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Bringing Practitioners into the Fold: Practical Suggestions for Successfully Bridging the Divide Between Students and Practitioners Carol Cwiak North Dakota.

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Presentation on theme: "Bringing Practitioners into the Fold: Practical Suggestions for Successfully Bridging the Divide Between Students and Practitioners Carol Cwiak North Dakota."— Presentation transcript:

1 Bringing Practitioners into the Fold: Practical Suggestions for Successfully Bridging the Divide Between Students and Practitioners Carol Cwiak North Dakota State University

2 Education: The Highest Order of Mitigation “ Mitigation is sustained action that reduces or eliminates long-term risk to people and property from hazards and their effects.” (Disaster Resistant Jobs Facilitator Guide, p. 4 - 6)  The highest order of mitigation requires a paradigm shift that adopts a posture of resilience above patchwork attempts at resistance and requires the proverbial “village” of practitioners, researchers, city planners, community organizers, businesses, etc. to buy-in to a new ideology of vulnerability and sustainability.

3 The Gap? Book Smarts vs. Street Smarts AKA Experience vs. Education

4 Emergency Manager “Stereotype”The “New Generation” Emergency Manager 1. Not college educated (4-year degree)1. College educated—many with EM degrees 2. Middle to late middle-aged2. More professional and knowledgeable 3. Emergency management is second or third career3. Knowledge base: science and research 4. Job obtained other than with EM Competencies4. Technologically more proficient/adept 5. Spend EM career in one jurisdiction5. Younger 6. Disaster response planning-oriented6. More diverse and culturally sensitive 7. Works primarily with emergency services7. Emergency management is career of first choice 8. Bureaucratic8. Building disaster-resistant communities focus 9. Plans for jurisdiction (primarily disaster response- oriented) 9. Proactive 10. Has not done a risk assessment10. Lifelong learner; reads disaster literature 11. Has not done a mitigation plan11. Joins professional associations 12. Has not done a strategic plan12. Plans with jurisdiction stakeholders 13. Has not joined an EM professional association13. Better paid 14. Doesn’t read disaster research literature14. Better funding for EM programs 15. Knowledge base is experiential15. Upwardly and geographically mobile 16. Frequently wears other hats16. Broader range of working contacts 17. Not well-paid or funded Information supplied by: Dr. Wayne Blanchard, FEMA Higher Education Project 18. Many part-time and volunteer positions

5 The Issues  Difference between depth and breadth of “knowing”  Immediacy of knowledge is required in the field  Stigma attached to degree  Age Are these issues what are really causing this gap?

6 Is there more to this story? YES and NO The issues mentioned play a part, but the biggest issue is one of valuation. Do practitioners feel their expertise is valued by the higher education community?

7 What’s really happening here? The valuation of “knowing” It is important to note at this point that the argument of book smarts versus street smarts is less about the way we “know”, than the valuation of the type of knowing. The message that college-educated is better is destined to be received combatively by those who are not college- educated, but know their job. Understand that college graduates are not the issue in-and-of themselves, the degree that is being heralded as validation of superiority and the face of the future that is the issue.

8 Practical Suggestions  Create either a formal or informal advisory board that includes a number of key local, regional, state and federal practitioners from your area.  Collegiate programs offering associate and bachelor degrees should offer practical/life experience credit hours for practitioners.  Bring in practitioners to speak to your classes.

9  Once a relationship is developed with local, regional and state practitioners, set up internships for students with practitioners.  Contact local practitioners and extend the offer of utilizing students from their program for training and full-scale exercises.  Sponsor a community preparedness day on campus.

10  Develop an award or series of awards to be awarded annually from your program that recognizes local, regional or state emergency management personnel excellence.  Have a practitioner be a co-advisor to an on-campus student emergency management organization.  Host quarterly practitioner and academic panels.

11  Create a practitioner mentoring program.  Publish a monthly, bi-monthly or quarterly bulletin that features local practitioner profiles, articles, etc.  Establish a meaningful relationship with your state division of emergency management and homeland security.

12 Conclusions Honor and respect practitioner’s experience. Make them an integral part of your program. Build meaningful student and practitioner relationships. Let the state division be a bridging organization.

13 Carol Cwiak North Dakota State University P.O. Box 5075 Fargo, ND 58105-5075 madamgovnr@msn.com


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