Addressing Racial, Economic and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network: Difference between revisions

From Future Worlds Center Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
added links for organizers
(added links for organizers)
 
(10 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
{{SDD_Report                                           <!-- The name of the template -->
{{SDD_Report                                        
|acronym=SDDP Civil Society Dialogue - Options                      <!-- Append to variable acronym the content  acronym of the sdd report -->
|acronym=Addressing Racial, Economic and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network                   
|book_image=SDDP_Report_Image.jpg  
|book_image=SDDP_Report_Image.jpg  
|report_title=Addressing Racial, Economic and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network
|report_title=Addressing Racial, Economic and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network
|Triggering_Question=What initiatives/actions could the communities of faculty/staff/students around the Open Society University Network take that would contribute towards narrowing racial, economic, and educational inequalities?
|Triggering_Question=What initiatives/actions could the communities of faculty/staff/students around the Open Society University Network take that would contribute towards narrowing racial, economic, and educational inequalities?
|LeadFacilitator=[[Yiannis Laouris]]<br> [[Marcus Hallside]]<br>[[Abiba Abdallah]] <br> [[Rahab Wairimu Gichuhi]] <br> [[Kevin Dye]]
|LeadFacilitator=[[Yiannis Laouris]]
|AsFacilitator=[[Tatjana Taraszow]] <br> [[Ilke Dagli]]  
|AsFacilitator=[[Marcus Hallside]]<br>[[Abiba Abdallah]] <br> [[Rahab Wairimu Gichuhi]] <br> [[Kevin Dye]] <br> [[Romina Laouri]]  
|project=[[Civil Society Dialogue]]
|project=Addressing Racial, Economic and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network
|author= Abdirashid Mohamed Ahmed, Asho Ahmed Abukar, Roger Stuart Berkowitz, Roberta Brown, Baha Ebdeir, Imani Faber, Sofia Stærmose Hardt, Maggie Holloway, Abdullahi Dahir Issack, Jo Krishnakumar, Farhan Moha, Helena Pierides, Fahmida Rahman, Shahidur Rahman, Jake Rivers, Noor Sada, Suhama Saniz,  
|author= Abdirashid Mohamed Ahmed, Asho Ahmed Abukar, Roger Stuart Berkowitz, Roberta Brown, Baha Ebdeir, Imani Faber, Sofia Stærmose Hardt, Maggie Holloway, Abdullahi Dahir Issack, Jo Krishnakumar, Farhan Moha, Helena Pierides, Fahmida Rahman, Shahidur Rahman, Jake Rivers, Noor Sada, Suhama Saniz,  
|editor=  [[Yiannis Laouris]] <br> [[Marcus Hallside]] <br> Roger Stuart Berkowitz <br> Jacob Rivers
|editor=  [[Yiannis Laouris]] <br> [[Marcus Hallside]] <br> Roger Stuart Berkowitz <br> Jacob Rivers
|total_duration=200 person hrs
|total_duration=200 person hrs
|n_k_st=N=83  Clusters=13  V=44  R=27    ST=50%    SCI=10,88
|n_k_st=N=83  Clusters=13  V=44  R=27    ST=50%    SCI=10,88
|dates=10-11 Mar, 2007
|dates=Mar, 2021
|link=[OSUN-REPORT_2021_FinalCompressed.pdf Download Report]
|link=[[Media:OSUN-REPORT_2021_FinalCompressed.pdf|Download Report]]
}}
}}




