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PLEASE FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS !!!!!!!! No Plagiarism BTtoP Case Study: Kingsborough Community College The Brooklyn Public Scholars (BPS) Project In 2012, Hurricane Sandy hit New York City, and the Kingsborough Community College campus, located in Brooklyn, New York, was dramatically impacted, disrupting classes and the lives of students, faculty, staff, and members of the surrounding community. The campus at once became a disaster area but also a sanctuary for nearby residents in trouble. Some students and faculty disappeared, and others became homeless. As the college community literally picked up the pieces from this disaster, administrators and faculty knew they were forever changed and thought differently about their teaching and their students. “Who really are the students we teach, and what resiliency enabled them to carry on?” they asked themselves. “How can we teach differently to tap the strengths of our students and the community around us?” Centering on the experiences of students who not only survived Sandy, but also on their everyday lives in times of deepening structural disparities, the BPS Project places emphasis upon recognizing and valuing the knowledge that working class, immigrant, students of color bring with them to college, as a starting point for understanding the ways that they are already highly engaged in civic life. Caitlin Cahill and Michelle Fine, co-PIs of the BPS, both at the Public Science Project, Graduate Center, CUNY, developed a proposal in consultation with faculty and administrators at Kingsborough Community College. Cahill’s unique position as a faculty member at both institutions supported the partnership. Associate Provost Reza Fakhari was a key member facilitating the project for KCC. Cahill has a background in community development and urban studies and teaches urban geography and politics. She is a founding member of the Public Science Project at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York in Manhattan, which encourages participatory action projects and research. In 2011, she helped launch the Charles and Stella Guttman Community College in Manhattan. That experience convinced her that faculty development could be used to strengthen community colleges. When she learned about the Bringing Theory to Practice (BTtoP) demonstration site grants, she realized Kingsborough would be a good place to launch a new project to rejuvenate the faculty. The CUNY Graduate Center (with the assistance of Distinguished Professor Michelle Fine) and Kingsborough Community College formed a partnership and with BTtoP funding created the Brooklyn Public Scholars Project. A Call for Civic Engagement Kingsborough Community College is located on a 71-acre campus that rests on a peninsula at the southern tip of Brooklyn, a spit of land that juts into the water and is surrounded by Sheepshead Bay, Jamaica Bay, and the Atlantic Ocean. The community college was founded in 1963 for the residents in the area. It offers credit classes for approximately 18,000 students, non-credit courses in the liberal arts, and career education for students with high school diplomas or GEDs. Fifty-eight percent of the students enroll full-time and pay $1,575 in tuition. Forty-two percent of students are part-time; per credit tuition ranges from $120 to $250. Seventy-five percent of students receive financial aid. The student population represents 140 different countries and speaks 70 languages. Fifty-six percent of the students are female, 87 percent are 29 years old or younger, 27 percent are younger than twenty, and 48 percent are U.S. born. Matthew Goldstein, former chancellor of CUNY, once proudly noted that 60 percent of Kingsborough students transfer to four-year colleges; this rate is far greater than the national average of 26 percent. Partly in response to a national call for a greater engagement in learning among college students, Kingsborough began rethinking its mission in 2008 to explore ways that students could become more engaged through different kinds of educational experiences and service learning opportunities. Administrators, including then President Regina Peruggi, became interested in creating more opportunities for civic engagement for students and saw the need for a civic engagement requirement. Faculty wanted to know what this would look like and how they would be supported. When faculty tried to do The Brooklyn Public Scholars Project Mission this work, they mostly did it on their own... A collaborative partnership between the Public Science Project They were not unified. (Graduate Center, CUNY) and Kingsborough Community College, The Brooklyn’s Public Scholars (BPS) project builds the capacity of They had no faculty CUNY’s Kingsborough Community College to engage with the development around critical issues facing our students and working-class urban this, no course releases, immigrant communities, through “civically engaged” pedagogy no recognition. We and public scholarship. began thinking about The BPS supports community-based teaching and engaged how to do this work in a scholarship to expand opportunities for studying critical urban way that could be issues. Cultivating new opportunities for ‘studying abroad in your transformative for the own backyard,’ the project focuses on teaching and research campus. projects that engage with Brooklyn’s richly diverse communities. The project builds upon faculty members’ own research projects and interests to develop strategic partnerships with community organizations for engaged scholarship. When beginning the project, Cahill first looked at what Kingsborough was already doing. She completed a study on service learning programs at Kingsborough and interviewed faculty to see what support they would need to address service learning in a substantive way. She found that when faculty tried to do this work, they mostly did it on their own. They were not unified, she said. “They had no faculty development around this, no course releases, no recognition. We began thinking about how to do this work in a way that could be transformative for the campus. According to Fine, the new BTtoP initiative was organized around a faculty seminar and a substantial group of courses in which civic engagement was deeply embedded in the coursework. We involved the faculty in sharing