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Nashman Center and the National Churchill Library and Center at the Gelman Library hosted faculty for our first Breakfast Conversation on Community-Engaged Scholarship of the 2018-2019 school year! We were happy to welcome back our diverse, talented group of faculty to GW and make everyone aware of new ways we can support and promote their work this year.

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We welcomed back Nashman Affiliated Faculty and announced new affiliated faculty as well. Dr. Wendy Wagner presented on the new course designation process for Community-Engaged Scholarship classes and the Washington, D.C. 101 resource. Email Dr. Wendy Wagner (wagnerw@gwu.edu) or Rachel Talbert (rachellt@gwu.edu) if you want access to the D.C. 101 resource and learn more about the course designation process here.

Faculty shared ideas and participated in great discussions about their experiences and what they will be doing this year. Community-Engaged Scholars Ashley Hidalgo and Yuval Lev presented a powerpoint on the new GWServes platform and what using it looks like for both professors and students. We hope you'll take time to get familiar with it here and see what classes are offered at GW. We hope you'll be inspired to designate your own course!

If you are struggling with GWServes, a link to the powerpoint and audio directions can be found by clicking here. Please reach out to any member of our team for help as we transition to GWServes.

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Thank you to all those who came out! Our next Conversation on Community-Engaged Scholarship will take place on September 25th, 2018 as we welcome Zaneeta Daver, Director of the ALL IN Campus Democracy Challenge, and Amy Cohen, Executive Director of the Honey W. Nashman Center for Civic Engagement and Public Service, to speak about the the role of college faculty in encouraging and preparing students to vote.

RSVP here and check out the schedule for the rest of our Breakfast Conversations on Community-Engaged Scholarship for Fall 2018 here.

Get ready for Syllabus Week in your CES courses-deadline for student waiver completion to Nashman Center October 1st

Students participating in onsite service as part of their coursework need to fill out waivers. Waiver forms can be found on GWServes click here for link. Faculty collect forms, scan and email them to the Nashman Center or place paper copies in campus mail to the Honey Nashman Center 837 22nd St NW Attn: Wendy Wagner. Forms are due October 1st - or before students begin service. Have a great Syllabus Week!

GWServes Tracks Community Impact: Student Handbook Updated for new Platform

The 2018-2019 CES Student Handbook can be found on GWServes by clicking here. Students will find everything they need for their CES course inside. Faculty are encouraged to post the handbook and link to GWServes on Blackboard and include it in their syllabi. Students and faculty can claim their GWServes account and access the entire platform by clicking here.

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New database GW Serves on Give Pulse replaces Noble Hour: Resources for faculty and students in Community Engaged Courses

August 2018 courses will be the first courses to use GW Serves on Give Pulse tracking for community impact. The new database is easy to use and allows students to track all the CES course hours, as well as other community impacts.

For faculty information click for a PDF to help you get started with using GW Serves on Give Pulse for your classes.

For faculty and students click HERE for a series of video tutorials that cover common questions about setting up your GW Serves Give Pulse class or individual account. If you need help managing your dashboard click HERE for a video tutorial.

If you haven't claimed your account yet don't worry. Look for an email from GW Serves Community Engaged Scholarship on Give Pulse inviting you to join the Community-Engaged Scholarship group page. GWserves (aka GivePulse) is the new database platform from the Nashman Center for tracking community impact. We will be using it to track community engagement, promote our events, make connections across issue areas and log service hours. You can use the platform to building out class content, engage people in discussion, or highlight service opportunities.

When you receive this message to "claim your account" click the link provided and then sign up with your first name, last name, and GW email.

For a quick rundown of the system, tutorials for managing your group, and how to navigate the interface please reference the video links below.

  1. Basics of GivePulse
  2. How to Navigate the User Dashboard
  3. How to Create and Manage an Event
  4. How to Manage Your Group and Your Members
  5. How to Verify Service Hours

We hope this system will make it easier for everyone to serve, track, and reflect on their community engagement as well as open up opportunities to expand their group, individual, and GW impact.

Help Students Find Community-Engaged Scholarship Courses!

