sustainability of Multicultural Music Education in Guizhou Province, China
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Du, Junge and Leung, Bo-Wah
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Sustainability has been incorporating multiculturalism in music education (MME) for decades, but the dialogs of MME in China has always focused on school education, neglecting community-based music education. The cultural-political context of this study is in Xijiang, southwest China, where is a Miao-dominated community integrating Miao, Han and other ethnic cultures. This study employed a mixed-method approach with a convergent parallel design that combined a survey with qualitative methods including casual conversation, semi-structured interview, and documentary analysis. Findings revealed that despite the promotion and inheritance of Miao's music are highly valued, and the interest of minority ethnic communities in engaging in music learning and performance remains considerable, the sustainability of multicultural music education in Xijiang is in question. Problems are attributed to inadequate and unequal educational resources, devaluation of state institutes, shortage of teachers, and high illiterate rate. This article contributes to theorizing on sustainability in multicultural music education within a multicultural background in southwest China, by identifying the stakeholders in the education system and drawing on the empirical evidence on the truly needs of communities. The implications of the study include improvements in the development of multicultural music education.
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- 2022
- Full Text
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99. Uncertainty in Diversity: Language Shift and Language Planning in Papua New Guinea, a Kala Case Study
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Schreyer, Christine and Wagner, John
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Since independence in 1975, Papua New Guinea, the most linguistically diverse country in the world, has had both unofficial and official policies of mother-tongue education. However, limited resources and support for mother-tongue education has led communities to incorporate bottom-up language planning as well. In particular, this paper examines the language planning efforts of the Kala Language Committee (KLC). The Kala language, which has four distinct dialects, is spoken in six villages in the Morobe province. In 2010, the KLC developed an orthography for their traditionally oral language leading to the expansion of mother-tongue education programmes in each of the six villages. Each village has different levels of language shift and during meetings in 2013 had developed their own individual language plans, which best suit their community's needs. This paper compares the choices of each village to the wider choices of the KLC and to the demands of the national mother-tongue education policies.
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- 2022
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100. Empowering the Community through the Extension Services of a Teacher Education Institution in the Philippines
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Corpuz, Demetria A., Time, Mary Jane C., and Afalla, Bonimar T.
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The quality of the extension services provided determines how effective extension systems are in accomplishing a sustainable development strategy. Hence, this research was carried out to ascertain the impact of extension services of the College of Teacher Education (CTE) of Nueva Vizcaya State University (NVSU), Philippines. The descriptive survey method was employed using a structured questionnaire that underwent expert validation. This questionnaire was administered among the implementers (n = 45) and beneficiaries (n = 200) of the extension services. Mean was used to describe the extent of engagement, the level of benefits derived, the extent of problems encountered, and the overall impact of CTE's extension services. This study concludes that beneficiaries and implementers are deeply engaged in the College of Teacher Education's Projects HELP and KKK, proving that extension initiatives attract both providers and consumers in high volumes. The adoptive college successfully managed its development programs such as Projects HELP and KKK, and extension participants benefitted immeasurably. Irregularity of consultations, difficulties in organizing residents, and incoherence in the monitoring and assessment of the college's extension activities were recognized as minor issues in the conduct of extension services. Beneficiaries and implementers regarded the College of Teacher Education's extension services as acceptable, signifying that the community was inspired to transform the lives of its citizens.
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- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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