Student internships bridge research to real world problems

Author:

Hynie Michaela,Jensen Krista,Johnny Michael,Wedlock Jane,Phipps David

Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to evaluate whether unstructured graduate student research internships conducted in collaboration with community agencies build capacity and knowledge for students and community.Design/methodology/approachThe paper reports the results of four semi‐structured interviews and 20 pre‐ and post‐internship surveys of students' perceptions of their internship activities; whether participation built research capacity in students and community resulted in the creation of new knowledge and promoted ongoing partnerships and relationships.FindingsStudents reported generating concrete outcomes for community partners, the acquisition of new research and professional skills, plus an increased understanding of theoretical knowledge. Many students also maintained ongoing relationships with their organizational partners beyond the terms of their internship.Research limitations/implicationsLimitations to this study are the relatively small sample size and reliance on self‐report measures.Practical implicationsThe paper describes a model for student‐community engagement that benefits both community and students.Social implicationsAs universities explore their relationships with their local communities, graduate student internships have tremendous potential for supporting research and knowledge‐based needs of local communities, while providing valuable skills and training to a cohort of students in bridging academic research to real world solutions. These students may go on to be community engaged scholars, or research trained personnel in the community.Originality/valueThe results presented in this paper demonstrate the benefits to graduate students in scholarship of engagement programs that prioritize true partnership between students, universities and communities.

Publisher

Emerald

Subject

Business, Management and Accounting (miscellaneous),Education,Life-span and Life-course Studies

Reference17 articles.

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2. Barker, D. (2004), “The scholarship of engagement: a taxonomy of five emerging practices”, Journal of Higher Education Outreach and Engagement, Vol. 9 No. 2, pp. 123‐37.

3. Bhatti, T. (n.d.), “SSHRC and knowledge mobilization”, available at: www1.unitedway.ca/sites/PortalEN/PublicSite/EVENTS%20AND%20MEETINGS/SSHRC%20%20Knowledge%20Mobilization_May%202008_1.pdf (accessed 29 January 2010).

4. Bloom, K. (2009), “Science policy in Canada: the Lavalife of science”, The Mark, 23 October, available at: http://themarknews.com/articles/615‐the‐lavalife‐of‐science (accessed 29 January 2010).

5. Boyer, E. (1996), “The scholarship of engagement”, Journal of Public Service and Outreach, Vol. 1 No. 1, pp. 11‐20.

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