To
what degree and in what ways did CCI-participating museums,
libraries and their grantee partners develop capacity to be
community catalysts?
|
Changes
in beliefs, attitudes, knowledge and skills among those involved
in the CCI-funded project
|
Increased
awareness of power dynamics in communities and openness to
shifting power dynamics in community change efforts
Note:
early change after initial training/TA
|
Orientation
and commitment toward shifting power from institutions to
community members
Awareness
of power differentials in the community
Understanding
root/systemic causes of power differentials
Understanding
of potential roles for the library/museum in efforts to shift
power differentials/address root causes thereof
|
|
Increased
understanding of assets and networks, and belief in benefit of
using an asset-based approach in local community change efforts
Note:
early change after discovery processes and additional TA
|
Understanding
of assets in local community
Understanding
of key actors and influencers within networks in local community
Understanding
of the historical and cultural context of local community
Understanding
of what community members care about in local community (i.e.,
community member priorities)
Understanding
of areas of local “common ground” between community
member priorities and outcomes that institutional partners are
working toward
Understanding
of roles that identified assets can play within community change
efforts and how to apply those in own communities
Belief
in benefit of using an asset-based approach in community change
efforts
Belief
in benefit of adapting strategy to address existing community
member priorities
|
Administrative
data including asset maps
TA
provider notes and interviews
Project
team interviews, museum/library surveys, partner surveys, case
studies
|
Increased
capacity to convene diverse stakeholders and facilitate
co-creation and joint implementation of a common agenda
(intermediate-term/during project implementation)
|
|
TA
provider notes and interviews
Project
team interviews, museum/library surveys, partner surveys, case
studies
|
Increased
flexibility/ agility/ adaptability to respond to changing
nature/ contexts of grantee projects (intermediate-term/during
project implementation)
|
Openness
to altering course in response to changing community priorities
and contexts
Sense
of accountability to community members versus institutional
partners
Strategies
and tools for capturing, responding to, and adapting to changing
community priorities and contexts
|
TA
provider notes and interviews
Project
team interviews, museum/library surveys, partner surveys, case
studies
|
Organizational
systems changes among museums, libraries, grantee partners
|
Increased
alignment of organizational priorities and expertise with
co-designed, jointly implemented, asset-focused,
community-driven collaboration
|
Leadership
support and vision for asset-focused, community-driven
collaboration (perceived and explicit/public among which levels
of leadership/staffing hierarchy)
Resources
dedicated to asset-focused, community-driven collaboration
(e.g., investment in professional development, staff time
allocation, part of budget vs dependent on grants)
Documented
institutional vision, mission statement, and/or strategic plan
aligned with/prioritizing asset-focused, community-driven
collaboration
|
TA
provider notes and interviews
Project
team interviews, museum/library surveys, case studies
|
Increased
structures and processes supporting authentic engagement of
community members
|
Empowered
decision-making groups comprised of diverse partners
Standing
meetings and events at times and locations convenient for
community members and inclusive agenda structures
Internal
communication structures/processes to support effective,
bi-directional, and culturally responsive information flow and
engagement with the community
Flexible
policies and practices to address community-driven programs
|
TA
provider notes and interviews
Project
team interviews, museum/library surveys, case studies
|
In
what ways did CCI-participating museums, libraries and their
grantee partners change practices to better engage their
communities in co-creating and implementing community change?
|
Increased
interactions with community members and non-traditional partners
outside of the museum or library (informal discovery practices)
|
Visits
to community-driven events and gathering places (in contrast to
only institutional events for the community)
Interactions
with community associations, leaders, and individuals
|
|
Increased
engagement in discovery processes with community members (asset
mapping, learning conversations) (formal discovery
practices)
|
Use
of asset mapping to identify a wide range of community assets
from individual, associations, institutions, places, and culture
Facilitation
of community listening sessions to identify community priorities
Engagement
of additional relevant cross-sector Institutional partners in
dialogue with community members
|
Administrative
data including asset maps
TA
provider notes and interviews
Grantee
interviews, surveys and case studies, including social network
analysis of partner relationships
|
Increased
co-creation and joint implementation of a common agenda with
community members and cross-sector partners, within CCI-funded
project
|
Community
members have lead/impacted decision-making in implementation of
CCI-funded projects
There
is a common agenda that was co-created by diverse community
partners around community-driven priorities (agenda = common
vision/outcome goal and understanding of what assets should be
brought to bear to help realize vision/plan)
Solutions
are assets-focused and emerge from community member strengths
and priorities
Institutional
practices support community action (versus drive the efforts)
Community
partners implement and support strategies and solutions aligned
with common agenda
Community
partners use communication processes and structures to provide
input, and support collaboration/ engagement
Community
partners use common indicators to track progress
Community
partners collectively engage in ongoing evaluation, data use,
and learning to assess progress and impact
|
Administrative
data including asset maps
TA
provider notes and interviews
Grantee
interviews, surveys and case studies
Partner
surveys
|
Increased
planning for engagement in efforts that include co-creation and
joint implementation of a common agenda with community members
and cross-sector partners, beyond CCI-funded project
|
Plans
for integrating asset-focused, community-driven collaboration
into other/future community change efforts
Rest
same as C but beyond CCI-funded project
|
NA
|
Changes
in local ecosystems
|
To
what degree and in what ways were CCI-participating museums,
libraries and their grantee partners able to create a local
ecosystem that supports community social change?
|
Increased
number of connections/ partnerships
among museums, libraries, other organizations, and community
members, particularly including citizen associations,
historically under-represented groups, civic leaders, and local
funders
|
Number
and type of partners (e.g., non-institutional and institutional
partners, different sectors)
Number
of partners that are citizen associations, historically
under-represented groups, civic leaders, and local funders
Network
characteristics including density of the network (degree of
cohesion/inter-connectivity in the network), degree of
centralization (degree to which activity is centered in a few
organizations (high) or spread across organizations (low)), and
size of the network
|
Administrative
data: Asset maps, TA provider notes
Museum/library
and partner surveys—social network questions
Project
team interviews
|
Deeper
connections/ partnerships
among museums, libraries, other organizations, and community
members, particularly including citizen associations,
historically under-represented groups, civic leaders, and local
funders
|
Increased
value of the network and partners (including shifts in power and
influence of partners, level of involvement and resource/asset
contribution or partners)
Increased
trust (including reliability, openness to discussion/compromise,
and support of the collaborative mission)
Increased
collaboration (sharing information and resources, short-term
collaboration on discrete projects, long-term partnership)
|
|
Changes
in local communities
|
To
what degree and in what ways do CCI communities experience
positive social change?
|
Increased
agency/empowerment among community members
|
|
|
Increased
social well-being among community members
|
[Community
outcomes are identified by local projects and vary according to
project goals]
|
|
Increased
perceptions that museums and libraries are trusted and important
allies in strengthening communities
|
|
|
Increased
local investment in community member-led community
transformation
|
|
|
How
did outcomes vary across types of CCI supports/inputs used,
cohorts, or characteristics of involved library/museums,
partners, or communities?
|
Variation
factors
|
Cohort:
1 or 2
Grantee
type: Museum, library, or other
Uptake
of CCI TA, tools, peer learning opportunity (CoP)
Number
of partners: small, medium, large (based on analytic rubric)
Focus
area of work (e.g., early learning, social service)
Leadership/institutional
support for library/museum engagement in community-driven
change: high, med, low (based on analytic rubric)
Previous
history with and existing practices of collaborative community
engagement
|
Administrative
data: Grant reports/ applications
|