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Cathy Jordan, PhD Associate Professor of Pediatrics Director, Children, Youth and Family Consortium University of Minnesota Member, Community Campus Partnerships for Health Co-Director, Faculty for the Engaged Campus Community-engaged Teaching and Scholarship: Making it Count in Promotion and Tenure
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Agenda -Define terms relevant to engaged research and teaching -Discuss scholarship from engaged teaching -Present challenges facing community-engaged scholars -Describe Faculty for the Engaged Campus -Introduce CES4Health.info
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Definitions -Engagement Community engagement is the application of institutional resources to address and solve challenges facing communities through collaboration with these communities
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- Scholarship "Scholarship is teaching, discovery, integration, application and engagement; clear goals, adequate preparation, appropriate methods, significant results, effective presentation, and reflective critique that is rigorous and peer- reviewed. (Boyer) Or, Scholarship = creative intellectual work that contributes significantly to knowledge in the field and has impact, is communicated and valued and is reviewed by peers.
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- Community-engaged Scholarship "Community-engaged scholarship (CES) is scholarship that involves the faculty member in a mutually beneficial partnership with the community. This could be within a research, teaching, programmatic or other kind of activity. Linking Scholarship and Communities: The Report of the Commission on Community-Engaged Scholarship in the Health Professions
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Finding Scholarship in Engaged Teaching Common misconception – engaged teaching methods such as service-learning are not necessarily scholarship. Must use a scholarly approach (grounded in work that came before) Must document and create product that can be disseminated and subjected to critique
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Challenges of P and T for CES Review committees dont understand CES – Misconceptions about rigor – Confusing CES with just service – You see connections between discipline and engaged work; others may not
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Challenges (continued) Faculty dont understand CES – Not producing scholarship from engagement, or confusing engagement with scholarship (service- learning example) – Not integrating engagement into research and teaching; making it an add-on – Not documenting engaged scholarship in c.v. or dossier
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Challenges (continued) The traditions of the system – Need for expanded definition of impact (not just publications and journal impact scores) Demonstrate community impact – Need for acceptance of alternative forms of scholarly products (not just peer-reviewed journal articles)
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Challenges (continued) – P & T is about you as an individual. Engaged work is usually a group effort and credit for its impact is shared. – Requirement to demonstrate leadership in field and national/international reputation In CES, leadership/reputation tend to be local. Must be intentional to expand reputation
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Faculty for the Engaged Campus History : – 2004-2007: Community-engaged Scholarship for Health Collaborative – Funded by US Dept of Ed FIPSE program – Under auspices of Community- Campus Partnerships for Health
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9 health professions school worked to, collectively and on individual campuses, support CES through culture and institutional change 3 gaps identified – Faculty development pathways – Mentors and dossier external reviewers – Mechanism for peer review and broad dissemination of innovative products
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Faculty for the Engaged Campus 2 nd FIPSE grant – 3 parts = the 3 gaps Competency-based CES faculty development – 6 universities received small grants CCPH Database of Faculty Mentors and Portfolio Reviewers.
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What is CES4Health.info? Mechanism for the rigorous peer review and online dissemination of innovative products of health-related (broadly defined) CES that are in forms other than journal manuscripts – Documentary, training video, curriculum, manual, guide, report, website, toolkit, policy brief
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Outcomes Faculty and grad students who author products that are published through CES4Health.info can note them in the peer-reviewed publications section of their curriculum vitae and describe them as peer- reviewed scholarly products. CES4Health.info provides authors with a measure of impact by tracking how often each product is accessed and how it is used.
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Outcomes (cont) Useful products will be more broadly disseminated, increasing the likelihood that they will be taken up, used and have impact in more communities
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Development of CES4Health.info Fall 2007 – Fall 2008 – Design team: community and academic – Designed review criteria, author instructions, application, rating form Winter 2008 – summer 2008 – Pilot testing, portal development, beta testing – Recruited authors and acad/comm reviewers (60) – Many, many reviewer training calls
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Sept 2009 – now – Focus on populating site – 21 products submitted 3 Accepted 12 Accepted with revision 2 rejected 4 under review November 3, 2009 – public launch!
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Submission and Review Author submits online application and product Application provides info about: – Development of the product – Significance/impact of the product – Rigor of the work that led to the product (allows assessment of scholarly nature of the work)
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Review process mirrors typical journals Editorial staff – editor, 3 associate editors, editorial board Editor screens for community engagement and health related criteria Products assigned to 3-4 reviewers – 2 academic – 1-2 community
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Using P & T to Shift Culture When faculty make their best case for P and T as community- engaged scholars, they: Educate administrators and P & T committees Focus attention on increasing the universitys relevance and impact Focus attention on enhancing learning outcomes Raise visibility of CES Enhance credibility of CES Create a career advancement pathway for those who will come later Possibility create a need for changes in P & T guidelines
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