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CIC AWARDS $1 MILLION IN GRANTS
TO 13 INSTITUTIONS FOR “ENGAGING COMMUNITIES AND CAMPUSES”

Project Helps College/Community Partners
Provide Learning Activities, Meet Community Needs

For Immediate Release:
February 28, 2001

Contact:
Laura Wilcox (202) 466-7230

WASHINGTON, DC – The Council of Independent Colleges (CIC) and its grantmaking unit, the Consortium for the Advancement of Private Higher Education (CAPHE), today awarded 13 private colleges and universities grants of up to $80,000 each to participate in a major national initiative, Engaging Communities and Campuses. The program is aimed at assisting independent colleges and universities establish partnerships with community organizations to enhance experiential learning activities while addressing community needs.

A total of $1,006,500 is being awarded to the following 13 colleges and their community partners, selected from among 113 colleges and universities that submitted proposals:

Augsburg College (MN) and Project for Pride in Living

Bates College (ME) and LA Excels

Calvin College (MI) and Grand Rapids Area Center for Ecumenism

Chatham College (PA) and Communities in Schools, Conservation Consultants, Inc., and the East End Neighborhood Forum

Emory & Henry College (VA) and Washington County Schools, People Inc., and Washington County Office on Youth

Loyola University New Orleans (LA) Boys & Girls Clubs of Southeast Louisiana, Inc., and Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA)

Madonna University (MI) and All Saints Neighborhood Center

Mars Hill College (NC) and the North Carolina Juvenile Evaluation Center

Otterbein College (OH) and the Westerville Chamber of Commerce, Communities In School, First Link, and the Columbus Foundation

Saint Joseph’s College (ME) and Crooked River Elementary School, Windham Family Resource Center, and the city government

St. Thomas University (FL), Florida Memorial College, and the Campus and Community Alliance for North Dade

Tougaloo College (MS) and United Way of the Capital Area, Inc., Tougaloo Community Civic League, Jackson Public Schools, Tougaloo Community Center

Wartburg College (IA) and Bartels Lutheran Retirement Community, Waverly-Shell Rock School District, and Bremwood Lutheran Children’s Home

The Engaging Communities and Campuses program is a multi-year initiative that builds on current and past CIC initiatives on service-learning, college/community partnerships, and colleges’ urban missions,” said CIC President Richard Ekman. “These grants will help private colleges and universities work with off-campus community organizations both to enhance student learning and to assist community organizations and residents in addressing critical issues.”

Beyond the grants competition, the overall project includes regional teaching and learning workshops held during the summer of 2000, and an effective practice exchange. The program is based on the premise that to prepare students for a lifetime of contributions to society, colleges should enable students to connect with the world beyond the campus—and the interests of those communities—while still enrolled in an educational program.

"Through an emphasis on student learning characterized by students and faculty participating in the resolution of community identified and defined issues, this program will empower colleges and universities and community organizations to collaborate in ways that are new to academe," said Michelle Gilliard, Executive Director of CAPHE.

Institutions selected for the Engaging Communities and Campuses program will work to build institutional capacity in one or more of the following ways: assisting faculty members in developing new knowledge and skills, establishing an infrastructure for work with community organizations, creating a campus culture supportive of faculty work with experiential learning pedagogies, and strengthening partner relationships with community organizations. Below is a brief outline of some of the specific activities.

Faculty Knowledge and Skills. Augsburg College will develop an annual training institute for faculty members on experiential education pedagogy. Calvin College will include faculty-community partnerships focusing on experiential learning and cross-cultural skills. Mars Hill College will provide course design workshops for faculty that will focus on experiential learning pedagogy. Otterbein College will develop and implement curriculum and programming related to civic engagement. Saint Joseph’s College of Maine will develop a database of tools to identify, describe, and evaluate outcomes of community-based service learning experiences.

Institutional Infrastructure. Chatham College is enabling its staff to support service-learning initiatives as well as institutionalizing its program designed to give new students a thematic and multidisciplinary experiential learning program in the city. Loyola University New Orleans will establish an office of experiential education whose focus will be to develop and institutionalize a service-learning program. Madonna University will institutionalize a certificate program in community leadership for participants in the service program as a “value-added” educational credential for students majoring in any field. St. Thomas University will develop sustainable internal structures that will link student learning and community needs and interests.

Academic Culture. Emory & Henry College will establish a partnership program designed, among other things, to increase the involvement of faculty members in community-based learning. Wartburg College will identify faculty incentives and rewards for implementing experiential education in the curriculum.

Partner Relationships. Bates College and its community partners will establish an applied research center whereby research topics will be determined both by the faculty and the community. Tougaloo College is collaborating with its community partner on the development of a community technology center, which will be staffed by students and community residents.

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