The Carnegie Foundation recognizes Calvin for its commitment to community engagement
In January 2015 the announced the list of colleges and universities selected to receive the 2015 Carnegie Classification for Community Engagement. Calvin College is across the country to receive this important designation.
To receive the classification, each institution voluntarily submits an application that provides compelling evidence of community engagement through meaningful collaboration with local, regional, national and global communities.
Renewal through community engagement
, director of community engagement at Calvin College, said that whether Calvin's community engagement occurs in a research lab on campus or an urban neighborhood across town; on a spring break trip to Louisiana or a semester abroad in Peru, the focus is on justice, service, love and renewal.
鈥淩ight from the beginning we talk about transformation,鈥 said Heffner. 鈥淲e want to see flourishing for all people and for creation. Community engagement is about trying to as a Reformed Christian college.鈥
John Saltmarsh, the administrator of the Carnegie Foundation Community Engagement Classification said, "These are campuses that are improving teaching and learning, producing research that makes a difference in communities, and revitalizing their civic and academic missions."
Living as agents of renewal in the world is at the core of Calvin鈥檚 mission. With a long history of community engagement as its foundation, Calvin continues to demonstrate commitment to this mission.
鈥淲e have systems of community engagement in place because we value it. It鈥檚 so significant for who we are as an institution,鈥 said Heffner.
Unexpected partnerships
Through the work of the , the and many academic departments, Calvin鈥檚 community partnerships reach locally and worldwide. Throughout the years, this involvement has deepened, creating unpredictable avenues of local, national and global engagement.
鈥淔or example,鈥 Heffner said, 鈥渨e started the in the late 鈥90s. But that has just blossomed. Now we鈥檙e doing this big watershed project with the that really grew out of CEAP.鈥
Research found that Calvin is situated on a watershed that drains into Plaster Creek, the most polluted creek in West Michigan. Calvin faculty, staff and students collaborated with local schools, churches and community partners to form Plaster Creek Stewards, which works to restore the health and beauty of the watershed.
The Summer Green Team, an initiative within Plaster Creek Stewards, is a program that trains youth in watershed restoration. It has been recognized in Washington D.C. as a program that can be replicated in other parts of the country. 鈥淭hat shows how things deepen over time,鈥 said Heffner. 鈥淚t evolves. It emerges.鈥
Recognizing local needs
Another partnership is the with four urban neighborhoods in Grand Rapids. Through extensive research, door-to-door surveys, partnership with local health organizations and the strong presence of the residents鈥 voice, the department developed strategic plans geared toward the specific needs of each neighborhood.
Heffner said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not just driven by the college saying, 鈥楾his is what we want our students to learn.鈥 We do want our students to learn, but it鈥檚 based on the issues that are particular health needs in this city.鈥
Engaging across the globe
On the global level, Calvin students and faculty partner with organizations all over the world through numerous and abroad.
Don De Graaf, director of off-campus programs at Calvin, said students don鈥檛 go in simply thinking they are there to solve every problem. Rather, it is an opportunity to engage people while learning from their lives and from how their society functions.
De Graaf hopes to enable students to connect these experiences serving abroad with community engagement back at home. 鈥淚t becomes more seamless,鈥 said De Graaf. 鈥淵ou learn about the world and you learn about how to be involved wherever you might end up living.鈥