The GW Registrar will now tag community-engaged scholarship courses to help students find these opportunities. If you currently teach a community-engaged scholarship course or would like more information on the process, please click following link and then submit the form via email to wagnerw@email.gwu.edu. FORM LINK

We encourage applications from courses across all subjects and all GW schools at undergraduate and graduate levels and can help you get started.

The Nashman Center supports:

  • Forming community partnerships
  • Community-Based Paticipatory Research (CBPR)
  • Applying for project funding
  • (Re)designing curriculum
  • Developing assignments
  • Planning logistics
  • Managing risk and liability
  • Training faculty and GTAs
  • Publicizing the course/program in the Schedule of Classes and through advisors

During and after course semester:

  • Orienting students to service-learning
  • Supporting students and community partners
  • Assessing and sharing outcomes and impact

For more information on community engaged scholarship click here: https://www.gwnashmancenter.org/course-designation-1

Want to learn how to marshal evidence for your community based research? Don't miss this CNCS webinar!

Using Evidence for Scaling Community-Based Interventions That Work      RSVP for the June Research and Evidence Webinar      The Office of Research and Evaluation (ORE) at the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNCS) invites you to join our Research and Evidence webinar series. This webinar series is one of many ways ORE is sharing current research on civic engagement, volunteering, and national service.  This month, we are pleased to introduce:   Welcome : Mary Hyde, PhD., Director, ORE, CNCS   Introductory Remarks : Lily Zandniapour, Ph.D., Research and Evaluation Manager, and Anthony Nerino, ORE, CNCS   Presentation : Using Evidence for Scaling Community-Based Interventions That Work  Nan Maxwell, Ph.D., Senior Researcher, Mathematica Policy Research  Scott Richman, Ph.D., Survey Researcher, Mathematica Policy Research    Closing Remarks : Lily Zandniapour and Anthony Nerino   Date and Time   This webinar will be held on  Wednesday, June 13, from 2 - 3 PM ET .   Please  RSVP to attend .   If you have any questions, contact the CNCS Office of Research and Evaluation at  evaluation@cns.gov .     Study Abstract    Presentation: Using Evidence for Scaling Community-Based Interventions That Work  Presenters: Nan Maxwell, Ph.D., Senior Researcher, and Scott Richman, Ph.D., Survey Researcher, Mathematica Policy Research  In recent years, policymakers, researchers, and practitioners have expressed a growing interest in using evidence to make investment decisions and grow the impact of community-based solutions that work. CNCS and its grantees have invested significant resources in the design, implementation, and evaluation of interventions to improve a range of outcomes for children, families, organizations, and communities. These efforts have helped the agency identify and support effective community-based interventions.

Using Evidence for Scaling Community-Based Interventions That Work

RSVP for the June Research and Evidence Webinar

 

THE OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND EVALUATION (ORE) AT THE CORPORATION FOR NATIONAL AND COMMUNITY SERVICE (CNCS) INVITES YOU TO JOIN OUR RESEARCH AND EVIDENCE WEBINAR SERIES. THIS WEBINAR SERIES IS ONE OF MANY WAYS ORE IS SHARING CURRENT RESEARCH ON CIVIC ENGAGEMENT, VOLUNTEERING, AND NATIONAL SERVICE.

THIS MONTH, WE ARE PLEASED TO INTRODUCE:

WELCOME: MARY HYDE, PHD., DIRECTOR, ORE, CNCS

INTRODUCTORY REMARKS: LILY ZANDNIAPOUR, PH.D., RESEARCH AND EVALUATION MANAGER, AND ANTHONY NERINO, ORE, CNCS

PRESENTATION: USING EVIDENCE FOR SCALING COMMUNITY-BASED INTERVENTIONS THAT WORK

NAN MAXWELL, PH.D., SENIOR RESEARCHER, MATHEMATICA POLICY RESEARCH

SCOTT RICHMAN, PH.D., SURVEY RESEARCHER, MATHEMATICA POLICY RESEARCH

CLOSING REMARKS: LILY ZANDNIAPOUR AND ANTHONY NERINO

DATE AND TIME

THIS WEBINAR WILL BE HELD ON WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, FROM 2 - 3 PM ET.

