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E-raamat: Community Matters: Service-Learning in Engaged Design and Planning

Edited by (Penn State University, USA), Edited by (Hunter College, USA), Edited by (SUNY-ESF, USA), Edited by (Cornell University, USA)
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Winner of the EDRA 2015 Book Award!

Community Matters: Service Learning in Engaged Design and Planning explores issues that resonate with a diverse group of design and planning educators drawn to the challenge of supporting greater community building and empowerment while combining learning with practice. The book explores such questions as:











How do we foster mutuality and reciprocity in community-academy partnerships?







What conflicts, challenges, limits and obstacles do we face in our service-learning studios and projects?





What evidence do we have of our impacts on students and communities and how are we responding?





How are we being attentive to the contemporary environmental and societal issues?





What is our role as both designers and agents of societal change?





How are we innovating to enable greater capacities for individuals, future practitioners and communities?

This book provides compelling evidence that educators should be adopting engaged pedagogies, research methods and theories through which they can bring together education, practice and scholarship at the boundary of community and academy.

Arvustused

Community Matters is a book that matters. Its goals are lofty: "a call for full participation" of all educational institutions, especially design and planning schools, to collaborate with underserved communities to effectively address the complex challenges these communities are facing. And for inspiration and understanding, several compelling programs are described in a compilation of case studies and reflective bookend chapters that illustrate the how-to and challenges of these collaborations. With the rise of service learning programs in U.S. architecture and planning schools, Community Matters provides needed guidance through its articulate report of the purposes, values, and strategies of effective community-engaged design and planning education. And for the emergent Public Interest Design movement, the book provides a powerful argument, backed up by evidence, for necessary, systemic changes in design and planning education. Professor Roberta Feldman, University of Illinois at Chicago

This book demonstrates that community is still the foundation of democracy, requiring attention to shared and unshared values, local participation and global political savvy and the design of everyday places of civic engagement. The authors show how to form, reimagine, contest, build and celebrate community. They collectively answer a most critical challenge: How can universities strengthen community through service-learning that simultaneously serves dispossessed groups and prepares students in planning and design fields to practice in ways that will support democracy. They use inspiring stories to raise tough questions that educators can no longer avoid. Randolph Hester, Professor Emeritus of Landscape Architecture & Environmental Planning, University of California, Berkeley

Dedication ix
Contributors xv
Foreword xxi
Kenneth M. Reardon
Acknowledgements xxv
Why community matters 1(21)
Mallika Bose
Paula Horrigan
1 Taking stock: Perspectives on community matters
22(7)
Sigmund C. Shipp
SECTION 1 Partnering to advance productive community dialogues
29(52)
2 Partnering, because community matters
31(14)
Cheryl Doble
3 Establishing a place for common ground: A case study of the role of a service-learning studio in neighborhood university redevelopment
45(20)
Maren King
4 Spaces of connection: Implementing the design of a high-tech learning space for youth
65(16)
Deven Gibbs
Debarah Mcfarland
Sharon Irish
SECTION 2 Original seeing: Beholding community
81(54)
5 Recalling and remembering community -- Cellphone Diaries
83(18)
Kofi Boone
6 Considering public history
101(16)
Deborah Zervas
7 Finding and reassembling community amidst disaster
117(18)
Nadia M. Anderson
SECTION 3 Co-imagining alternative worlds
135(52)
8 Clearwater studio: Co-imagining a living past and a common future
137(14)
Lancelot Coar
9 The politics of radical pedagogy: Transforming power and seeking justice
151(16)
Abbilyn Miller
10 Rust to Green: Cultivating resilience in the Rust Belt
167(20)
Paula Horrigan
SECTION 4 Changing from within: Recasting academic communities
187(68)
11 Democracy matters, beginning in the classroom: Toward a collaborative (democratic?) design studio
189(21)
Deni Ruggeri
12 Changing racial attitudes: Community-based learning and service in East St. Louis, Illinois
210(23)
Stacy Anne Harwood
Marisa A. Zapata
13 Putting community first: Reflections on history, identity, and power in local and global service-learning
233(22)
Lynne M. Dearborn
SECTION 5 Outcomes matter: Creating an evaluative community
255(80)
14 Reaching out and reaching in: Investigating community impacts of a university outreach program
257(21)
Susan Erickson
15 Probing impacts: Voices of community
278(21)
Mallika Bose
James Wilson
16 The semester ends but the community challenges do not: A legacy to continue the work in East Harlem
299(16)
Jonathan Martin
Eve Baron
Alexis Rourk Reyes
Lacey Tauber
17 Life before/during/between/after the service-learning design studios
315(20)
Jeffrey Hou
Index 335
Mallika Bose is Associate Professor of landscape architecture at Penn State University, USA. She was the Director of the Hamer Center for Community Design from 2008 to 2012. Motivated by her interest in issues of equity/justice and how social structures are spatially embedded, she pursues research on built environment and active living/healthy eating, public scholarship and community-engaged design and planning.









Paula Horrigan is Associate Professor of landscape architecture at Cornell University, USA. Her teaching and research focus on placemaking, participatory design, and the pedagogies and practices of civic engagement that encourage universitycommunity reciprocity and enable community-based problem solving. She leads the Rust to Green NY Action Research Project whereby university and community partners work together on fostering a narrative of resilience and sustainability in New Yorks Rust Belt.



Cheryl Doble is Associate Professor Emeritus in the department of landscape architecture at SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry in Syracuse, New York, USA. She is the founding director of the colleges Center for Community Design Research, which facilitates the development of academic/community partnerships that support collaborative community-based design and research projects.















Sigmund C. Shipp is Associate Professor in the department of urban affairs and planning at Hunter College, New York, USA. He is the director of the undergraduate urban studies program. His research has involved a study of urban renewal, worker-owned cooperatives, and the Black church and college community development corporations. His recent research has focused on White poverty in America.