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The Cisneros Hispanic Leadership Institute will be hosting a Town Hall on College student Hunger and Homelessness on March 15th, 2017 12:00pm-1:30pm at Duques Hall, Room 151, 2201 G Street NW. Lunch will be provided with an RSVP here.  

Photojournalists James Rodriguez and William B. Plowman and curator Heidi McKinnon will speak about the motivations behind migration from Guatemala to the United States. Additionally, immigrant advocate and community leader Luis Cardona of the DHHS in Montgomery County will explore the current deportation order in the DC area. Register here to attend this event taking place on Tuesday, March 7th from 6pm-9pm in Hammer Auditorium at 500 17th Street NW, Washington, DC.

The International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement has released a call for submissions for their upcoming issue release in Fall 2017. The deadline for submissions is May 1st, 2017. Please access the submission entry form as well information for submission guidelines here.

Released by Stylus in 2016, Publicly Engaged Scholars: Next-Generation Engagement and the Future of Higher Education, by Post, Ward, Longo & Saltmarsh is proving to be a timely book for our field. The authors boldly argue that up-and-coming college faculty and administrators are notably more committed to the public purposes of the academy than previous generations. These faculty are not enthusiastic about campus policies and structures that do not value or reward community engaged scholarship.

The book makes a strong case for the role of higher education in addressing public problems and being an active community partner.

This text is available for you to borrow from the Nashman Center. We are interesting to see

what you think about the extent to which GW stands as an example of its description of the future of higher education. Book club anyone?

For your students submitting research for GW's Research Days (submissions are due Feb. 28th) please encourage those who conducted Community-Based Participatory Research (CBPR) to "tick the box" to submit their study for the Nashman Prize ($300 for first place, $200 for second).

The Honey W. Nashman Center for Civic Engagement and Public Service will once again be awarding the Nashman Prize for research that represents community-based participatory research (CBPR). CBPR is research on significant social issues that occurs in collaboration with local community residents with the aim to provide potential solutions and contribute to long-term, sustainable change in the community.

If you have questions about CBPR or the Nashman Prize, please contact Wendy Wagner at wagnerw@gwu.edu. Click here for information about last year's Nashman Prize winners.

Dr. Emily Morrison shared this article from today's Chronicle of Higher Education. More conversations are needed about the issue of political diversity on our campus, as well as campus policies regarding appropriate venues for activist students to draw attention to their causes.

Campus Conservatives Get a Lesson in Activism: When Professors Start Ranting, Start Filming

http://www.chronicle.com/article/Campus-Conservatives-Get-a/239309/

More cases are being made that rather than encouraging critical thinking, higher education is telling students what to think. It is increasingly important for faculty to be clear with students and others about our goals for their learning. This is particularly important for faculty who see their role as encouraging students to participate in democratic civic engagement. How will we respond?

The following is from this week's Chronicle of Higher Education

Betsy DeVos, the U.S. education secretary, said that university faculty members “ominously” tell college students what to think, according to her prepared remarks for a speech on Thursday at the Conservative Political Action Conference.

Congratulations to Emily Morrison, director of GW’s Human Services and Social Justice program, and Wendy Wagner, Senior Associate for Academic Service-Learning for the Nashman Center, on their recently released research article. With this piece, they identify a new approach to understanding the diversity of experiences of community-engaged faculty.

The article is available through the Michigan Journal for Community Service-Learning (link here). The study findings, a typology of community engaged faculty aimed at fostering greater understanding of and support for engaged scholars will be published in Spring of 2017.

Diversity & Democracy is a publication of the Association of American Colleges & Universities. This issue is an interesting read - definitely worth your time: http://www.aacu.org/diversitydemocracy/2017/winter

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

From the Editor: Exploring Key Questions of Citizenship through the Humanities

By Kathryn Peltier Campbell, Association of American Colleges and Universities

CITIZENSHIP UNDER SIEGE

Diversity and the Future of American Democracy

By William D. Adams, National Endowment for the Humanities

Clashes Over Citizenship: Lady Liberty, Under Construction or On the Run?

By Caryn McTighe Musil, Association of American Colleges and Universities

Bridges of Empathy: Crossing Cultural Divides through Personal Narrative and Performance

By Dona Cady and Matthew Olson—both of Middlesex Community College; and David Price, Santa Fe College

Affirming Interdependency: Interfaith Encounters through the Humanities

By Debra L. Schultz, Kingsborough Community College, City University of New York

Addressing Wicked Problems through Deliberative Dialogue

By John J. Theis, Lone Star College System, and Fagan Forhan, Mount Wachusett Community College

PERSPECTIVES

Creating a Generation of Humanitarian Art Activists (Artivists)

By John Frazier, Miami Dade College

Gentle People

By Christian Carmelino and Sabrina Mendoza, Miami Dade College

An Ethics of Reading?

By Peter Brooks, Princeton University

CAMPUS PRACTICE

Reconsidering Citizenship in the American Republic

By Michael Parrella and Jill Schennum—both of County College of Morris

Free Minds, Empowered Citizens: Changing Lives with the Humanities in Austin

By Vivé Griffith, Free Minds

The Humanities Action Lab: Mobilizing Civic Engagement through Mass Memory Projects

By Liz Ševčenko, Humanities Action Lab

Project Pericles just released a new white paper titled: Creating Cohesive Paths to Civic Engagement: Five Approaches to Institutionalizing Civic Engagement by authors Garrett S. Batten, Adrienne Falcon, and Jan R. Liss. The paper discusses civic engagement achievements of 26 colleges and universities. You can access the full paper here.

