Overall Rating | Gold |
---|---|
Overall Score | 73.33 |
Liaison | Maria Dahmus |
Submission Date | Nov. 30, 2023 |
University of St. Thomas
EN-13: Community Service
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
---|---|---|
3.40 / 5.00 |
Dustin
Killpack Associate Director Center for the Common Good |
"---"
indicates that no data was submitted for this field
Part 1. Percentage of students participating in community service
Yes
Total number of students:
5,942
Number of students engaged in community service:
3,645
Percentage of students engaged in community service:
61.34
Part 2. Community service hours per student
Yes
Total number of student community service hours contributed annually:
106,596
Number of annual community service hours contributed per student:
17.94
Part 3. Employee community service program
No
A brief description of the institution’s program to support employee volunteering:
While the university does not have a formal program to support employee volunteering during regular work hours, the university allows faculty and staff to participate in community engagement opportunities at the discretion of their department lead. The Center for the Common Good has a database of vetted community partners for Faculty and Staff to select from. We have a tracking system for Faculty and Staff to log their time completing community engagement.
Does the institution track the number of employee community service hours contributed through programs it sponsors?:
No
Total number of employee community service hours contributed annually through programs sponsored by the institution:
---
Optional Fields
Additional documentation to support the submission:
---
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
Data notes:
Headcount and hours reported for this credit correspond to the students enrolled in the Dougherty Family College and in four-year undergraduate degree programs. The figures reported represent the 2022-2023 academic year.
Information about the university's community service programs:
The Center for the Common good is one of the central hubs of community engagement for the University of St. Thomas. The Center hosts a majority of the university’s community engagement efforts but many offices, colleges, and departments across the university are engaged this work important work.
Community engagement at the University of St. Thomas is weaved into our fabric, as part of our institutional mission is to advance the common good. While the Center for the Common Good (CCG) serves as a hub for community engagement and community partner relationship building, the CCG also does much work supporting community engagement efforts that spring up organically across the University. The five main concentrations of community engagement at the University are within the CCG's Academic Community Engagement (ACE) Program, the Office of Sustainability Initiatives' Sustainable Communities Partnership (SCP), Business 200 Courses, Student Clubs, and the CCG's Tommies Together Volunteer Center (TTVC).
Both the ACE & SCP Programs encompass most of curricular community engagement, pairing instructors who are trained in community engagement with approved CCG Or SCP community partner organizations in order to focus on a question or issue that the professor, their students, and the community partner develop together. Another community engagement program in the curricular realm is the Business 200 course. All Business students are required to complete this course. In this course, students complete a minimum of 40 hours of volunteer service in the community and reflect on what they’ve learned in a series of in-class discussions. Co-curricular programing on campus is led by the TTVC. The TTVC coordinates volunteer programs focused on the social issues of food insecurity, housing insecurity, and the education opportunity gap. Students who nurture their personal interests and goals by joining a Student Club have the opportunity to volunteer with an approved CCG community partner. Student Clubs are required to volunteer every semester, and meet with TTVC staff and interns to find a mission match for their community engagement work and sustained partnership. Our largest program is Tutor-Mentor with over 200 students committing to investing in the lives of our local youth at least 1 hour a week for a whole semester.
Additionally, we have a strong federal work-study program and academic field placements program. Not included in our total is data from our graduate school programs. We continue to work on building the infrastructure to collect that data in the future. We do know that our Law School through clinics, externships, and a public service graduation requirements is investing 15,000+ hours of engagement into our community annual.
Headcount and hours reported for this credit correspond to the students enrolled in the Dougherty Family College and in four-year undergraduate degree programs. The figures reported represent the 2022-2023 academic year.
Information about the university's community service programs:
The Center for the Common good is one of the central hubs of community engagement for the University of St. Thomas. The Center hosts a majority of the university’s community engagement efforts but many offices, colleges, and departments across the university are engaged this work important work.
Community engagement at the University of St. Thomas is weaved into our fabric, as part of our institutional mission is to advance the common good. While the Center for the Common Good (CCG) serves as a hub for community engagement and community partner relationship building, the CCG also does much work supporting community engagement efforts that spring up organically across the University. The five main concentrations of community engagement at the University are within the CCG's Academic Community Engagement (ACE) Program, the Office of Sustainability Initiatives' Sustainable Communities Partnership (SCP), Business 200 Courses, Student Clubs, and the CCG's Tommies Together Volunteer Center (TTVC).
Both the ACE & SCP Programs encompass most of curricular community engagement, pairing instructors who are trained in community engagement with approved CCG Or SCP community partner organizations in order to focus on a question or issue that the professor, their students, and the community partner develop together. Another community engagement program in the curricular realm is the Business 200 course. All Business students are required to complete this course. In this course, students complete a minimum of 40 hours of volunteer service in the community and reflect on what they’ve learned in a series of in-class discussions. Co-curricular programing on campus is led by the TTVC. The TTVC coordinates volunteer programs focused on the social issues of food insecurity, housing insecurity, and the education opportunity gap. Students who nurture their personal interests and goals by joining a Student Club have the opportunity to volunteer with an approved CCG community partner. Student Clubs are required to volunteer every semester, and meet with TTVC staff and interns to find a mission match for their community engagement work and sustained partnership. Our largest program is Tutor-Mentor with over 200 students committing to investing in the lives of our local youth at least 1 hour a week for a whole semester.
Additionally, we have a strong federal work-study program and academic field placements program. Not included in our total is data from our graduate school programs. We continue to work on building the infrastructure to collect that data in the future. We do know that our Law School through clinics, externships, and a public service graduation requirements is investing 15,000+ hours of engagement into our community annual.
The information presented here is self-reported. While AASHE staff review portions of all STARS reports and institutions are welcome to seek additional forms of review, the data in STARS reports are not verified by AASHE. If you believe any of this information is erroneous or inconsistent with credit criteria, please review the process for inquiring about the information reported by an institution or simply email your inquiry to stars@aashe.org.