==Executive Summary==
==Executive Summary==
The Co-Laboratory to “Address Racial, Economic, and Educational Inequalities through Our Uni- versity Network“ was organized by Future Worlds Center and Innovative Compliance Europe Ltd on behalf of the OSUN Hannah Arendt Humanities Network. The methodology utilized to facilitate the Co-Lab was the Structured Democratic Dialogue process, supported by specialized tools1.
The [[Co-Laboratory]] to “Address Racial, Economic, and Educational Inequalities through Our University Network“ was organized by [[Future Worlds Center]] and [[Innovative Compliance Europe Ltd.]] on behalf of the Open Society University Network (OSUN)<ref>https://opensocietyuniversitynetwork.org</ref> and the Hannah Arendt Humanities Network <ref>https://hac.bard.edu/programs/hannah-arendt-humanities-network/</ref>, referred to as [[OSUN Hannah Arendt Humanities Network]]. The methodology utilized to facilitate the Co-Lab was the [[Structured Democratic Dialogue]] process, supported by specialized tools: (i) [[Cogniscope 3]]; (ii) [[Concertina]]; (iii) [[IdeaPrism]].
The Co-Laboratory was held as a series of online virtual events during March 2021. Eighteen ac- ademics and students from eight OSUN Universities and Colleges came together to propose ac- tions that could be implemented either locally or through OSUN to improve educational access for disadvantaged students. The participants came from very differing cultural, economic, and societal backgrounds across OSUN, and included academics and students, with equitable cross-gender distribution. The participants represented both OSUN founding institutions (e.g., Bard College and CEU) and a broad cross section of European (Bard Berlin, American University in Bulgaria) Middle Eastern (Al-Quds Bard) and Asian (BRAC University, American University of Central Asia, Kyrgyz- stan) OSUN members. Two participants were OSUN students who reside in refugee camps.
The Co-Laboratory was held as a series of online virtual events during March 2021. Eighteen ac- ademics and students from eight OSUN Universities and Colleges came together to propose ac- tions that could be implemented either locally or through OSUN to improve educational access for disadvantaged students. The participants came from very differing cultural, economic, and societal backgrounds across OSUN, and included academics and students, with equitable cross-gender distribution. The participants represented both OSUN founding institutions (e.g., Bard College and CEU) and a broad cross section of European (Bard Berlin, American University in Bulgaria) Middle Eastern (Al-Quds Bard) and Asian (BRAC University, American University of Central Asia, Kyrgyz- stan) OSUN members. Two participants were OSUN students who reside in refugee camps.
During the first online Co-Laboratory session, many of the OSUN students commented, even before introducing themselves to the group, that they wished to thank Bard College Hosts for providing this opportunity for their voices to be heard on this important subject. In the participants surveys OSUN students highlighted the importance they attributed for their ideas and their clarifications being treated as equally important to those from the Professor and Lecturer participants. The ex- tremely high level of response in two Co-Laboratory participant surveys was unprecedented.
During the first online Co-Laboratory session, many of the OSUN students commented, even before introducing themselves to the group, that they wished to thank Bard College Hosts for providing this opportunity for their voices to be heard on this important subject. In the participants surveys OSUN students highlighted the importance they attributed for their ideas and their clarifications being treated as equally important to those from the Professor and Lecturer participants. The extremely high level of response in two Co-Laboratory participant surveys was unprecedented.
 
To facilitate the dialogue process, a Triggering Question was formulated as “What initiatives/actions could the communities of faculty/staff/students around the Open Society University Network take that would contribute towards narrowing racial, economic, and educational inequalities?” The Triggering Question and the goal of the process were communicated to all participants one week before the initial online Co-Lab virtual session. In response to this question, the participants put forth 40 proposals of initiatives/actions capable of addressing the challenge. Using a bottom-up clustering approach, the participants identified 10 “dimensions”. Community Building was the most common dimension that appeared in 8 actions, to be followed closely by Funding and Schol- arships and Accessible Education (each with 5 actions). Raising Awareness appeared in 4 actions closely followed by Admissions and Outreach, Educational Resources and Support, Democracy, Advocacy and Human Rights, and Employment Opportunities each of which appeared in 3 actions. Following a selection of ideas using preference voting, the participants used Interpretive Structural Modeling to explore whether one idea could support another, thus constructing a tree of influences.
 
[[File: OSUN_Tree.png|thumb|center|upright=3.0|alt=Influence tree 2 from the Option SDDP of the OSUN Co-Laboratory.| Influence tree 2 from the Option SDDP of the OSUN Co-Laboratory.]]


