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Tufts, a research university with
campuses in the Boston area, is seeking to make civic
engagement part of "the academic fiber of the institution."
Courtesy of Tufts University Photography. |
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Tufts University Lays Foundation
for Lifelong Civic Engagement
Tufts University, a research institution
with campuses in the Boston area, has long been known for
its engagement with civic life and public policy. Since the
founding of Tufts's University College of Citizenship
and Public Service in 2000, this commitment to civic engagement
has become more integrated into the life of the institution.
Unlike academic divisions that offer
courses and grant degrees, the University College at Tufts
seeks to foster civic engagement across the undergraduate
curriculum and cocurriculum, and increasingly in graduate
and professional programs. The college provides support and
funding for a range of projects--from incorporating experiential
learning into the core curriculum and developing specialized,
service-intensive courses to educating a select group of "Citizenship
and Public Service Scholars" and broadening civic engagement
research and service opportunities for all students.
Through such initiatives, Tufts
hopes to encourage lifelong active citizenship. Already, deans
from the campus's schools of arts and sciences, engineering,
medicine, dentistry, and veterinary medicine are incorporating
civic engagement into their strategic plans. As Director and
Associate Dean of University College Nancy Wilson explains,
the university's goal is not to develop just one or
two signature programs, but instead to make civic engagement
part of "the academic fiber of the institution,"
a "hallmark" of a Tufts education.
The 5, 35, and 100 Percent
Strategy
In the years since its founding,
the University College of Citizenship and Public Service has
reached about 2,500 Tufts students, according to Nancy Wilson.
Currently, the college is broadening the reach of its programs
through a "5, 35, and 100 percent" strategy, which
formulates different approaches to civic engagement for different
groups of students.
As the first part of this strategy,
Tufts engages 5 percent of the undergraduate population in
sustained and intensive service work. Students in this group
typically enter Tufts with a strong background in volunteer
work or a special interest in public service. Foremost among
these students are the Citizenship and Public Service Scholars,
a select group of sixty undergraduates who take intensive
classes, spend at least eight hours per week leading or supporting
a civic engagement project, and ultimately become leaders
for civic engagement on campus.
At the same time, Tufts is targeting
a larger group of students and faculty through its 35 percent
strategy. For students in this group, the experience of service
will be "pivotal," according to Wilson, "but
maybe not the major thing that a student does while they're
at Tufts." The school seeks to reach these students
through semester-long community-based courses, grants to students
who develop proposals for community engagement projects, and
service-based internship programs.
The
greatest challenge for Tufts is the 100 percent strategy,
through which the university intends eventually to reach every
student. At the heart of this effort is ongoing curriculum
development work. By working with faculty and departments
to incorporate civic engagement into core courses, Wilson
says, the University College hopes to ensure that students
in all majors will have an experience early in their undergraduate
career "that highlights the role that they can play
in civic life" and lays the foundation for active citizenship.
Creating Opportunities
for Service
The 5, 35, and 100 percent strategy
is based upon an explicitly tiered set of expectations about
students' civic engagement, and relies on a range of
different programs and courses to achieve its goals. In Nancy
Wilson's view, such a tiered approach has the advantage
of allowing the university to be "flexible about the
range of ways" that students can become civically engaged.
This flexibility is reflected, on
the one hand, in the range of academically based service opportunities
at Tufts. Students enrolled in courses developed with support
from the University College produce documentary films about
social and political issues, work with immigrant groups in
Somerville, and participate in watershed restoration projects
on the Mystic River, among many other projects. In one philosophy
seminar that is part of a new certificate program on ethics,
law, and society created with help from the University College,
students visit a prison and reflect on the nature of justice
and punishment in the U.S. A two-semester American studies
course that focuses on race, power, and privilege similarly
blends theory with direct experience by placing students at
schools and community organizations in Boston's Chinatown.
Many of these community opportunities
are coordinated by the Lincoln Filene Center for Community
Partnerships, an outgrowth of a previously independent nonprofit
organization that is now a key component of the University
College. In addition to connecting faculty to community partners,
the Filene Center has identified local partner organizations
in Tufts host communities for student engagement programs
such as Civic Engagement Summer Scholars, which provides grant
money to students who wish to pursue civically engaged research
with faculty during the summer months.
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| Angela Lee, a participant in the
University College's Active Citizenship Summers program,
works in Boston's Chinatown. Photo by Melody Ko/Tufts
University. |
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The University College is also building
the number of faculty across Tufts who integrate civic engagement
into their research. Such faculty and curriculum development
work, Nancy Wilson says, "ensures that active citizenship
is seen as part of the intellectual experience at Tufts, and
not as an alternative to critical thinking."
Current Challenges and What
Lies Ahead
The range of academic and cocurricular
opportunities offered through the University College can also
present problems. Unlike programs that incorporate civic engagement
into a single, shared general education program, the nature
of civic engagement at Tufts is highly varied. Ensuring that
all students reap the educational benefits of their experiences
can be difficult in such a context, especially when the service
does not occur only in a course setting.
Nancy Wilson emphasizes, however,
that Tufts's flexibility about student engagement is
balanced by a consistent emphasis on student learning. Whether
civic engagement occurs in a formal class setting or in extracurricular
volunteer work, she says, students must be given the time
and tools to learn from their experiences. For that reason,
Tufts makes a special effort "to build in the reflection
process in a really thoughtful way, so that students pause,
reflect, and learn something from the experience, instead
of just doing it and moving on. We encourage sharing of reflection
between students and comment on students writing--so
that journal entries form part of a learning conversation."
As Wilson and others at Tufts's
University College look toward the future, additional challenges
remain. In the near term, the college hopes to increase the
number of students who are civically engaged at an intermediate
level from the current 20 percent to an envisioned 35 percent.
The University College has also recently launched a longitudinal
study that promises to provide data about the Citizenship
and Public Service Scholars program by tracking behavior of
these and other students over time. At the same time, the
college is organizing special alumni/ae service programs for
Tufts graduates. Through such projects, Tufts continues to
extend its ambitious plan to foster active citizenship--in
college and beyond.
More information about Tufts's
University College of Citizenship and Public Service is
available online. Tufts will be among the campuses presenting
at "The
Civic Engagement Imperative: Student Learning and the Public
Good," an upcoming AAC&U Network for Academic
Renewal Conference."
AAC&U's work on
civic engagement is coordinated through the
Center for Liberal Engagement and Civic Engagement; AAC&U
also has online
resources on civic engagement.
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