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  • Content tagged with : TRUCEN

    Empowering promotores de salud to engage in community-based participatory research

    This article describes the development, implementation, and evaluation of a community-based training program that empowers promotores (community health workers) to identify the health needs of recent Latino immigrants. The training program was a total of 30-hours, and included fieldwork accompanied by skills development in leadership, organization, interpersonal communication and survey implementation. The evaluation of the program demonstrated the feasibility of recruiting and engaging promotores to identify health priorities within their community. Cupertino, A. P., Suarez, N., Cox, L. S., Fernandez, C., Jaramillo, M. L., Morgan, A.,…Ellerbeck, E. F. (2013). Empowering promotores de salud to engage in community-based participatory research. Journal…

    Results from the data and democracy initiative to enhance community-based organization data and research capacity

    This study evaluated an initiative designed to increase community-based organizations’ data and research capacity through a 3-day train-the-trainer course on community health assessments. The results of the evaluation suggest that an intensive, short-term training program can achieve large immediate gains in data and research self-efficacy in community-based organization staff. In addition, the results show initial evidence that such a training program can achieve longer-term behavior change related to use of data and research skills. Carroll-Scott, A., Toy, P., Wyn, R., Zane, J. I., & Wallace, S. (2012). Results from the data and democracy initiative to enhance community-based organization data and…

    Exploring how social media can enhance the teaching of action research

    This article explores how social media have been used to enhance the teaching and learning of action research. The authors discuss their experience with teaching an action research module in the ABCD program, which uses Web 2.0 technologies and social media to up-skill people who are ‘under-employed’ in South Wales, UK. The authors found that the module’s blog, chat, and forum tools were used by students to deepen their understanding of action research. Carroll, F., Jenkins, A., Woodward, C., Kop, R., & Jenkins, E. (2012). Exploring how social media can enhance the teaching of action research. Action Research, 10(2), 170-188. Full…

    Engaged scholarship at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Campus integration and faculty development

    This article describes UNC Chapel Hill’s community-engaged scholarship faculty development activities and the impact of the activities on promotion and tenure initiatives and the university’s new academic plan. The authors describe the activities and report two main lessons learned: incorporation of these activities into existing university programs helps institutionalize them, and implementation of these activities into broader university programs widens the forum for the promotion of community engaged scholarship. Blanchard, L.W., Strauss, R.P., & Webb, L. (2012). Engaged scholarship at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill: Campus integration and faculty development. Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement,…

    More than research and ruble: How community research can change lives (including yours and your students)

    In this article, the author shares lessons learned from personal experience engaging students in community research. The lessons are based on the author’s experiences teaching at a large research university, as well as at a liberal arts college in a professional school of psychology. Several strategies are provided for fostering the research process and community-based research with students. Aten, J. D. (2012). More than research and ruble: How community research can change lives (including yours and your students). Journal of Psychology and Christianity, 31(4), 314-319. Full Text.

    Training partnership dyads for community-based participatory research: Strategies and lessons learned from the Community Engaged Scholars Program

    This paper describes a unique campus-community training initiative for CBPR, the Community Engaged Scholars Program (CES-P), which is run by the South Carolina Clinical & Translational Research Center for Community Health Partnerships. The CES-P provides simultaneous training to community and academic partners during an 18-month program. Program elements include 12 monthly interactive training sessions, mentorship with apprentice learning opportunities, and funds for a CBPR pilot project. The development, implementation, evaluation framework, and initial outcomes of the CES-P are described. The CES-P has early promising outcomes as a potential model for CBPR training. Andrews, J. O., Cox, M. J., Newman, S….