To facilitate the dialogue process, a Triggering Question was formulated as “What initiatives/ac- tions could the communities of faculty/staff/students around the Open Society University Network take that would contribute towards narrowing racial, economic, and educational inequalities?” The Triggering Question and the goal of the process were communicated to all participants one week before the initial online Co-Lab virtual session. In response to this question, the participants put forth 40 proposals of initiatives/actions capable of addressing the challenge. Using a bottom-up clustering approach, the participants identified 10 “dimensions”. Community Building was the most common dimension that appeared in 8 actions, to be followed closely by Funding and Schol- arships and Accessible Education (each with 5 actions). Raising Awareness appeared in 4 actions closely followed by Admissions and Outreach, Educational Resources and Support, Democracy, Advocacy and Human Rights, and Employment Opportunities each of which appeared in 3 actions. Following a selection of ideas using preference voting, the participants used Interpretive Structural Modeling to explore whether one idea could support another, thus constructing a tree of influences.


Out of the 40 ideas generated, the influence tree revealed that those that one should give priority (because they leverage on others) included projects, proposed by students themselves, that would directly benefit disadvantaged students and that could be implemented rapidly and at low cost:
Out of the 40 ideas generated, the influence tree revealed that those that one should give priority (because they leverage on others) included projects, proposed by students themselves, that would directly benefit disadvantaged students and that could be implemented rapidly and at low cost:
Line 74: Line 77:




12 ideas were structured to create the influence MAP shown below. <br>
<br>
[[File:CSD_Platres_Map_1.jpg|thumb|center|upright=3.0|alt=Influence tree 1 from the Option SDDP of the Civil Society Dialogue Co-Laboratory.|Influence tree 1 from the Option SDDP of the Civil Society Dialogue Co-Laboratory]]
<br>
According to the participants of the Platres / peace revival Co-Laboratory, the options with the greatest positive influence on bridging the gap between the two communities in Cyprus were: <br>
* Idea #4, Have more positive and independent media on both sides<br>
* Idea #15, Make possible for Turkish Cypriots to use rights arising from the Cyprus constitution and EU membership<br>
The Knowledge Management Team later structured an additional 15 ideas to create the influence MAP shown below. <br>
<br>
[[File:CSD_Platres_Map_2.jpg|thumb|center|upright=3.0|alt=Influence tree 2 from the Option SDDP of the Civil Society Dialogue Co-Laboratory.|Influence tree 2 from the Option SDDP of the Civil Society Dialogue Co-Laboratory]]
<br>
According to the revised MAP of the Platres / peace revival Co-Laboratory, the options with the greatest positive influence on bridging the gap between the two communities in Cyprus were: <br>
* Idea #8, Create sustainable incentives in crossing and cross-border activities<br>
* Idea #73, Use structured methodology to construct a comprehensive plan for the settlement of the Cyprus problem<br>
The two most influential options identified in the first MAP moved higher up in the MAP, thus still important
The Co-Laboratory was facilitated by [[Yiannis Laouris]], [[Marios Michaelides]], [[Ilke Dagli]], and [[Tatjana Taraszow]].
In sum, the participants of the dialogue reported satisfaction that their voices have been heard and documented, therefore they communicated their expectations for follow-up activities to address the diagnosis of their needs.<br> 


The full report can be downloaded from [[Media:| here]]. <br>
The full report can be downloaded from [[Media:| here]]. <br>
The full paper is available from [http://www.springerlink.com/content/tu2870qnx285210u/fulltext.pdf Open Access]


==Sponsor and partners==
==Sponsor and partners==
Line 112: Line 87:
==External Links==
==External Links==


* [[https://hac.bard.edu/programs/hannah-arendt-humanities-network/democratic-dialogue/ REports on the SDDP at BARD]]
* [https://hac.bard.edu/programs/hannah-arendt-humanities-network/democratic-dialogue/ REports on the SDDP at BARD]
* [[https://hac.bard.edu BARD College Home Page]]
* [https://hac.bard.edu BARD College Home Page]
* [[https://opensocietyuniversitynetwork.org OSUN Home Page]]
* [https://opensocietyuniversitynetwork.org OSUN Home Page]
 


==References==
==References==

Navigation menu