critical pedagogies and thinking about how to connect the college to the larger community. In particular, because Kingsborough has working class students, students of color, and immigrant students, we were really interested in understanding how the gifts those students bring to the university could be appreciated and cultivated in the classroom. It was a slight turn on civic 2 engagement, which often means that wealthy white children from a college move into a community to help. Here, it was about building authentic reciprocal relationships between community and university facilitated by resources that immigrant and working class students were bringing to the classroom and the community. Kingsborough put out a call to an interdisciplinary group of faculty who would be interested in cultivating classrooms in which civic engagement was at the intellectual and ethical core of the class, added Fine. Sixteen Kingsborough faculty members expressed an interest. Jason VanOra, In community an assistant professor of psychology, was one. The BTtoP project at Kingsborough started with Caitlin Cahill, he said. I remember being colleges, faculty are in a meeting when she talked about this opportunity to be in a thought of as community of scholars that would do civic engagement in their teachers, not scholars. classes and also study its impact on students, on learning, and on Their own scholarship other educational outcomes such as persistence and engagement. I is marginalized. Partly said, Sign me up. I wanted to see if I could civically engage the students in my Introduction to Psychology class. what we wanted to do was to think about The Brooklyn Public Scholars project (BPS) was born and additional how scholarship could faculty from sociology, education, biology, tourism and hospitality, occur in their classes. psychology, and English were involved. BPS began in the fall of 2012 If they teach nine as a two-year campus program to show what community-based engagement, public scholarship, and experiential education might classes per year, they look like, Cahill noted. “One of the first things we did was talk to often don’t have time faculty members to set up a structure for a seminar that would be at for their own the heart of the project. scholarship. That meant establishing a day for a seminar and obtaining course releases and stipends for the participating faculty. The scholars were given a choice of 1 course credit release per semester or $1,000. We wanted to explore what public scholarship means,” Cahill further explained. “We planned a two- year program so faculty would think of themselves as public scholars and created a faculty development seminar to model a process that we hoped faculty could then bring to their own classrooms. We wanted an intellectually creative space in which faculty could have meaningful conversations about what public scholarship meant to them, what were their concerns, and what did they think the concerns of the students in their classrooms would be. We wanted them to think about the opportunities and barriers to this work. We wanted them to think of themselves as scholars, which is different from other schools,” she added. “In community colleges, faculty are thought of as teachers, not scholars. Their own scholarship is marginalized. Partly what we wanted to do was to think about how scholarship could occur in their classes. If they teach nine classes per year, they often don’t have time for their own scholarship. Debra Schultz, an assistant professor of history, started out as one of the faculty participants and then became director of the project. She said that the goal was to work with faculty to do a couple of things. One was to support individual faculty members in thinking through what it would mean to 3 include civic engagement as a graduation requirement starting with incoming freshmen in the fall of 2014. At the same time, the Brooklyn Public Scholars program wanted to give community college faculty an opportunity to reflect on what they were doing as a form of public scholarship even while working on practical questions such as how to write about it as a discipline and the larger questions of what public scholarship means. To Schultz, public scholarship meant knowledge creation in the service of the public in general, in the service of communities Faculty seminars were that touch the lives of students, in the service of Kingsborough as the thrust of the project, a community. I am personally interested in having a conversation being able to struggle and about the history of race in the United States as a civil rights historian. One half of our students are foreign born and try things, talk to represent 140 nationalities, so the student body is racially and colleagues about what ethnically diverse. But whether or not they were born here, their worked and what didnt knowledge of history and race in this country, including slavery, is work...about the ways very spotted. Yet because we are embedded in a community in the traditional model of which there is gentrification and racial profiling, issues that have historical and contemporary ramifications, we are attempting to service learning would figure out ways to talk about them. not work without adaptation for our The Thrust of the Project students because many of them work full-time BPS faculty participants met approximately once per month for and go to school full-two years to find ways to promote community-based teaching and scholarship. They discussed the theory and practice of time. engaging in civic research. They looked at how to transform courses in various disciplines and surveyed students about their concerns and commitments. They also identified organizations that could become community partners. During that first semester, the faculty also identified the classes they would use and created proposals for what they wanted to do. “For many of them, this was the first time they had done this kind of work,” said Cahill. Cahill met with faculty one-on-one to help them create their proposals. To find community partners, some faculty members connected with the Kingsborough service learning coordinator, who many did not know existed. Still others explored different teaching strategies to discover more about their students and how that could inform their teaching. In the second semester, faculty were asked to implement their proposals in some way and