Exploring the reciprocal benefits of community-university engagement through PACE

Book chapter


Lloyd, Kate, Bilous, Rebecca, Clark, Lindie, Hammersley, Laura, Baker, Michaela, Coffey, Eryn and Rawlings-Sanaei, Felicity. (2017). Exploring the reciprocal benefits of community-university engagement through PACE. In In Sachs, Judyth and Clark, Lindie (Ed.). Learning through community engagement : Vision and practice in higher education pp. 245-261 Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0999-0_16
AuthorsLloyd, Kate, Bilous, Rebecca, Clark, Lindie, Hammersley, Laura, Baker, Michaela, Coffey, Eryn and Rawlings-Sanaei, Felicity
EditorsSachs, Judyth and Clark, Lindie
Abstract

Multiple understandings of reciprocity inform and underscore diverse ways of engaging in community-university partnerships. Although the benefits to students of such engagement are relatively well-documented in the literature (Eyler J, Giles DE, Jr. Stenson CM, Gray CJ, At a glance: what we know about the effects of service-learning on college students, faculty, institutions and communities, 1993–2000, 3rd edn. Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 2001; Tryon and Stoecker, J High Educ Outreach Engage 12(3):47–59, 2008), little empirical research currently supports claims that programs and partnerships result in reciprocal learning and engagement opportunities, especially from the perspective of community partners. This chapter conducts a preliminary empirical inquiry into the diverse ways reciprocity manifests as benefits for key stakeholders in the PACE context, taking the analytical framework proposed by Dostilio et al. (Mich J Commun Serv Learn 19(1):17–32, 2012), and Hammersley’s (2016) favourable critique of it as primary points of departure. We draw on the reflections and perceptions of a range of staff, students, and partners involved in PACE activities in local, regional and international settings and identify, organise and articulate some of the diversity and complexity of the relationships that exist within the PACE program and the beneficial outcomes it has spawned for different stakeholders.

Keywordstangible benefit; narrative account; exchange orientation; tangible product; pace activity
Page range245-261
Year2017
Book titleLearning through community engagement : Vision and practice in higher education
PublisherSpringer
Place of publicationSingapore, Singapore
ISBN9789811009976
9789811093050
9789811009990
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-0999-0_16
Scopus EID2-s2.0-85017623552
Publisher's version
License
All rights reserved
File Access Level
Controlled
Output statusPublished
Publication dates
Print19 Aug 2016
Online10 Aug 2016
Publication process dates
Deposited13 Sep 2023
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