Abstract

With a focus on organizational capacity building, community-university (CU) partnerships have the potential to yield valuable resources for community nonprofits, which increasingly have to accomplish more with fewer resources. Although a growing body of literature documents the success of such arrangements, both community agencies and universities often face challenges in managing such partnerships. With a focus on student involvement, this paper describes a framework for conceptualizing CU partnerships around capacity building, with efforts designed to address particular program needs as related to the organization’s capacity goals. These needs can be viewed as involving five levels of capacity building: 1) monitoring and documenting program outcomes or processes, 2) enhancing staff skills, 3) modifying program processes, 4) supporting adaptation, and 5) developing infrastructure. Conceptualizing partnerships along these levels helps frame communication about the agency’s capacity building agenda, focuses efforts on addressing organizational needs, and establishes expectations for the scope of student work. Efforts to address these levels can take the form of internal or external models of partnership, varying in their degrees of student involvement and faculty supervision, and can leverage various mechanisms to compensate students for their work. Over time, opportunities for student involvement transform as the needs, goals, and resources of the agency evolve, and the potential of the university to influence the agency grows. Simultaneously, the opportunities open to students for professional development, competency building, and career networking continue to develop as they implement higher-level capacity building within an organization.

Highlights

  • With a focus on developing or enhancing the capacity of community organizations, CU partnerships have the potential to yield valuable resources for community agencies and meaningful applied learning experiences for students (Gazley, Bennett, & Littlepage, 2013; SuarezBalcazar, Mirza, & Hansen, 2015)

  • Still other models of CU partnerships attempt to redefine the contributions that academic institutions can provide to community partners such as the “catalyst process” outlined by Milofsky (2006), which views the academic partner as a “catalyst” for changes that might not occur without a neutral, outside presence with the time, technical knowledge and, most importantly, resources to move forward a particular project or aim of the partner

  • Successful CU partnerships in these contexts ensure that the collaborating organization develops additional capacity as a result of university involvement, that students gain valuable professional competencies through applied learning, and that organizational constituents benefit through enhanced programming, skill development, and improved infrastructure

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Summary

Introduction

With a focus on developing or enhancing the capacity of community organizations, CU partnerships have the potential to yield valuable resources for community agencies and meaningful applied learning experiences for students (Gazley, Bennett, & Littlepage, 2013; SuarezBalcazar, Mirza, & Hansen, 2015). Following years of engaging in CU partnerships, the Community Psychology Training Program at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte (UNCC) developed a framework for structuring these partnerships and conceptualizing evolving organizational goals and student learning needs around capacity building.

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Conclusion

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