Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic

The high impact disruptions in the external environment caused by the Covid-19 pandemic revealed the socially embedded character of many universities around the world. University collaborations with schools during the pandemic suggest that they are institutions open to their external environment, ca...

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Main Author: Fernando M. Reimers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.636769/full
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spelling doaj-393503cedd3f4f97b69c296a73b9ab002021-05-20T05:35:50ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainability2673-45242021-05-01210.3389/frsus.2021.636769636769Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 PandemicFernando M. ReimersThe high impact disruptions in the external environment caused by the Covid-19 pandemic revealed the socially embedded character of many universities around the world. University collaborations with schools during the pandemic suggest that they are institutions open to their external environment, capable of learning from and with their environment, and capable of influencing their external environment, helping to address significant social challenges. Drawing on a non-probabilistic survey administered to a convenience sample of 101 universities in 21 countries, I examine how they built partnerships with schools to sustain educational opportunity during the pandemic. The results are informative of the evolving nature of higher education and its mission. They illustrate the responsiveness of universities to societal needs. The findings show that universities are socially connected to their surrounding context, and that they see themselves as engines of social innovation at a time of great unexpected need. The study found the majority of universities to be engaged with schools supporting education during the pandemic. They see such engagement as part of their mission and strategy, even though they perceive it as challenging. Most of such engagements do not have a formalized “theory of action,” but are evolving as the crisis created by the pandemic itself evolved. While such engagement during the pandemic builds on pre-existing engagements with schools, the response during the pandemic provided an opportunity to integrate different efforts across various units. The majority of the universities in the study had a school of education, and about half have a program of pre-service teacher education and few of the collaborations established during the pandemic were new, most were based on pre-existing collaborations. In two thirds of the cases the collaborations with schools during the pandemic were initiated by University leaders. Most of the collaborations consist of developing alternative delivery channels and supporting teachers in developing new skills to teach remotely.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.636769/fullCOVID-19higher education sustainabilityhigher education outreachsustainable development goalsuniversity school collaborationshigher education innovation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fernando M. Reimers
spellingShingle Fernando M. Reimers
Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
Frontiers in Sustainability
COVID-19
higher education sustainability
higher education outreach
sustainable development goals
university school collaborations
higher education innovation
author_facet Fernando M. Reimers
author_sort Fernando M. Reimers
title Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
title_short Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
title_full Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
title_fullStr Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
title_full_unstemmed Can Universities Help “Build Back Better” in Education? The Socially Embedded University Responds to the Covid-19 Pandemic
title_sort can universities help “build back better” in education? the socially embedded university responds to the covid-19 pandemic
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sustainability
issn 2673-4524
publishDate 2021-05-01
description The high impact disruptions in the external environment caused by the Covid-19 pandemic revealed the socially embedded character of many universities around the world. University collaborations with schools during the pandemic suggest that they are institutions open to their external environment, capable of learning from and with their environment, and capable of influencing their external environment, helping to address significant social challenges. Drawing on a non-probabilistic survey administered to a convenience sample of 101 universities in 21 countries, I examine how they built partnerships with schools to sustain educational opportunity during the pandemic. The results are informative of the evolving nature of higher education and its mission. They illustrate the responsiveness of universities to societal needs. The findings show that universities are socially connected to their surrounding context, and that they see themselves as engines of social innovation at a time of great unexpected need. The study found the majority of universities to be engaged with schools supporting education during the pandemic. They see such engagement as part of their mission and strategy, even though they perceive it as challenging. Most of such engagements do not have a formalized “theory of action,” but are evolving as the crisis created by the pandemic itself evolved. While such engagement during the pandemic builds on pre-existing engagements with schools, the response during the pandemic provided an opportunity to integrate different efforts across various units. The majority of the universities in the study had a school of education, and about half have a program of pre-service teacher education and few of the collaborations established during the pandemic were new, most were based on pre-existing collaborations. In two thirds of the cases the collaborations with schools during the pandemic were initiated by University leaders. Most of the collaborations consist of developing alternative delivery channels and supporting teachers in developing new skills to teach remotely.
topic COVID-19
higher education sustainability
higher education outreach
sustainable development goals
university school collaborations
higher education innovation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.636769/full
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