Penn gets top rank for outreach
Penn, USC tied for first place in survey on community engagement, involvement
· October 13, 2009, 1:39 am
Penn has been ranked as a number one “Best Neighbor” college in the country for its outreach to the West Philadelphia community.
The ranking comes as part of the national Savior of Our Cities: Survey of Best College and University Civic Partnership. The results were released yesterday with Penn and the University of Southern California sharing the top spot.
Drexel University was also recognized on the list in 10th place.
Evan Dobelle, president of Westfield State College, researched and compiled the list based on criteria including length of involvement with the community and real dollars invested. He presented it at the annual conference of the Coalition of Urban and Metropolitan Universities.
Dobelle said Penn stood out as a pioneer in leading community partnerships.
“As Penn has done well, other colleges have learned that they can do well by doing good,” he said.
Dobelle published a similar list in 2006, which ranked Penn under USC at number two.
Penn’s new ranking resulted largely from the continuing efforts of the Barbara and Edward Netter Center for Community Partnerships, which engages academic resources with community needs in Philadelphia.
Ira Harkavy, associate vice president and director of the Netter Center, said the center’s main outreach is through Academically Based Community Service courses, which provide Penn students the opportunity to work with their professors in solving universal social problems.
“[The Center] can be mutually beneficial and not only make a substantive and real difference working with communities and schools, but also advance student learning [at Penn],” he said.
Over 1500 students participated in 59 ABCS courses at Penn during the 2008-2009 academic year, according to the Netter Center’s web site. These courses are across 21 of Penn’s departments and eight of its undergraduate and graduate schools.
Course topics for last year included a potential plan to open a new high school in West Philadelphia and a nursing clinical focused on nutrition.
Dobelle said the Netter Center and Penn’s importance to Philadelphia grew after various businesses moved out of the city.
“Colleges have really become the growth industry of cities, replacing manufacturing and financial services,” he said. “Universities have become indispensable assets to the future of the city.”
Dobelle said he hopes the future will yield a list of even more universities following Penn’s lead.
“My hope three years from now is that there are 100 more colleges and everyone is tied for number one,” he said.
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Comments (1)
glennm7
October 13, 2009, 2:05 pm
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This ranking is marketing cloaked as research. Please look at the history of the author, Evan Dobelle. This ranking started with his firing from the U. of Hawaii. This "Savior of Our Cities" is also marketed in the NYT and Inquirer as news.
Penn and other urban universities are acquiring neighboring real estate for future development. The U. has used a variety of dishonest tactics to recreate the diverse community west of campus. The goal is always designed to homogenize the neighborhood into a wealthy enclave. The so called partnerships are done over the top of the local community. A close look at the "partnerships" reveals a standard process of divisive back room dealing with a tiny group of hand picked civic association leaders and corporate power brokers. These dishonest claims of neighborhood salvation have been going on for several years. It followed a couple decades of massive negative marketing which drove down the value of local real estate. Each part of this marketing is false. The new school with a gerrymandered catchment zone is not a commitment to Phila. public schools. But it is part of developing a wealthy zone around campus and a lab for the school of education. Study this propaganda for what it is and realize the direction our U. has taken!
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