How We Do Our Work
Boundary Spanning
Our work extends across multiple boundaries:
- University - Community
- Faculty - Staff
- Content Expertise - Engagement Expertise
- Research - Practice
- Individual - Collective
- Positional Power - Functional Power
- Quantitative - Qualitative
- Positivism - Constructivism
This goes into more depth about boundary spanning - what it is and why it is critical to university-community engagement.
A Healing Centered & Restorative Lens
Dr. Tracy Hall and Dr. Jessica Camp's scholarship, , provides a lens through which we approach community engagement. Some examples include:
- Scholarship that is created with and by members of the community rather than scholarship that is separate from those that are studied
- Encouraging faculty to conduct creative and interdisciplinary research rather than reinforcing discipline-specific promotion and tenure rules
- Relying on knowledge of the community to define priorities and allocate resources rather than relying on university "specialists" separate from community
Delegating decision-making to those closest to the situation rather than a hierarchical decision-making approach
Traditional Community Engagement
- community is viewed as a passive presence or source of limited information
- the concept of community exists as a source of information and data and is practiced upon
- focus on short-term fixes/reactive
- faculty follow the rules and regulations closely and are judged by how well they do so - interaction with community is based solely on information and data collection
- faculty only serve a community while conducting their research. They are not encouraged to build long-term, close relationships with members of individual communities
- experimentation outside the rules and regulations of traditional research methodologies and practices are not encouraged or valued
Progressive Community Engagement
- community is viewed as a key partner in addressing concerns with faculty
- community is small, well-defined geographical area
- focus on long-term goals/proactive
- faculty are members of the community and participate as active members of it
- university faculty and staff live and work within the community and often work after hours on community problems and solutions. Everyone is an integral part of the community in which they live and work
- encourage innovation and creativity in an honest effort to solve problems; understand that mistakes will be made on the road to improvements
Office of Community-Engaged Learning
Suite 1100, First Floor - Ford Collaboratory - Mardigian Library
4901 Evergreen Rd
Dearborn, MI 48128
4901 Evergreen Rd
Dearborn, MI 48128