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Chatham College (Pittsburgh, PA)
The Practioner-In-Residence

Summary
Chatham College’s National Education for Women’s (NEW) Leadership program has, as a central element, a Practitioner-in-Residence: a community leader who lives on campus during the summer leadership program and participates formally through workshops and guest lectures, and informally through daily interactions with students to model the applied dimensions of leadership and public participation.

The Practice
Chatham College’s Pennsylvania Center for Women, Politics, and Public Policy is host to the National Education for Women’s (NEW) Leadership program, a week-long residential institute based on a model program developed at Rutgers, that brings together college women and their advisors from institutions across the state to develop young women’s leadership potential, connect students with women leaders in public affairs, and provide opportunities to practice newly-acquired leadership skills.

The Practitioner-in-Residence (PIR) role has been held by diverse women: a lobbyist, a higher education leader, an international NGO organizer, and in 2003, a community activist from the East End Neighborhood Forum (EENF), one of four community partners involved with Chatham’s Engaging Communities and Campuses grant project. This activist, who directs EENF, provided guest lectures and campus addresses, and led sessions with students on issues related to diversity, community and grassroots organizing, and engaging the policy-making process. Similar to past practitioners, she lived in the residence hall with students and advisors, was continuously available for informal dialogue, and was instrumental in helping students reflect on the week’s experiences.

During NEW Leadership, time is allocated for students to work with their advisors and begin the development of a leadership project that they will implement upon return to their home campuses. Students are asked to frame their projects as grant proposals in order to practice some of the applied skills emphasized during workshops. In the 2003 NEW Leadership program, students had a second opportunity to refine their proposal writing and planning skills by developing a mock grant application to receive funds specifically for a violence against women project. This grant application exercise was developed jointly by the PIR and the Faculty-in-Residence (a Chatham faculty member who also lives in residence during the program) based on a federal Violence Against Women Act campus grant program and modified to reflect the types of grants college student organizations might be able to obtain from an organizational funding source like Campus Compact or a community group. At the conclusion of the week, students present their proposals to the institute group and receive feedback from the PIR and their peers.

Effectiveness
The campus project developed during the institute, and designed to serve a campus or local community need, allows students to practice the skills acquired during the summer program. Students submit project outlines to the Center for Women, Politics, and Public Policy in the autumn and project reviews in the spring, at which time they receive a small stipend to off-set project costs. We noted a marked increase in project proposals this year that reflect the values emphasized by our PIR and her Community Partner organization. Traditionally, student projects have primarily been on-campus and serve only the campus community (such as leadership trainings, campus information forums, and Get Out the Vote drives). This year, many student projects involved some level of outreach to the community in the form of partnerships between student organizations and community groups for joint programs. Additionally, several project proposals were entirely focused on a community need and sought to expose students to issues beyond the campus rather than providing services or activities only to an on-campus student population.

Resources
For more information on the Center, please visit http://www.chatham.edu/pcwppp.

For more information on the East End Neighborhood Forum, please visit their website.

Contact Information
Allyson M. Lowe, Ph.D.
Director
PA Center for Women, Politics, and Public Policy
Chatham College
Woodland Road
Pittsburgh, PA 15232
Phone: 412-365-2725
alowe@chatham.edu



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