- The President
- About Joy
- Priorities
- Conversations
- Statements
- 2022
- Dr. Yabome Gilpin-Jackson named 間眅埶AVs first Vice-President, People, Equity and Inclusion
- Chris (Syetaxtn) Lewis joins 間眅埶AV in advisory role on Indigenous Initiatives and Reconciliation
- A World of Difference: How universities must evolve in a post-COVID world
- Russian invasion of Ukraine
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next?
- Celebrating National Indigenous Peoples day
- Please join us for the annual appreciation BBQ
- 間眅埶AV begins process to become Living Wage Employer
- Staying engaged in an increasingly polarized world
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next? - Message from the President to Faculty and Staff
- 間眅埶AV: What's Next? - Message from the President to students
- Search Announcement: Provost and Vice-President Academic
- Statement from the VP, PEI: Addressing Racism and Hate at 間眅埶AV
- 2021
- Welcome new 間眅埶AV students
- UPDATED Jan. 6: My response to Dec. 11 event in 間眅埶AV dining hall
- Celebrating Black History Month
- The Universitys Role and Contributions to a Just Recovery Over the Next Decade
- Inspired by meetings with 間眅埶AV Faculty and Staff
- Looking forward to Summer and Fall
- Opinion: This is why 間眅埶AV is backing the Burnaby Mountain gondola
- External Review of December 11, 2020 Event
- Facing the future with hope
- President's statement on TransMountain Expansion Project and support for a fire hall on Burnaby mountain
- The road ahead
- Stronger Together: 間眅埶AV, the pandemic and lessons for a better future
- 間眅埶AV to observe moment of silence at 2:15 PM today
- Taking action: Reconciliation at 間眅埶AV
- Join 間眅埶AV President Joy Johnson for a tour of Burnaby campus
- Message from the President: Residential school findings
- Dr. June Francis appointed Special Advisor to the President on Anti-Racism
- My response to the open letter from 間眅埶AV faculty and staff
- Resources and ways to support scholars in Afghanistan
- BC Vaccine Card
- Masks required on all 間眅埶AV campuses, vaccine card required for residence, athletics, dining, events and others
- Vaccine declaration and follow-up screening at 間眅埶AV
- Return to campus planning updates
- Welcome Back
- Work to review contract vs. in-house cleaning and food services
- National Day for Truth and Reconciliation
- 間眅埶AV and SFSS united in commitment to climate action
- Inclusion benefits us all
- Moving forward with kindness
- 間眅埶AV commits to full divestment from fossil fuels
- Safety on 間眅埶AV's campuses
- Thank you!
- Temporary shift to remote learning January 10 23, 2022
- 2020
- Statement on academic freedom
- Welcome back faculty and staff
- Welcome back students
- Statement on scholar strike
- Reflections on my first 30 days
- Taking care of ourselves, taking care of each other
- Equity, diversity and inclusion commitments
- Statement on 間眅埶AV's Athletics Team Name Change
- Finding connection in times of adversity
- Wishing you a safe and restful holiday break
- Op-ed: 間眅埶AV helping drive social, economic innovation in time of crisis
- 2022
- Presidents Distinguished Community Leadership Award
- Strategic Plan
- Approach
- How to participate
- What we're hearing
- April 4, 2022: Updates and reflections
- April 19, 2022: Updates and reflections
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? phase one results now available
- Research assistants shape 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? analysis
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Message from the President to Faculty and Staff
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Message from the President to Students
- Search announcement: Provost and Vice-President Academic
- 間眅埶AV: Whats Next? Phase 2 results now available
- Executive
- Executive Searches
- Contact
Engage for success, perhaps even for survival
Community engagement is not just a good strategy, it's an urgent responsibility
Andrew Petter
President and Vice-Chancellor
間眅埶AV
Why should institutions of higher learning immerse themselves in the broader community? The question has been asked since universities were defined as cloisters and ivory towers, anxious to keep pure their quest for knowledge by distancing themselves from the trials and tribulations of the outside world.
Times have changed, even if old habits die hard. There is a growing realisation that community engagement can be helpful and, in certain aspects, essential not only to a productive and creative academy, but to a resilient and governable world.
For universities, the benefits of engagement are numerous. Work-integrated learning and other community-based programmes enable students to attain practical skills, civic understanding and the sense of achievement that comes from applying academic knowledge in a community context. Students also acquire a better understanding of their employment options and work aptitudes, enabling them to chart educational pathways that are more likely to result in successful and fulfilling careers.
Engagement can be similarly rewarding for faculty researchers, who gain new insight, deeper understanding and the rewards of co-creating knowledge with communities and contributing directly to their betterment. There is no doubting the value of fundamental research, but the best answers usually come in response to the most profound questions and many of those arise in a real-world setting. And close community connections increase the likelihood of all research outputs finding meaningful application.
Universities also have much to give communities. The world faces a daunting array of social, environmental and political challenges. Income inequality, health crises, climate change: there is no shortage of destabilising influences that require creative, evidence-based decision-making and leadership.
Yet there is a shortage of reliable institutions to which communities can turn for help. Governments are under attack and, in many places, in retreat. At the same time, globalisation and rapid technological change are disrupting and diminishing social infrastructure. Businesses that once sustained communities have become increasingly disconnected outsourcing and mechanising work, and migrating operations overseas.
The mainstream media, traditionally a dependable platform for public discourse, is also under siege and struggling to survive an internet age that offers a surfeit of information but a relative scarcity of investigative reporting, reliable fact-checking and informed analysis.
Societys best hope lies with so-called anchor institutions that combine long-standing societal connections with enduring capacities to support community development. No institutions are better prepared or more appropriately resourced to play this role than universities.
Universities are already appreciated for the part that we play in building and sustaining communities from educating workers, entrepreneurs and leaders to producing answers and innovations that increase prosperity, extend sustainability and improve quality of life.
We also have capacities to provide productive spaces for public discourse. The Edelman Trust Barometer shows trust in government officials, business leaders and the media at all-time lows. Academics, however, retain public confidence. Universities are therefore uniquely well positioned to facilitate and inform public dialogue and to help communities develop policies and initiatives that respond to citizens needs.
And there is still more that universities can do. A commissioned by and the McConnell Foundation documented a host of underutilised instruments that universities can deploy to build social capital. These include financial instruments such as procurement and investment; physical instruments such as the use of facilities and land; and relational instruments such as harnessing the capacities of employees, data and alumni networks.
Never have universities been more needed, and never have we had more to gain. In addition to the benefits that I have already mentioned, strong community connections help to counter perceptions of universities as elitist bastions. The best way to earn public support from taxpayers and philanthropists is to demonstrate our societal value in every way possible.
For all of these reasons, universities such as Simon Fraser have committed ourselves to embracing the trials and addressing the tribulations of the communities we serve. In making an all-out commitment to community engagement, we see the opportunity to create a virtuous circle in which the larger contributions we make are returned many times over in the greater benefits we reap.
Andrew Petter is president and vice-chancellor of 間眅埶AV, Canada. He is speaking this week at the Global University Engagement Summit at the University of Melbourne.