    Scholarship in Public: Knowledge creation and Tenure Policy in the Engaged University

    In this comprehensive report Imagining America’s Tenure Team discusses and recommends rationales, policies, and strategies for strengthening public engagement within a continua of: 1) scholarship with which academic public engagement has full and equal standing, 2) scholarly and creative artifact, 3) professional pathways for faculty, including the choice to be a civic professional, and 4) actions for institutional change Emphasis is on enabling engaged faculty to prepare for and successfully gain tenure and promotion. Curricular models are also provided. Ellison, J & Eatman, T. (2008). Scholarship in public: Knowledge creation and tenure policy in the engaged university, Imagining America, Syracuse…

    Beyond the research/ service Dichotomy: Claiming all Research Products for Hiring, Evaluation, Tenure, and Promotion

    This article discusses the current reluctance in the academy to value work that steps outside of the traditional report format for hiring, evaluation, tenure, and promotion. Devalued genres include writing for the general public (e.g. op-eds, blogs), embodied performances, reports for community organizations, and non-profit website material. The authors argue that universities’ processes for evaluating research should be revised, in order to enable faculty to respond to the increased demand for qualitative, interpretive, and engaged research. Ellingson, L. L. & Quinlan, M. M. (2012). Beyond the research/service dichotomy: Claiming all research products for hiring, evaluation, tenure, and promotion. Qualitative Communication…

    Bridging the Gap Between Knowledge and Health: The Epidemiologist as Accountable Health Advocate

    This paper discusses how, despite the growing need for academic epidemiology to rediscover and adapt its historical skill set to emphasize knowledge translation, its existing incentive structures continue to emphasize knowledge generation. To address this issue, the authors propose a useful heuristic—the epidemiologist as Accountable Health Advocate (AHA), who enables society to judge the value of research, develops new methods to translate existing knowledge into improved health, and actively engages with policymakers and society. The authors also suggest useful changes to incentive structures, including novel funding streams (and review), alternative publication practices, and parallel frameworks for professional advancement and promotion….

    Disciplinary Differences in Engaged Scholarship: What Research Tells Us

    This conference presentation shares a research study that investigated the disciplinary differences in engaged scholarship. The study analyzed RPT documents from 173 faculty members in three universities to determine disciplinary variations in faculty reports of their publicly engaged scholarship with regards to the types of activities, the intensity of activity, and the degree of engagement. The presenters discuss the study’s findings, and make recommendations for changes to institutions, departments, and faculty and graduate student professional development based on the findings. One recommendation made is to modify reappointment, promotion, and tenure policies.Doberneck, D. M., & Schweitzer, J. H. (2012). Disciplinary differences…

    Convening Constructive Conversations about Engaged Scholarship in Promotion and Tenure

    This PowerPoint presentation will help faculty convene constructive conversations about engaged scholarship and promotion and tenure. The slides focus on the following topics: challenges/criticisms of engaged scholarship and promotion and tenure, the importance of dialogue, language associated with engaged scholarship in particular disciplines, degree of collaboration, type of activity, type of product, faculty motivations, and career stage. Each slide contains questions to help faculty cultivate and advocate their unique position as an engaged scholar. Doberneck, D.M., Glass, C.R., & Schweitzer, J.H. (2011). Convening constructive conversations about engaged scholarship in promotion and tenure. National Outreach Scholarship Conference 2011. Michigan State University,…

    The engaged scholar magazine

    The Engaged Scholar Magazine focuses on collaborative partnerships between Michigan State University and its external constituents—partnerships forged for mutual benefit and learning, with an emphasis on research. The magazine is published annually, in the fall of each year, in both hard copy and web versions. Annual issues are themed, e.g. sustainability, cultural entrepreneurship, families. Current and archived magazine editions are available online as are editions of the Engaged Scholar E-Newsletter, a quarterly online supplement to The Engaged Scholar Magazine. Michigan State University et al (2006-2009). The engaged scholar magazine. Magazine.

