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The September 5th, Conversation on Community Engaged Scholarship focused on recent research findings, student surveys, and student service data.

The presentation slides from this event are available here.

The Periscope video is available here.

Wendy Wagner, the Nashman Center's director of community engaged scholarship, presented these findings and facilitated a conversation about uses of the data and new lines of inquiry for the coming year.

We are happy to present/discuss specific findings with your department faculty as well. Contact wagnerw@gwu.edu to schedule a department presentation.

While many topics arose, important themes were: cost of transportation to service sites, future data gathering and reporting, and further mining of the data from the MSL research study.

...continue reading "Conversations Series: The Big Data Share"

GW's annual Community Service and Engagement Fair will be Friday, September 13th from 1-5pm in the Marvin Center's Continental Ballroom.

Students and faculty are encouraged to take this opportunity to meet the staff of many local nonprofit and human services organizations to talk about opportunities to partner and create new initiatives.

Organizations registered for the event include:

  • 826DC
  • YWCA National Capital Area
  • Jumpstart
  • Life Pieces To Masterpieces, Inc.
  • The AnBryce Foundation
  • Little Friends For Peace
  • Cystic Fibrosis Foundation
  • Reading Partners
  • Rock Creek Conservancy
  • African American Civil War Museum
  • CASA (Court Appointed Special Advocates) for Children of DC
  • Ward 8 Woods
  • Asylum Seeker Assistance Project
  • Rock Creek Conservancy
  • US Dream Academy
  • Capital Area Food Bank
  • ArtReach GW
  • National Center for Missing and Exploited Children
  • Latin American Youth Center
  • FoodPrints
  • International Spy Museum
  • Raising a Village Foundation
  • DC Prevention Center Wards 1 & 2
  • SOME, So Others Might Eat
  • Mosaic Theater Company of DC
  • Community of Hope
  • Christ House
  • Higher Achievement
  • For Love of Children
  • Atlas Performing Arts Center
  • City Gate
  • US Dream Academy
  • The Petey Greene Program at George Washington University
  • Homeless Children's Playtime Project
  • JxJ
  • GWSeves

The Stanford University Libraries, in partnership with Campus Compact and other supporters has curated an online Service-Learning History Project archive, curated by Tim Stanton, Seth Pollack and Josh Schneider. The archives contains downloadable interviews, films, and documents, telling the story of the emergence and institutionalization of service-learning from over the last fifty years.

 

If your summer writing list is long and your research needs to be disseminated you need a writing retreat!

Pen to Paper is an academic writing retreat designed to provide time, space, and resources to guide faculty, professional staff, graduate students, and community partners working on manuscripts related to service-learning and community engagement. The two and a half-day retreat provides participants with time to discuss ideas with and receive feedback from editors, share ideas with peers, and write.

Each year attendance is intentionally kept to a minimum in order to foster personal connections the small group provides the space participants need to focus on engaged scholarship. Registration and information here https://indianacampuscompact.org/pen-to-paper/

We are glad you’re here and learning about community engaged scholarship.

To get course credit just follow these steps

  1. Log on to your GW Serves GivePulse Account https://gwserves.givepulse.com

  2. Click on Classes, click on spring 2019, click on your class and scroll down to your class wall. https://gwserves.givepulse.com/group/classes/159231?term=Spring+2019

  3. Post your answers to the prompts that are posted on your class wall your professor can see the answers there and award your credit.

  4. Don’t forget to click Submit!

See pictures below if you need help! Have a great day at #SymposiumGW and learn about how to extend your Community Engaged Scholarship by following us @NashmanFaculty

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Professor Gregor D. Squires, a Nashman Affiliate Faculty member and Professor of Sociology and Public Policy & Public Administration, will be teaching the Social Problems in America (SOC 2105) Engaged Scholarship/Service-Learning class in Fall 2019. The Nashman Faculty Update wanted to highlight this class for those who might be interested as registration comes up soon!

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The class aims to integrate students into the city to see first-hand the problems addressed in the readings, lectures, films, and other classroom activities. It includes guest speakers who are actively engaged in addressing critical issues facing the DC community, attendance and analysis of an event in DC (e.g. Congressional hearing, theatrical performance, political demonstration, museum exhibit) and volunteering with a local non-profit advocacy or service delivery organization. The final paper will be an assessment of the causes, consequences, and potential solutions of a critical social problem based on students’ experiences on and off campus.

