2021
DOI: 10.1108/sej-10-2020-0089
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Completing the CiCLE: long-term assessment of community-involved collaborative learning ecosystems for social innovation in higher education

Abstract: Purpose The purpose of this study is to highlight the benefits and challenges of immersive, design thinking and community-engaged pedagogies for supporting social innovation within higher education; assess the impact of such approaches across stakeholder groups through long-term retrospective analysis of transdisciplinary and cross-stakeholder work; offer an approach to ecosystems design and analysis that accounts for complex system dynamics in higher education partnerships. Design/methodology/approach This … Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…http://ijlter.org/index.php/ijlter The selected publication was published within a fifteen-year time frame and included, inter alia, conceptual papers, mixed-method research designs, and quantitative and qualitative empirical studies. Twenty-six (26) studies that met the selection criteria, were taken into consideration including seven quantitative studies (Portuguez Castro & Gómez Zermeño, 2021;Cunha et al, 2021;Vázquez-Parra et al, 2021;Santos et al, 2021;Yasin & Khansari, 2021;Othman & Ab Wahid, 2014;Kirby & Ibrahim, 2011); eleven qualitative studies (Belcher et al, 2022;Lake et al, 2022;Krstikj, 2021;Day et al, 2021;Zermeño & de la Garza, 2020;Vealey & Gerding, 2016;Wiley & Berry, 2015;Rivers et al, 2014;Huq & Gilbert, 2013;Elmes et al, 2012& Gunn et. al, 2008, seven concept papers (Brown & Crawford, 2022;Yu & Duchin, 2022;Adomßent et al, 2019;Maxwell & Armellini, 2018;Penin et al, 2015;Chang et al, 2014;Rae, 2010) 2011); Germany (n=1) (Adomßent et al, 2019); Australia (n=1) (Huq & Gilbert, 2013); Africa (n=1) (Elmes et al, 2012); India (n=1) (Satar & Natasha, 2019), and the state of Columbia, Uganda, Tanzania, Nigeria (n=1) (Belcher et al, 2022).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…http://ijlter.org/index.php/ijlter The selected publication was published within a fifteen-year time frame and included, inter alia, conceptual papers, mixed-method research designs, and quantitative and qualitative empirical studies. Twenty-six (26) studies that met the selection criteria, were taken into consideration including seven quantitative studies (Portuguez Castro & Gómez Zermeño, 2021;Cunha et al, 2021;Vázquez-Parra et al, 2021;Santos et al, 2021;Yasin & Khansari, 2021;Othman & Ab Wahid, 2014;Kirby & Ibrahim, 2011); eleven qualitative studies (Belcher et al, 2022;Lake et al, 2022;Krstikj, 2021;Day et al, 2021;Zermeño & de la Garza, 2020;Vealey & Gerding, 2016;Wiley & Berry, 2015;Rivers et al, 2014;Huq & Gilbert, 2013;Elmes et al, 2012& Gunn et. al, 2008, seven concept papers (Brown & Crawford, 2022;Yu & Duchin, 2022;Adomßent et al, 2019;Maxwell & Armellini, 2018;Penin et al, 2015;Chang et al, 2014;Rae, 2010) 2011); Germany (n=1) (Adomßent et al, 2019); Australia (n=1) (Huq & Gilbert, 2013); Africa (n=1) (Elmes et al, 2012); India (n=1) (Satar & Natasha, 2019), and the state of Columbia, Uganda, Tanzania, Nigeria (n=1) (Belcher et al, 2022).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Works on the literature reviewed found several best teaching and learning strategies that could foster students' entrepreneurial minds such as the Top-Down and Bottom Up Approach (Yu & Duchin, 2022;Vázquez-Parraet al, 2022;Adomßent et al, 2019;Satar & Natasha, 2019), Experiential Learning (Belcher et al, 2022;Cunha et al, 2022;Yunfeng et al, 2022;Awaysheh & Bonfiglio, 2017;Othman & Ab Wahid, 2014), Action Learning (Brown & Crawford, 2022;Day et al, 2021;Santos et. al., 2021;Yasin & Khansari, 2021), Community-Based Project (Lake et al, 2022), Problem-Based Learning (Krstikj, 2021), Work-Based Learning (Maxwell & Armellini, 2019;Huq & Gilbert, 2013), and many more. Therefore, this empirical paper aims to discuss the best strategy for promoting students' social entrepreneurial minds and produce an extensive map of themes for future research.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The perceived success of this type of organization, especially when tackling local level social issues, has prompted academia to pay more attention in recent publications to the measurement of the social impact of such organizations, and the modelling of key aspects related to guiding principles, structure and management models (Cole, 2022). This has been a sign of increasing involvement of Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) in developing and refining the activity of innovation labs, particularly community innovation labs (CILs), an aspect distinctly encouraged by some authors as HEIs are perceived as an integral part of community eco-systems (Lake et al, 2022). In this regard, we can already see examples of HEIs choosing to increase social innovation activity through creating social innovation structures within their own institutions with the specific purpose of then developing community partnerships (Panitch et al, 2021).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%