to try some sort of public scholarship intervention in their classrooms. Meanwhile, Kingsborough adopted a new civic engagement requirement that became effective in the fall of 2014. Many of the BPS participants implemented their ideas with this in mind, documented what they were doing, asked questions, tried something new, and revised their courses. The faculty seminars were the thrust of the project, said Schultz, being able to struggle and try things, talk to colleagues about what worked and what didnt work, and have a process to refine a course over two years. The meetings often opened with the faculty answering questions about scholarship. What does civic 4 education mean? What is the most rewarding thing we are finding? What is the most challenging? How can I connect to my own research? How can I understand ESL better? What are my students learning challenges? Through questions such as these, they discussed various kinds of civic engagement activities. For me personally, added Schultz, it was talking about the dilemmas we faced and the ways the traditional model of service learning would not work without adaptation for our students because many of them work full-time and go to school full-time. We talked about different ways of managing that. Another dilemma was the wide range of skills among students in one class. Some faculty addressed this by organizing group work, pairing students, or creating mentoring relationships so that stronger students could with weaker ones to foster a community of learners. During the second year of the project, the faculty integrated community-based activities into their courses. A couple of faculty members posited the campus as community, said Schultz, “and asked what kind of experiential learning would the students find on campus.” Kingsborough has an urban farm, for example. After Hurricane Sandy, Schultz took her class around campus to help clean up after the storm. The BPS Classes Approximately 30 classes were sponsored as BPS classes. Once the BPS project was underway, some students interviewed community members on a variety of topics, including gentrification. Another class looked for local heroes and then created markers in the community, for example, for the first day care center, the person who organized against drugs, or the grandmother who got a speed bump put on a street to slow down trucks. There was a course on multicultural counseling and how different communities mourn, grieve, and deal with trauma and depression. In another class, students visited a local farmer’s market in Brooklyn and conducted cooking demonstrations. Others completed research on some of the people in the community regarding issues such as health and cultural background. Jason VanOra conducted his BPS project with George F. Hill, an academic advisor and case manager in the Opening Doors Learning Communities, a program for first-semester, first-year students. VanOra and Hill decided to link their courses: VanOras Introduction to Psychology and Hills first-year seminar on the exploration of community and what it means for students to be a part of one. They designed joint projects for which students received credit in both courses. The first joint assignment was a collage; students worked in groups of four and discussed questions such as the following: What do you think community means? What does it mean to be part of a community? We wanted them to start to think about what their responsibilities are to a community, said Hill, why is it important, and what the community does for you. Students had varied responses. Some took it to mean the neighborhoods they lived in, so one group talked about pictures of their neighborhoods. Another group thought about the community on campus, travelled around campus, and found resources. The goal in my classes is to connect the students to resources on campus to make them more successful in college, said Hill. 5 Students visited the urban farm located on campus, for example, to learn about food justice and why the farm was created. Students then researched and wrote about other resources on campus, such as the mens resource center, womens resources, and organizations that are part of student life, in the hope of inspiring students to get involved in campus groups or experiences. Students also interviewed other students who were identified as community activists. They read about race and class, IQ testing, stereotypes, and the achievement gap. Students were asked to draw upon psychological concepts in their writings about community and in their creation of the collage and how psychology could be a vehicle for social change. The students then wrote legacies, VanOra said, and talked about what they learned about student engagement in a community beyond their individual friends and families, a community that includes the college but goes beyond college. We called it a legacy because we turned it into a book. The first reading assignment the next semester was what the previous students had written. The legacy piece is something Hill has traditionally done in his other seminars; it serves as advice from current students to upcoming students. But for the BTtoP courses, the legacy was focused on why it might be valuable to be engaged in a civically-minded way on campus. Students wrote about what they did, what they wished they had done better, what they learned about community, what civic engagement meant to them, and why they thought it might be valuable for future students to undertake similar endeavors. Assistant Professor Indira Skoric teaches classes on immigration at Kingsborough. In the past, her class would have centered more on theoretical discussions, and she would have been doing much of the talking and directing the flow of discussion. For the BPS class, she allowed the students to be the focus. Many were themselves immigrants, and they described their experiences and voiced their concerns. “The idea was to have a place for immigrant and non-immigrant students to talk about immigration reform,” she said. Students discussed immigration reform with each other, but Skoric also invited speakers to class who described the history of the immigrant in American society, for example. Representatives from Facing History in Ourselves talked about immigration in America and the state of immigrants abroad. Skoric created a web site called the Immigration Hub, an online space