
Indicators of Engagement at Two-Year Institutions
Ongoing Self-Study of the Institutionalization of Civic Engagement
at KVCC
The purpose of the ongoing self-study
is to evaluate the extent to which KVCC is meeting the Indicators of
an Engaged Campus as proposed by the National Campus Compact. (Much
of this information comes from the Campus Compact publication titled
The Community's College: Indicators of Engagement at Two-Year Institutions.)
The 13 indicators of Engagement that we assess are defined
as follows:
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Mission and purpose explicely articulate
a commitment to the public purpose of higher education.
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Administration and academic leadership (president,
trustees, provost) is in the forefront of institutional transformation
that supports civic engagement.
-
Disciplines, departments, and interdisciplinary
work have incorporated community-based education, allowing
it to penetrate across disciplines and reach the institution's academic
core.
-
Pedagogy and epistemology incorporate
a community-based, public problem-solving approach to teaching and
learning.
-
Faculty development opportunities
are available for faculty to rettol their teaching and redesign
their curricula to incorporate community-based activities and reflection
on those activites within the context of the course.
-
Faculty roles and rewards, including
promotion and tenure guidelines and review, reflect a reconsideration
of scholarship that embraces a scholarship of engagement.
-
Enabling mechanisms are present
in the form of visible and easily accessible structures (e.g., centers,
offices) on campus to assist faculty with community-based teaching
and to broker community partnerships.
-
Internal resource allocation is
adequate for establishing, enhancing, and deepening community-based
work on campus--for faculty, students, and programs that involve
community partners.
-
Community voice deepens the role
of community partners in contributing to community-based education
and shaping outcomes that benefit the community.
-
External resource allocation is
made available for community partners to create richer learning
environments for students and for community-building efforts in
local neighborhoods.
-
Integrated and complementary engagement
activities weave together student service, service-learning,
and other community engagement activities on campus.
-
Forums for fostering public dialogues are
created that include multiple stakeholders in public problem-solving.
-
Student voice is cultivated in
a way that recognizes students as key partners in their own education
and civic development and supports their efforts to act on issues
important to themselves and their peers.
The self-study documents activities and efforts across
the campus that indicate progress toward these standards in an effort
to cultivate, develop, promote, and support KVCC as an "Engaged
Campus".
For a summary of the assessment tool being used to evaluate
our degree of engagement (including the indicators above, core questions,
specific language being assessed, and assessment questions) click...HERE.
Reports and Progress
Under Construction
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