Outreach and service
Businesses develop tomorrow’s technology leaders through K–12
programs
Businesses join forces with college and K-12 educators to ensure tomorrow's leaders get the science and math preparation they need
from an early age. [Continue
reading in Connect.] Inspiring parents; educating youth
Family engagement is one of the most important factors in a child’s
academic success. The Learning Dreams program achieves this goal by
supporting the parents’ involvement in their own educational dreams.
[Continue reading
in Connect!]
College extends help down river
In early January a team of eight faculty, staff, and students joined
forces to provide crisis-intervention services to rural Mississippi
communities still suffering from the impact of Hurricanes Katrina and
Rita. The focus of the college’s From Minnesota to Mississippi
initiative, as it is known, was to undertake needs assessments at the
individual, family, and community levels, particularly in the area of
mental health. After ascertaining the level of need, the team was able
to refer clients to local service providers and to begin building a
sustained, intentional relationship between the college and the affected
areas. [Continue
reading in Connect!]
Partnership responds to bridge disaster
When the Interstate 35W bridge collapsed in August, the public and
officials turned their attention to rescue efforts and traffic
challenges. Few people immediately considered the event’s potential
impact on children. Few people, that is, besides
Abigail
Gewirtz, assistant professor in the Department of Family Social
Science. [Continue
reading in Connect!]
Project Intersect: Anishinaabe Arts Meet Standards-Based Curriculum
The Institute on Community Integration (ICI) has teamed up with two
northern Minnesota schools, American Indian artists, and the Department
of Curriculum and Instruction to create an innovative project that's
enhancing students' understanding, enthusiasm, and performance in
standards-based art education, language arts, mathematics, and science.
It is called Project
Intersect.
Program fosters collaboration between corrections, advocates,
communities
A safe return for prisoners
and their loved ones
While many organizations offer support to former prisoners or to
domestic violence victims, few recognize the intersections between the
two groups and their concerns. Since 2003 the School of Social Work’s
Institute on Domestic Violence in the African American Community has
worked to strengthen programs for intimate partners of former prisoners.
Its Safe Return Initiative focuses specifically on preventing domestic
violence in communities and families living with newly released
prisoners.
PartnersWork, December 2007
Outstanding Community Service Award winners
This award is given by the University's Office for Public Engagement.
2007:
Ernest C. Davenport Jr., Department of Educational Psychology
2006:
Mark Umbreit, Professor, School of Social Work
2005: William Doherty, Family Social Science
2004: Van Mueller, professor emeritus, Educational Policy and
Administration
More partnerships
The Hennepin County Community Corrections Department worked with the
School of Social Work to study factors that lead to successful
transitions for youth offenders exiting the Hennepin County Home
School Intensive Aftercare Treatment program. The study investigated
changes in recidivism rates and risk scores, and also considered
perspectives of youth offenders.
Early Childhood Research
Collaborative,
sponsored by the college's
Center for Early
Education & Development and the
Federal
Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, fosters multidisciplinary research on
early childhood development from birth to age 8.
The Center for Applied
Research and Educational Improvement (CAREI), a collegewide
center that provides evaluation and assessment services in Minnesota and
nationally to K–12 districts, recently concluded a research assessment
of all-day kindergarten in the Burnsville-Eagan-Savage School District.
The Institute on Community
Integration (ICI), another collegewide center, is dedicated to
work that supports the right of all persons with developmental and other
disabilities to live as valued members of local communities. As part of
its work, ICI occasionally partners with other researchers, especially
within CEED, to examine issues or to design services and training for
professionals working with infants and young children.
The University's Literacy
Initiative, which is housed in the college, includes a
broad-based tutoring program. The initiative has forged partnerships
with specific schools, community centers, and health care clinics to
provide books, volunteer readers, and tutors. In addition, college
faculty are active in this area, developing a research-based teacher
training program, examining issues of preliteracy, assessing reading
comprehension, developing policy, and evaluating the role of family.
The college has a long tradition of addressing the educational
problems endemic to our core cities. We have created programs such as
the
Common Ground Consortium
(CGC) in collaboration with a group of Historically Black Colleges and
Universities to educate both graduate students of color as teachers and
in other educational and business fields, and we have worked in
partnership with several city schools, including both Minneapolis and
St. Paul, to create sites for teaching, research, and P-12 teacher
development and support.
Other college initiatives that support this effort include the
Homegrown Teacher
Partnership Project (HTPP), a program to recruit and prepare
students of culturally diverse backgrounds as teachers; the
Multicultural Teacher
Development Project (MTDP), a program to recruit and prepare
students of culturally diverse backgrounds for teacher development
programs; the Shirley Moore Laboratory School for pre-school children;
parent and family education; and programs for first-time, at-risk
parents.
Revised March 2008
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