To read more about the class, check out the page from Fall 2018 on GivePulse here. You can also check out our previous interview with Professor Squires here.

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Interested in Living and Learning with Students? Apply for a Faculty in Residence or Faculty Guide position

The application for faculty who are interested in joining GWUs Faculty in Residence and Faculty Guide programs is open until February 15th.  The Faculty in Residence and Faculty Guide program is a partnership between Academic Affairs and Student Engagement, that provides faculty members with the unique opportunity to connect with students in a residential setting.  Faculty connect with students through programs, events, and informal interactions, and collaborate with residential staff in supporting our communities.

This a a great opportunity for faculty whose scholarship would benefit from living and learning in community settings on campus.

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About Campus is offering free downloads of top articles for a limited time-great opportunity for over the break reading-or to fill out reading lists for spring courses!

There are great articles available at About Campus for your and/or your students. We particularly liked Shifting to Curricular Approaches to Learning beyond the Classroom by Kathleen G. Kerr, James Tweedy, Keith E. Edwards and Dillon Kimmel

Other Articles from About Campus Available for free download:

Generation Z: Educating and Engaging the Next Generation of Students by Corey Seemiller and Meghan Grace

Success by Failure by Benjamin D. Andrews

Being Better and Doing Better: Men's Health and Mental Health on Campus by Christopher Kilmartin

William Deresiewicz Talks with Executive Editor, Frank Shushok, Jr. about His Book, Excellent Sheep: The Miseducation of the American Elite & the Way to a Meaningful Life by William Deresiewicz

Mental Health, Well–being, and Learning: Supporting Our Students in Times of Need by Alan M. Woody Schwitzer and John A. Vaughn

Practice or Perish: How Overexposure and Premature Claims of Success Undermine Men of Color Initiatives by Steven Thurston Oliver

About Campus Executive Editor, Frank Shushok, Jr. Visits with Beverly Daniel Tatum, President Emerita of Spelman College, about Leadership, Her College Presidency, and the Contemporary Challenges That Face All Our Students

Fairness and Fate in Elite College Admissions by Stephen J. Handel

“What is Said Here”: Reflections on an Informal Community for Black Men at an Historically White Institution by Ray Black

The Symposium was a success and we want to thank the students, faculty and community partners who spent the afternoon learning from and engaging with each other! Everyone learned a great deal from the presenters, Dr. Jacobsen’s Theater Students gave the audience a new way to think about immigration with their presentation, the showcases from community engaged courses highlighted the service, research, learning and action that students undertook throughout the semester and the concluding panels examined community engaged scholarship in depth- all great examples of engagement with our community and our scholarship.

If you missed the symposium check out the great people who presented here: https://www.gwnashmancenter.org/symposium/

Two of our presenters-Dr. Imani Cheers’ class and Gillian Joseph 2018-2019 Knapp Fellowship Winner have websites to share with us in case you missed their sessions at the symposium or wanted to learn more here they are https://monumedia2018.wixsite.com/home & https://findourwomen.org/

Do you have scholarship to share? Mark your calendar for the spring symposium on April 26, 2019!

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The Nashman Center welcomes students from Community-Engaged Courses who are participating in the Symposium today. To confirm your attendance with your professor, post your reflections on each session you attend to your GWServes course page (instructions below).

1) Go to https://gwserves.givepulse.com/group/classes/159231?term=Fall+2018

2) Scroll down and select your course by clicking on the course title

3) You’ll see your class page

4) Scroll all the way to the bottom of your class page and you’ll see the discussion wall

5) Post your reflections (prompts provided on the next page) and click submit. Your wall posts will be seen by your course instructor and that is how they will verify credit for attendance today.

6) Questions? From GWServes, message your course administrator, Rachel Talbert.

Prompts for response: Please share a few thoughts about each of these sessions today.

1) Lunch Session: After viewing the GW Theatre students’ presentation, what do you think about the role of the arts in social change? Has your service experience ever led you to also do advocacy?

