Developing a university-voluntary sector collaboration for social impact

Authors

  • Sarah Weakley University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Paula S. Karlsson University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Jane Cullingworth University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Laura Lebec University of Glasgow, United Kingdom
  • Katie Fraser University of Glasgow, United Kingdom

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53761/1.18.7.6

Keywords:

Civic engagement, anchor institution, higher education, service learning, voluntary sector, collaborative autoethnography, cross-sector collaboration

Abstract

This article outlines how a team of academics, professional staff and students from a Scottish University in the United Kingdom worked with voluntary sector partners to achieve civic and ‘social purpose’ goals, through setting up a project called The Collaborative. This is a reflective paper that draws on collaborative autoethnography and is written collarboratively by that team of academics, professional staff and students. We explore how universities can achieve their civic engagement goals by serving as anchor institutions, and we develop a conceptual framework for how anchor institutions can enact their institutional mission of ‘social purpose’. We uncover important considerations for university initiatives aiming to improve academic and student engagement with community partners for social change, with three learning points around building relationships, building capacity, and barriers to engagement. Service-learning can be used as a pathway to becoming a civic university, however, there are structural barriers that need to be overcome. This is an account of an ethical fact-finding project, reflecting on our experience of working with the local voluntary sector, designed to facilitate the University’s better engagement with such collaborative ‘social purpose’ ventures.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2021-09-03

Issue

Section

Articles

How to Cite

Developing a university-voluntary sector collaboration for social impact. (2021). Journal of University Teaching and Learning Practice, 18(7), 71-88. https://doi.org/10.53761/1.18.7.6