for students to voice their opinions about certain aspects of the immigration experience and the issues surrounding immigration reform. It was not mandatory, she noted, and it was anonymous. Students had a common log-in so their privacy was protected. A question on the discussion board asked students for suggestions for immigration reform. Another asked what tactics advanced immigration reform. Students had to formulate opinions and state their cases. Skoric also organized two Immigration Days with general speakers and student speakers. At the October 2014 event, topics included the following: Current State of NY Dream Act Advocacy and Latino Justice Initiatives in New York: How You Can Get Involved; Asylum Seekers and Work at Urban Farms in Queens; An Update from CUNY Central on Supporting Immigrant Students; Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Outreach for Social Services; and an open mic for students. Meanwhile, the activities in class were “more than sharing thoughts,” said Skoric, as important as that 6 was. Students needed to learn a framework of skills: how to volunteer for organizations, become an advocate, and become a good listener. Some skills focused on conflict resolution and negotiation and how to organize, develop campaigns, build alliances, make presentations, organize events, and engage in fundraising. Students learned how to help immigrants find resources in their communities. All of these skills honed communication skills and enhanced knowledge of the issues. But to Skoric, “The most important aspect was that students had a shared narrative about immigration reform from one group of students who had that experience and felt safe to speak, make sense of their own experiences, and then help others.” In 2012, Jason Leggett, an assistant professor of political science, was working on a related civic engagement project sponsored by the Association of American Colleges and Universities called Bridging Cultures to Form a Nation. He integrated the humanities themes of democratic thinking and community into the curriculum of his class on the American legal The BTtoP funding system. For BPS he expanded his project to examine the same issues, also enabled the particularly ones related to immigrant access, such as legal rights and citizenship. I wanted to see different perceptions of the rule of law by faculty to create an groups that were not getting equal access, he said. online community database of various His students were required to learn three skills: legal research using partners… mostly online sources, how to complete legal documents and forms, “Often faculty don’t and how to conduct small scale mapping of neighborhood services, such as immigration services, free and legal services, and public health know what other services. His BPS students then conducted interviews with service faculty are doing organizations. He compiled the data that students collected during down the hall.” two semesters. I wasnt studying students; I was studying with students, and they became my fellow researchers. I also realized from my students that legal access wasnt the only difficulty immigrants had. Students created maps of neighborhoods using Google maps and then added their research data. They conducted workshops in their public libraries using a tablet interface. For example, one student heard that his area of New York was a food desert” but learned that this was not true. An urban farm in east New York and a farmer’s market accepted food stamps. So he gave a video workshop, Food Stamps to Farmers Market. He hopes to create a touch screen for New York libraries so visitors can access this information. Leggett said students were shocked on two levels: first they were able to use their own interests and their own communities for the class and second, they could follow their own suggestions and write a poem, create a video, or draw a political cartoon. Leggett feels that students also acquired skills useful in today’s and tomorrows workforce by learning how to use technology for innovation. We turned the e-portfolio [course] into a learning environment so that as they do their work, I can interact with them and see their critical reflections. Instead of being that person up at the front of the room, I am on the sidelines being more of a coach. The BTtoP funding also enabled the faculty to create an online community database of various 7 partners. For example, a faculty member can type in the words community gardens or obesity and identify possible community partners or click on a map to see what organizations might be in the area. Different resources, such as a curriculum or materials, can be uploaded so that other faculty can see them. “Often faculty don’t know what other faculty are doing down the hall,” noted Cahill. “The faculty participating in BPS said there should be a way to Once they started build visible relationships among the faculty, students, and the teaching in a new way, it community,” said Fine. “So there was a citizen science project, for changed the way they example, where a biology professor had students track the first were as educators and bud of a particularly rare plant and the first butterfly sighting. They put that data in a national citizen science data bank. They also scholars. There is now a tracked how environmental pollution might limit a bird’s access to cohort of faculty who the Kingsborough site.” have developed an expertise at an Sustaining the Scholarship institution and are an amazing resource. The BPS program gave pre and posttests on civic engagement and well-being in which students were asked if they were involved in their communities and what they got out of their classes. The assessment included a quantitative pre and post analysis of the nearly 1,000 participating students. The faculty seminars were documented to describe individual teachers and stories. The online mapping of university partners served as another source of evaluation of the project. Cahill and Fine conducted an analysis to determine where the institution-facilitated work was completed and wrote an overview of the courses, the experience, and the faculty. For VanOra, the result of the project was that “students were interpersonally closer with one another than we had seen in previous groups. Their academic outcomes were better. The grades just on the psych exams and the assignments that were not directly