2) Showcase Session: Which showcase presentation was your favorite and why?

3) Panel Session: Which session did you choose? What was discussed that you can connect to what you learned in your community-engaged scholarship course this semester?

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As we near the end of another semester, our students often need help identifying their next steps, given the significant learning experience they have had. Below are a few suggestions to forward to them.

Recently circulated on the Service-Learning in Higher Education Listserv:

The International Undergraduate Journal for Service-learning, Leadership and Social Change has a call for papers.  You can view the Journal at http://opus.govst.edu/iujsl/

The Journal is dedicated to providing undergraduate students a venue to discuss their service-learning projects and experiences.

The Journal considers three types of articles:

1) Articles that discuss the development of a service-learning project and the

impact of the project on the community served;

2) A case study of a service-learning project;

3) A reflection on service-learning and the development of personal leadership.

Each article will be reviewed by selected readers and the member of the editorial board.  Manuscripts should be typed double-spaced, excluding block quotations which should be typed single-spaced, and references.  To ensure anonymity, author’s names and affiliation should appear on a separate cover page.  Articles should not exceed 15 pages.  Authors should follow APA format.

Submissions should be sent in Word format.  DO NOT HAVE HEADERS OR PAGE NUMBERING.

Submit by e-mail to:

Ned Scott Laff, Ph.D.                                  Jamie Opdyke

ned.laff@gmail                                           jopdyke@uoregon.edu

The November 14th, Conversation on Community-Engaged Scholarship was about gender-based harassment or assault in the context of service sites. Several faculty have recently had students express discomfort from experiencing unwanted attention while at their service-site. This Conversation was intended to be the first of many discussions about how to respond and how to proactively prepare students to feel more comfortable communicating their boundaries, particularly in the context of the service relationship.

The Conversation began with two speakers, who provided resources and responded to questions. Most of the resources shared are available through Haven: https://haven.gwu.edu

Christina Franzino (cfranzino@gwu.edu), is the Assistant Director for Sexual Assault Prevention and Response (Response Coordinator) in GW’s Title IX office. She conducts consultations with students, faculty and staff to inform individuals of available resources both on- and off-campus. Christina can assist individuals with obtaining interim support measures, such as academic support, campus-housing adjustments, and no contact orders. Additionally, Christina manages GW's Sexual Assault Response Consultation (SARC) Team, a 24/7 hotline resource.  https://haven.gwu.edu/about-title-ix-staff

Tamara Washington is GW's Victim Services Specialist. She advocates for and supports persons affected by any form of crime. Ms. Washington’s provides confidential services, helping members of the GW community learn about resources on and off campus, as well as about their rights and reporting options. https://safety.gwu.edu/about-office-victim-services

Both speakers indicated their availability to speak with concerned faculty, or to schedule presentations to classes. They coordinate training for all incoming students but are happy to facilitate a more specific conversation in any of our courses.

Some of the points raised in the subsequent discussion include:

  • Concern about how few GW staff are available to serve the campus population, given the statistic that 1 in 4 college women and 1 in 6 men will experience sexual assault.
    • It was acknowledged that the GW community is experiencing a recent increase in such resources and staffing, but many faculty expressed that more is needed.
  • Concern that many students believe silently accepting harassment is the way to avoid a situation that might escalate.
    • Faculty can and should have a role in discussing with students ways to make their boundaries clear without putting themselves at further risk
  • Gender-based harassment at service sites
    • The importance of strong relationships between faculty and community partners, so conversations about how to respond begin from a place of trust
    • Complexity when the source of harassment is a client of the organization, someone in need of their services. Can this person receive help while being distanced from volunteers? Can the organization staff, who likely know the client better, intervene? What are the options?
    •  It is also helpful to know the gender-based harassment policies of the service-site organization
    • Preparing students to respond to/de-escalate when they are in the context of serving in the community.
    • We emphasize the need to have empathy, patience, and respect for those we serve. We also emphasize the cultural differences that should lead students to expect differences in norms of behavior. These messages need to go alongside messages that students should feel empowered to maintain their own boundaries of comfort. Students may find these to be complex messages to communicate.
    • Training for faculty may be needed, to help them facilitate this discussion in class as a part of other course content that prepares students to enter the community.
  • The need to address the shifting of culture, in addition to responding to individual issues.
    • Training needs to not just focus on how to respond to harassment or assault, but how to help students recognize when they are being perpetrators of unwanted and inappropriate attention
    • At the Honey W. Nashman Center, we have made our goal to address the culture of racism explicit. There is a need at GW to address rape culture in a similar way
    • Opportunities for training and discussion of this culture were considered
      • The Nashman Center’s Institute for Citizen Leaders will include training related to gender-based harassment and assault in future.
      • A discussion of these issues may also occur at Chavez-Huerta-Itliong Day as well
  • Franzino and Washington indicated that they are frequently asked about how to influence culture shifts. They believe some important shaping experience happen long before students arrive at college.
    • Teaching young children that their bodies are their own – that they do not have to hug someone they do not want to. When children say stop tickling, grown-ups should stop.
    • Our students can contribute to this shift in culture is through their own service with children. GW service-learning students often describe discomfort with the way children hug/grip, climb on them. Students can use this teachable moment to demonstrate to children how to communicate about the boundaries they want to have where their own bodies are concerned.
    • Faculty can play a role in removing the taboo on discussing issues of gender and sex.