PLEASE RSVP TO ATTEND.

IF YOU HAVE ANY QUESTIONS, CONTACT THE CNCS OFFICE OF RESEARCH AND EVALUATION AT EVALUATION@CNS.GOV.

STUDY ABSTRACT

PRESENTATION: USING EVIDENCE FOR SCALING COMMUNITY-BASED INTERVENTIONS THAT WORK
PRESENTERS: NAN MAXWELL, PH.D., SENIOR RESEARCHER, AND SCOTT RICHMAN, PH.D., SURVEY RESEARCHER, MATHEMATICA POLICY RESEARCH

IN RECENT YEARS, POLICYMAKERS, RESEARCHERS, AND PRACTITIONERS HAVE EXPRESSED A GROWING INTEREST IN USING EVIDENCE TO MAKE INVESTMENT DECISIONS AND GROW THE IMPACT OF COMMUNITY-BASED SOLUTIONS THAT WORK. CNCS AND ITS GRANTEES HAVE INVESTED SIGNIFICANT RESOURCES IN THE DESIGN, IMPLEMENTATION, AND EVALUATION OF INTERVENTIONS TO IMPROVE A RANGE OF OUTCOMES FOR CHILDREN, FAMILIES, ORGANIZATIONS, AND COMMUNITIES. THESE EFFORTS HAVE HELPED THE AGENCY IDENTIFY AND SUPPORT EFFECTIVE COMMUNITY-BASED INTERVENTIONS.

Faculty Call for Proposals due 6/15: Teaching Day SoTL Poster Session

Together with the Academy of Distinguished Teachers, we are sponsoring the 3rd annual SoTL poster session at Teaching Day 2018 on September 27.

For more information and to submit your proposal, please visit go.gwu.edu/sotl
Contact Maria de la Fuente or Elise Ruckert with questions.

Looking for resources on the Scholarship of Learning and Teaching?

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Please encourage your students to submit for this honor. All disciplines welcome, as are collaborative or team projects. The prize is $1,000. Submissions are due May 21, 2018.

For more information: https://writingprogram.gwu.edu/julian-clement-chase-prize

Strong entries will show

  • Original research demonstrating in-depth engagement with the Washington, DC community.
  • Clear and effective communication of ideas.
  • Adherence to the academic standards of a particular field or discipline.

The prize honors Sgt. Julian Clement Chase, 22, a native of Washington DC who was killed in action in the Helmand Province of Afghanistan. He was set to matriculate at GW in Spring 2013. Julian knew and relished his city. His family has established this prize to recognize others who explore DC with the intelligence and exuberance that he did.

Don't miss a teach-in on Reconstruction for K-12 pre-service and in-service teachers. This is part of the Zinn Education Project campaign to teach Reconstruction. Presenters include NPS chief historian Turkiya Lowe, Howard University professor Greg Carr, Lies My Teacher Told Me author James Loewen, representatives from NMAAHC and the African American Civil War Museum, and more. Location: Howard University's Blackburn Center. This event is free. RSVP required.

Learn More and RSVP

What does youth civic engagement have to do with inequality? Report from Peter Levine via WT Grant FoundationThis new report on civic engagement of young people is a great read on youth led research, civic education and the role of universities and high schools in education for democracy. Excerpts below-full report here http://wtgrantfoundation.org/youth-civic-engagement-inequality

Many young people live in “civic deserts”

Since the beginning, CIRCLE has focused on severe disparities in the opportunities to become civically engaged in America. For instance, young people who are headed to college are much more likely to volunteer and belong to organizations than their counterparts who are not college-bound. These disparities translate into major gaps in who has voice and power in politics and civil society.

Youth participate when they have opportunities and are asked, but we find that such opportunities are missing in many communities. We call places where civic engagement is absent “civic deserts.” Although some youth in suburban and urban areas perceive that no organizations would want them to participate, and that there are no physical places where they could address local issues, that perception is almost twice as common in rural areas. It is likely that the sheer distance to religious congregations, nonprofits, and cultural institutions—as well as a lack of investment in such resources—makes many rural communities feel like civic deserts to youth. Other research tells us that in all kinds of communities, opportunities to participate in civic activities in school are more common for advantaged students who attend well-resourced schools. A high school may be a kind of civic desert for the students it enrolls even if it is located in a city that offers many cultural and civic resources.