related to civic engagement were better. The work unified them and helped them connect in a way they had not in other semesters. Going to the farm and watching us try to dig and plant with them brought us closer together. They were closer to us as faculty, they did better in terms of attrition, and the grades were good.” Hill found that attending the BPS meetings and talking about different ways of thinking and different ways of doing things was most helpful. It was helpful in terms of thinking about our own project, he said, but also for finding out more about other resources available on campus. For example, one of the biology professors did a project with her class to research volunteer opportunities for students interested in health care, nursing, or physical therapy. This kind of information helps me in my advising capacity with students. It gives me more knowledge about what resources they can use. Fine notes that the faculty participated, not because they were compensated, which was inadequate, “but because they loved it. They built a community of ideas and ethics, a place to talk about scholarship and teaching and writing. It became very much a coveted space.” Indeed, BPS became “a small community of faculty,” said Cahill. “Once they started teaching in a new 8 way, it changed the way they were as educators and scholars. There is now a cohort of faculty who have developed an expertise at an institution and are an amazing resource. They are now running their own faculty inquiry groups and bringing in other faculty. It is now up to the institution to value and support the faculty to do this work and support other faculty.” According to Fine, three … Instructions Before you begin your report, be sure you have prepared by completing the  Applying Systems Thinking  and  Cultural Web  interactive media activities, and carefully read and analyzed the following case study: · Bringing Theory to Practice. (n.d.)  BTtoP Case Study: Kingsborough Community College  [PDF] . Available from https://www.bttop.org/ Then use the following prompts to structure your report: 1. Describe aspects of a cultural web relevant to this scenario. . Apply systems thinking to demonstrate the complex and interrelated nature of the organizations various parts. · Describe leadership behaviors exhibited in this scenario.  . Evaluate leadership behaviors exhibited in this scenario. . Provide specific examples to support the evaluation. · Describe ethical considerations relevant to this scenario.  . Analyze these ethical considerations. . Reflect on your personal experience(s) identifying and addressing ethical organizational practices. · Describe solution strategies that might help the organization continue to improve. . Explain potential challenges when implementing these strategies. . Explain approaches for addressing these challenges. · Synthesize multiple sources into key themes or findings. . Establish how these key themes or findings support a clearly discernible thesis or central idea of your report. Additional Requirements · Written communication: Your paper should be free from errors that detract from the overall message. · Length: At least 5 pages. · References: Cite at least eight relevant scholarly sources. Include a reference page at the end of your paper. To locate scholarly sources and review other resources for conducting scholarly research, visit the  Capella University Library . · APA Style and Format: Be sure to use current  APA style and format  throughout your paper, including citations on your reference list. · ePortfolio: You may choose to save this learning activity to your ePortfolio. · Font: Times New Roman, 12 points.
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Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less. INSTRUCTIONS:  To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:  https://www.fnu.edu/library/ In order to n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.  Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear Mechanical Engineering Organic chemistry Geometry nment Topic You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts) Literature search You will need to perform a literature search for your topic Geophysics you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes Communication on Customer Relations. 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Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in in body of the report Conclusions References (8 References Minimum) *** Words count = 2000 words. *** In-Text Citations and References using Harvard style. *** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)" Electromagnetism w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care.  The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management.  Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management. visual representations of information. They can include numbers SSAY ame workbook for all 3 milestones. You do not need to download a new copy for Milestones 2 or 3. 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Throughout your nurse practitioner program Vignette Understanding Gender Fluidity Providing Inclusive Quality Care Affirming Clinical Encounters Conclusion References Nurse Practitioner Knowledge Mechanics and word limit is unit as a guide only. The assessment may be re-attempted on two further occasions (maximum three attempts in total). All assessments must be resubmitted 3 days within receiving your unsatisfactory grade. You must clearly indicate “Re-su Trigonometry Article writing Other 5. June 29 After the components sending to the manufacturing house 1. In 1972 the Furman v. Georgia case resulted in a decision that would put action into motion. Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard.  While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business No matter which type of health care organization With a direct sale During the pandemic Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record 3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. 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After establishing where each member is in relation to the family A Health in All Policies approach Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum Chen Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change Read Reflections on Cultural Humility Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident