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Institutionalizing Engagement
Demonstrating the knowledge, skills, and critical commitments to advocate for and garner support for civic and community engagement as an institutional priority in your context
Key competencies
- Ability to advocate for community engagement and communicate its value, vision, goals, and alignment with institutional mission and purpose in your context.
- Ability to leverage resources to advocate for community engagement as an institutional priority.
- Ability to advocate for the development of policies that support community engagement and position it as an institutional priority.
- Ability to conceive of and implement institutional structures to support engagement.
- Ability to collect and report data (qualitative and quantitative) to strengthen institutional support.
- Ability to cultivate a critical mass of supporters to act as champions for engagement
- Knowledge of institutional and program evaluation mechanisms and tools that can be used or leveraged to advance community and civic engagement within the institution
- Knowledge of benchmarks or artifacts of institutionalization
- Knowledge of potential funders, grant seeking
- Ability to plan for both short and long term goals (e.g, an action plan, master calendar, 5-10 year strategic plan)
- Ability to comprehend and identify the strengths and assets of the institution in promoting positive social change (e.g., able to make a convincing case for building on past successes for expanding institutional support and resources for engagement).
- Ability to navigate the institution’s political environment and hierarchy, adapting to leadership changes as needed, to generate support for an engagement agenda in a context of multiple priorities and limited resources
- Ability to identify, work within, and challenge contradictions in practice (e.g., between the public purposes of higher education and institutional practices that undermine efforts to advance community engagement)
- Ability to advocate for and respect community partners’ active role in institutionalization efforts and incorporate community partner’s participation in institutional work
- Ability to tell compelling stories of institutional success in community engagement and institutionalization of community engagement.
- Ability to connect civic and community engagement work with diversity, equity, and inclusion work as it relates to the recruitment, retention, and success of underrepresented students, faculty, and staff
- Ability to build bridges with faculty to position community engagement as core academic work at the institution.
- Ability to give voice to students to shape community engagement efforts and provide testimony of its impacts.
- Critical commitment to participating in continued professional development to enhance competency to guide institutionalization efforts