Civic engagement is good for youth

One reason for our concern about these disparities is that being civically engaged can help a young person succeed. Working on a community’s problems is a way of building skills, creating connections, and giving youth new reasons to stay in school and succeed there.

For example, YouthBuild USA enrolls youth who have not completed high school. Participants learn academic content and job skills while helping to manage building projects that serve their communities. In our evaluation of YouthBuild, we heard many stories about participants gaining new career aspirations as a result of their experiences running their work sites. One graduate told us, “Getting involved in the policy committee activities and being a speaker for the program uplifted me, and gave me more motivation. And I thought, ‘I can be a leader.’”

When I interviewed graduates of Points of Light’s Service Works program, which gives marginalized youth opportunities to define and address community problems in teams, many told me about positive effects on their career plans. One interviewee told me that it “definitely wasn’t [her] plan” to go to college before she enrolled in ServiceWorks, but it got her “on track,” and she is now pursuing an associates degree.

Getting a young person on a better track by engaging her in civic activities has benefits that go far beyond the individual. Opportunity Nation, which works to engage disconnected young adults, estimates that “Young adults who are not in school or working cost taxpayers $93 billion annually and $1.6 trillion over their lifetimes in lost revenues and increased social services.” Offering civic opportunities has the potential to cut those social costs.

Youth also contribute to communities

We’ve also been impressed by evidence that geographic communities where people are more civically engaged are much better places to come of age. Robert Sampson argues that “collective efficacy,” the habit and norm of taking action together in a community, “transcends poverty and race and in many cases predicts lower violence and enhanced public health” (Great American City, p. 168). Raj Chetty and his colleagues, when analyzing tax records for 40 million pairs of parents and children, find that one of the factors that promote economic mobility is social capital, that is, “the strength of social networks and community involvement in an area.”

These findings do not suggest that government programs are unimportant or that communities can or must solve their own problems unaided. Rather, public institutions of all kinds (including schools and police) seem to serve people better when communities are more organized and active.

Most of the research on the correlation between civic engagement and prosperity, mobility, or equity looks at whole populations. In our current work, we are exploring the hypothesis that young adults are pivotal to civic life. If they are active in organizations that serve the community and help younger kids, they can have a huge positive impact. But young adults can be detrimental if they find harmful alternatives to civic opportunities—gangs, for example, instead of neighborhood associations.

How to expand opportunities for civic engagement

If our hypothesis about the importance of young adults’ civic engagement proves correct, it will provide an argument for investing in positive, pro-civic youth opportunities as a strategy for enhancing everyone’s economic outcomes. Programs like YouthBuild and Service Works show positive results, but are very small compared to the demand.

In addition to expanding and strengthening programs that enlist young people in improving their own communities, we must also fix flaws in the labor market to value civic skills. Today, high school or college degrees, previous jobs, and references serve as the major sources of information for prospective employers. A low-income or otherwise marginalized young person who has gained truly valuable skills by participating in civic activities may be unable to demonstrate her market value to employers.

For example, maybe an employer would love to hire someone who is capable of organizing a popular event, but that skill will not be evident in a job application. Offering reliable credentials for civic skills may help young people translate civic experience into jobs. The criteria for the skills would be chosen collectively by a coalition including educators, employers, and youth, and then the ability to confer the credential could be distributed.

Youth are transforming the research

I’ve described the mainstream of our own work on the connections between civic engagement and equality since 2001. But the research agenda has changed lately because of youth advocacy—the very thing we study.

Movements like Black Lives Matter have raised awareness about arbitrary and harmful policing and disciplinary policies. Scholars, often influenced by these youth (and also drawing on past research), are demonstrating the relevance of those issues to civic engagement. For example, Sarah K. Bruch (Iowa) and Joe Soss (Minnesota) use nationally representative surveys of students and administrators to measure the harshness of schools’ disciplinary policies.