    An integrated model for advancing the scholarship of engagement: Creating academic homes for the engaged scholar

    A integrated model is offered for the preparation of future faculty that addresses the transformation of institutions of higher education into supportive environments for the next generation of engaged scholars. Drawing on the knowledge bases of the scholarship of engagement, institutional change, preparing future faculty, the role of disciplinary associations, and promising practice for institutional engagement, the model provides a framework for approaches that would prepare individuals (primarily doctoral students and early career faculty) as learners of engagement while instigating and catalyzing institutions as learning organizations (Sandmann, Saltmarsh & O’Meara, 47). This model has implications for determining how the scholarship…

    Achieving the promise of authentic community-higher education partnerships: A community partner summit

    Partnerships between communities and higher educational institutions as a strategy for social change are gaining recognition and momentum. Despite being formed with the best of intentions, however, authentic partnerships are very difficult to achieve. While academic partners have extensively documented their experiences and lessons learned, the voices of community partners are largely missing. If true partnerships are to be achieved, community partners must harness their own experiences, lessons learned, and collective wisdom into a national, organized effort. With guidance from a planning committee of community leaders, Community-Campus Partnerships for Health convened a Community Partner Summit in 2006. A diverse group…

    Community engagement and boundary- spanning roles at research universities

    From the Carnegie Foundation classification system for university commitment to community engagement, to the establishment of professional networks focusing on engagement, progress has been made in recognizing the value of engaged scholarship. However, there has been an uneven adoption of engaged scholarship work by research universities in comparison to non-research institutions. This study uses boundary-spanning theory to determine ways that research universities build bridges with community partners, and therefore increase institutional capacity for engagement. The research questions guiding this study include: (a) How are boundary-spanning roles understood and defined across research institutions in the context of university-community engagement?(b) Who are…

    A network assessment of community-based participatory research: Linking communities and universities to reduce cancer disparities

    Although the development of CBPR has been accompanied by growth in empirical studies on the operations and impacts of CBPR programs, there are few studies that evaluate the effectiveness of CBPR programs. Weaving an Islander Network for Cancer Awareness Research and Training (WINCART) initiative is based in Southern California. The goal of WINCART is to decrease cancer disparities among Pacific Islander communities by connecting community-based organizations (CBOs) and academic institutions that work in cancer education, research, and training. Can community-based outreach activities increase links between CBOs and academic researchers? This paper describes a 2-year study that employed social network analysis…

    Community-based research in higher education

    This book presents a model of community-based research (CBR) that engages community members with students and faculty in the course of their academic work. Noting that CBR is collaborative and change-oriented and finds its research questions in the needs of communities, it presents a dynamic research model that combines classroom learning with social action in ways that can ultimately empower community groups to address their own agendas and shape their own futures. Strand, K., Marullo, S., Cutforth, N.,Stoecker, R., Donohue, P. (2003). Community-based research in higher education. San Francisco: Jossey Bass.

    Managing critical tensions: How to strengthen the scholarship component of outreach

    Central to scholarship in outreach is the management of several critical tensions that emerge during planning, implementing, and evaluating endeavors. How can one produce outcomes valued by the academy and community? Analysis uses Michigan State University’s Points of Distinction framework including significance, attention to context, scholarship, and impact. Sandmann, L., Foster-Fishman, P., Lloyd, J., Rauhe, W., & Rosaen, C. (2000). Managing critical tensions: How to strengthen the scholarship component of outreach. Change, 32(1), 44-52.

    A Framework for entry: PAR values and engagement strategies in community research

    The goal of this paper is to demonstrate the significance of entry in community-based research projects and to present a framework for entry that is influenced by principles of participatory action research (PAR): empowerment, supportive relationships, social justice, ongoing reciprocal education, and respect for diversity. This study examines the four entry stages of a mental health CBPR project in Ontario Canada, and analyzes the ways these principles were successfully applied and also how they were difficult to implement. Considering the entry process as critical in setting the tone for the project/partnership, the paper concludes by emphasizing the importance of combining…

    Community-based participatory research for health

    This resource on the theory and application of community-based participatory research focuses on health, but the application is universal. The book contains information on a wide variety of topics including planning and conducting research, working with communities, promoting social change, and core research methods. An appendix of tools, guides, checklists, sample protocols, and much more is included Minkler, M. & Wallerstein, N. (Eds.). (2008). Community-based participatory research for health. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.