The Conversation concluded with important clarification on GW’s new policy that includes instructors as “responsible employees,” meaning they have a responsibility to inform the Title IX office whenever they become aware that a member of the GW community has experienced gender-based harassment or assault. The result of this notification is that the student will receive, via email, information about the supports and resources available to them. The student is not required to respond to this email and the perpetrator of the harassment is not contacted (unless there are multiple reports about the same person, indicating the GW community is at risk). It was suggested that having the student be involved when we notify Title IX (or at least letting them know that we are contacting Title IX in order to get information about resources) would help the student feel more comfortable with the process.

The resources shared with students are also available through Haven, https://haven.gwu.edu, and include contact information for medical care, legal support, and reporting information, but most importantly, a trained person to talk to about the experience through the Sexual Assault Response and Consultation Team (SARC).

New Community Engaged Scholarship Course for Spring 2019: PUBH 6299. 13 The Autism Experience: A Public Health Perspective

2 credit hours Friday, 10:10am - noon

Open to graduate and upper level undergraduate students

Instructor, Sean D. Cleary, PhD, MPH, Associate Professor of Epidemiology sdcleary@gwu.edu

A public health perspective of the autism experience is explored through service learning and community participatory research methods engaging autistic young adults, their parents, researchers, clinicians and other service providers. The course covers the science, viewpoints, and experience of autism with a focus on young adults transitioning to adulthood. Collaboratively with community advocates, students will explore research relevant to the autistic community.

Course Summary Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a complex developmental disorder characterized by repetitive behavior and delayed social interaction and communication (APA, 2013). National estimates indicate that autism affects approximately 1 in 68, or 14.6 per 1,000 8 year-old children (CDC, 2017; Christensen, 2016), with symptoms usually appearing in infancy or toddlerhood and continuing through adulthood. For children with ASD, early intervention has proven to be effective in enhancing functioning and educational attainment (Cohen et al., 2006; Dawson et al., 2010; Remington et al, 2007). But throughout their lifespan, individuals with ASD need additional and often different services, especially during the transition to adulthood. An estimated 50,000 adolescents diagnosed with ASD turn 18 each year (Roux et al, 2013). The transition to adulthood is challenging for all, but especially so for adolescents with ASD with aging parents (the primary care givers), with changing roles to independent adults with employment and social expectations of young adults (Shattuck et al, 2012). Many adolescents and young adults with ASD are unemployed primarily due to an inability to create an appropriate environment to thrive. Identifying and addressing these challenges is important given the magnitude and continued growth of the ASD population. This course was developed and will be implemented through continued engagement with autistic young adults, the Tribe, their families, the Growing Kids Therapy Center, SPARC, and others in the DC metro area. Collaboration with and continual review by community advocates will ensure the course covers relevant content to adequately prepare undergraduates or graduates that are interested in entering the workforce as researchers and/or practitioners working with autistic young adults and ensuring what is gained from the course is driven by the specific needs of the autism community.

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