School discipline is related to race, class, and gender. Just for example, African American boys whose parents have little education are more than ten times more likely to be punished by a school than White girls with well-educated parents. In their multivariate model, Bruch and Soss find that most of these school climate variables are related to the later civic engagement of youth, with harsher and less inclusive climates depressing graduates’ community engagement, voter turnout, and trust in government.

I mention this shift in the research agenda for two reasons. First, it is important substantively. An essential way to improve youth civic engagement is to reform school discipline. Youth have helped us to understand a complex, interconnected problem. By treating students unfairly, schools depress civic participation, which then makes school reform less likely and more difficult. Teachers who strive to educate their own students about democracy face profound obstacles if the broader context of the school and neighborhood is unjust and alienating. However, programs and policies that offer young people real voice may interrupt these damaging cycles.

Second, the shift in the research agenda illustrates the necessity of youth voice. Young people are the ones who best understand their own contexts and can diagnose and address problems. Through Black Lives Matter and related social movements, youth have drawn the attention of older people and formal institutions to a set of crucial issues that are obvious to them because they live with them every day, including arbitrary suspension and arrest. This is an example of why youth should be prominent in diagnosing social issues and inventing solutions.

The Community Engagement Program has made two key changes to the Community Engagement Pilot RFA.

 

First, the deadline for Letters of Intent has been extended until 5:00 pm EST on March 22, 2018. Please note that the deadline for the full proposal will remain the same,5:00 pm EST on April 13, 2018.

 

Second, applicants may request up to $50,000 for their project. Please see the RFA below for more detail.

 

Download Community Engagement RFA here

Applications should be submitted here:

https://cri-datacap.org/surveys/?s=HKNWJYDCJH.

 

Questions? Email Christina Robinson at cgrobins@childrensnational.org.

The Breakfast Conversations on Community-Engaged Scholarship are back. Join GW’s community-engaged faculty for a light breakfast and stimulating conversations on a variety of topics related to community-engaged teaching, research, and creative activity.

These events are held in the Gelman Library first floor, in the National Churchill Library and Center.

Thursday, March 29, 9:45-10:45am
Public Dissemination of Student Scholarship: Opportunities and Examples

Conversation facilitated by:

  • Dr. Michelle Kelso, Human Services and Social Justice
  • Dr. Dana Hines, School of Nursing
  • Dr. Phyllis Ryder, Director University Writing Center

One of the standards of Community-Engaged Scholarship courses is that the public benefits from students' scholarly work. This month's conversation features a variety of approaches used by GW faculty to disseminate student scholarship to the public. These include online platforms for sharing collected data, live-streaming webinar presentations, advocacy letter-writing, as well as traditional reports and symposium presentations. How might your students' work provide greater community benefit if shared to broader audiences?

A light breakfast is provided. Please RSVP via this link

Coming up next month:

Thursday, April 19, 9:45-10:45am
When Students’ Experiences in the Community Lead to Politics in the Classroom

The Course Design Institute (CDI) is, "a “bootcamp” style program that guides faculty through the design of a new course or the re-design an existing one in a facilitated, supported environment" offered by the University Teaching and Learning Center (UTLC). CDI this year is May 21-25.

"Participants explore learning-centered design principles in a large group setting and then work on their individual course designs in a small, discipline- or pedagogy-focused learning team. Teams provide brainstorming, individualized feedback, and on-going support opportunities."

Once again our colleagues at the UTLC have welcomed the Nashman Center to facilitate a learning team for faculty who are attending the Course Design Institute to design/re-design a course that will use community-engaged pedagogy. The team last year benefited from the opportunity to meet colleagues who are also doing community-engaged work and develop a group of critical friends to consider new ideas and approaches with.

Participation in the Course Design Institute is is by application, and all GW faculty members are eligible. Applications are accepted through March 24, 2018

This documentary film contest is a great way for students to create a project focusing on one aspect of civic life (perhaps as part of a class project or research that they are doing) and have the opportunity to share their work with a national audience. Details on how to participate in this project can be found at the link below. If your students are presenting at the symposium this deadline is only one day before the symposium-why not document their civically engaged work and have it presented to an audience beyond GW as well?

https://www.civiclifeproject.org/

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