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Matthews, Alysha D.; Costa, Guilherme Hebling; Erickson, Karl; Pfeiffer, Karin A.; Pearson, Amber L.; Dougherty, Benjamin V. – Journal of Community Engagement and Higher Education, 2022
Greenspaces provide several well-being (Dinnie et al., 2013) and psychosocial benefits (Addy et al., 2004). Community-engaged research affords community partners a voice in the project (Cushman et al., 2004). This study assessed Detroit community members' perceived benefits of and suggestions for engaging with the community to support greenspaces.…
Descriptors: Community Involvement, Community Programs, Gardening, Public Opinion
Bard, Morton – 1968
Universities have responded to increasingly imperative societal demands by expanding their public service activities, often in the form of social action programs. This development has not extended to the field of psychology, in which the university psychological center could effectively serve to collaborate on university-community efforts. Such a…
Descriptors: Community Benefits, Community Involvement, Community Programs, Higher Education
Vaughan, George B. – SACJTC Occasional Paper, 1993
No institution is better positioned to address the problems facing today's communities than the community college. The colleges are community-based and, through community-based programming (CBP), can place themselves at the center of the organizations and institutions, and collaborate with formal or informal leaders devoted to resolving community…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, College Planning, Community Benefits, Community Colleges
Boone, Edgar J. – 1992
Community-based programming (CBP) is a cooperative process in which a community college serves as the leader and catalyst in effecting collaboration among the people, leaders and community organizations in its service area. This report discusses the changing role of the community college, the nature of CBP, and expected outcomes of the process,…
Descriptors: College Planning, College Role, Community Benefits, Community Colleges
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Elmes, Ellen – Inquiry, 2002
Uses the five stages of creativity designed by psychologist Jacob Getzel--first insight, saturation, incubation, illumination, and verification--to describe a mural project in a rural community college. Reports that the project successfully paired students with community members to paint two local murals. (NB)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Buildings, Community Benefits