2012
DOI: 10.21225/d5mk5f
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Reframing University Continuing Education’s Role in Community Engagement

Abstract: In Canada, a growing interest within higher education in community engagement practices is evidenced through the establishment of national networks, funding opportunities for community-university research partnerships, and the development of specially designated centres on university campuses. However, based on the literature in continuing education, the role of university continuing education (UCE) units in supporting community engagement is not clear. Many UCE units have been involved and continue to be invo… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…UCE units are being expected to provide for ever more diverse and demanding learner populations while conventional university curricula, calendars and services remain relatively unchanged and arguably 22 Hall (2009);McRae (2012). UCE units are being expected to provide for ever more diverse and demanding learner populations while conventional university curricula, calendars and services remain relatively unchanged and arguably 22 Hall (2009);McRae (2012).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…UCE units are being expected to provide for ever more diverse and demanding learner populations while conventional university curricula, calendars and services remain relatively unchanged and arguably 22 Hall (2009);McRae (2012). UCE units are being expected to provide for ever more diverse and demanding learner populations while conventional university curricula, calendars and services remain relatively unchanged and arguably 22 Hall (2009);McRae (2012).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although community engagement is an integral, mandated aspect of all HEIs (including UL), the Council for Higher Education does not prescribe specific modes of engagement at an institutional level, enabling specific institutional contexts to shape the localised identity and nature of engaged scholarship (CHE, 2006). Policies from different HEIs demonstrate that there are similarities in the modes of structured and unstructured activities and identities of different HEIs (McRae, 2012;Hall, 2010;Westdijk, Koliba and Hamshaw, 2010). Generally, CE in most South African universities (including UL) takes the form of service learning, structured outreach -or volunteerism -and community centred research activities (Snyman, 2014;Nhamo, 2013;Schuetze, 2010;UL CE Policy, 2008).…”
Section: The Context Of Engagementmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, educational leaders in the tertiary sector should seek to establish "engaged campus [es]" (McRae, 2012, p. 2) that connect with individuals and organizations in the communities they serve. Engagement may be manifested, for example, in the form of networking, service learning, policy development, and responsive programming (McRae, 2012). Second, a reasonable and defensible goal of higher education is to meet the needs of learners to access education and training in order to increase their success in the workplace (Adamuti-Trache & Schuetze, 2009).…”
Section: Guiding Assumptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although revenue generation is a subset of academic entrepreneurship, it is sufficiently under-described in the educational leadership literature so as to merit attention on its own. Revenue generation in postsecondary institutions is a controversial topic and debates continue about the capacity of higher education, especially continuing education units, to fulfill their mandates to generate revenue while concurrently offering socially responsive programming (McRae, 2012). It is unlikely that there will be a quick resolution to the tensions between proponents of revenue generation and defenders of higher education as primarily or even exclusively government funded organizations.…”
Section: Revenue Generationmentioning
confidence: 99%