IARSCLE released a call for proposals for their upcoming Fall 2017 conference taking place September 14-16, 2017 in Galway, Ireland. A free webinar for those who wish to submit proposals will take place on Tuesday, February 21 at 10am CT. Space is limited for the webinar, so please register in advance here.

Proposals are due on Friday, March 10, 2017. You can submit a proposal and access information about the conference here.

The Partnership for Public Service recently released a document which helps to describe the process for students who are currently in the process for applying for work with the federal government and for those considering applying for positions. It answers important questions such as "Should students continue applying for federal jobs?" and "What about the Pathways Programs?"

Access the full informational breakdown here.

The Chronicle of Higher Education recently released a new study of an education policy seminar for political science majors at Wake Forest University. The seminar references new approaches to civic engagement and education after the most recent election occurred.

The report also references the recent release of a report by the National Association of Scholars which condemned civic engagement education as "an effort to divert students from the classroom to vocational training as community activists."

Read the full article here.

The National Association of Scholars just published a report which condemns civic engagement programs and courses. The report includes case studies of schools in Colorado and Wyoming, among others describing service-learning and civic engagement courses and programs with the phrase "progressive New Civics." The report urges campuses offering these courses to return to old civics education, which the author says focuses on the foundations of American government.

To learn more about the conversation surrounding this report, access the following sources:

  • The full 500+ page report can be read here.
  • Read about support for this report here.
  • Read about the negative implications of this report here.
  • The response to the report by Campus Compact President, Andrew Seligsohn (below)

Dear Campus Compact Member Presidents and Chancellors:

You may have seen coverage of a recently released document called "Making Citizens" by the National Association of Scholars. While the document claims to be a report on the state of civic education, it is actually a polemic that takes direct aim at the idea that it is valuable to give college students the opportunity to learn how to contribute to their communities and their country. The authors of the document cast aspersions not only on thousands of dedicated faculty and staff, but also on the millions of students who spend countless hours pursuing the common good while advancing their own education. These students deserve to be celebrated--not denigrated--and it would be wrong for those of us who know what is really happening on our campuses and in our communities to remain silent. That is why I am writing to you today.

The NAS document runs to more than 500 pages, and it is packed with invented premises, inaccurate claims, and tendentious interpretations--far too many to document in a brief message. You can find the relevant materials at the NAS website so that you can see for yourself.

The central error in the report is that it envisions a world in which everyone and everything is divided between left and right. Campus Compact and our partners in the movement for the public purposes of higher education reject that premise: Campus Contact is non-partisan. We envision a world of citizens working actively and effectively together to build the communities and the democracy they want. We are a network of diverse institutions--two-year, four-year, graduate, urban, suburban, rural, faith-based, public, private--and diverse individuals committed to the idea of self-government by free citizens. We believe institutions of higher education have a special role to play in cultivating the capacity for that shared work.

While there will be opportunities to pick through the report's details, right now I simply want to state a few facts.

  • Campus Compact is and always has been in favor of robust civic education for college students that includes classroom learning about topics such as the history, structure, and functioning of all levels of government. Because we know that student civic learning is deepened by the thoughtful integration of experience, we support approaches that give students the opportunity to learn by testing ideas in books and lectures against realities on the ground, and by thinking critically about existing and proposed policies and practices. This approach does not favor any ideology or political party. It simply represents the highest quality education for our students.
  • Campus Compact is a non-partisan organization that encourages participation by all students regardless of political party or ideology. Indeed, in our most recent statement of principles, we identified "a decline in the culture and practice of democracy, as evidenced by the polarization of our political discourse and institutions," as a major problem to be addressed through civic education. From our perspective, a crucial role of college is to teach students to listen carefully and respectfully to all political views and to express their own views without demonizing others. We have learned through decades of experience that giving students practical opportunities to build skills in civil discourse is highly effective. It requires a diversity of opinion, which we celebrate and seek to cultivate.
  • Campus Compact member institutions advance their community engagement work by building partnerships with organizations of all kinds. To cite two examples from our annual survey, 81% of our member campuses are engaged in partnerships with faith-based organizations, and 67% of members are engaged in partnerships with for-profit businesses as part of their community-engaged learning programs. Nearly all of our members engage in partnerships with local primary and secondary schools. The work of our member institutions is the work of building communities and strengthening our country.

While the NAS report is misguided, it does provide us all with a useful reminder that it is critical to communicate about the powerful contributions colleges and universities make to our communities and our democracy and the invaluable student learning generated in the process. In the months ahead, Campus Compact will focus on providing ways for our member institutions to share such stories. Many presidents and chancellors have chosen to catalyze that process on their campuses by signing the Campus Compact 30th Anniversary Action Statement and committing to create a Campus Civic Action Plan. If you have not already done so, we urge you to join that national effort. Now is also the time to speak up for the role of higher education in democracy. We need non-partisan institutions to remind us all that there is a world beyond endless partisan battling--and to educate citizens for that world.

We all know that America needs to find ways to come together, to communicate across difference, to find common ground, and to move forward. In higher education, we know that work begins with students. It is unfortunate that some organizations are trying to demonize millions of students, faculty, and staff who spend their evenings and weekends in churches, homeless shelters, and schools finding solutions to shared challenges. I do not know why they made that decision. I do know that now is a great moment for all of us to thank our colleagues, partners, and students--and to share with everyone who cares about America's future the good work that is happening on campuses all across our country.

Sincerely,
Andrew J. Seligsohn, Ph.D.
President

Volume 4 of the International Journal of Research on Service-Learning and Community Engagement has been published. The volume features rigorous research on a number of topics including international service-learning and community engagement student outcomes in primary, secondary, and higher education.

You can access the volume on the IJRSLCE website.