Graduate Students Benefit from Research Experience
![Robin Toof and Nili Pearlmutter at the Community Connections Breakfast](/Images/Robin%20Toof%20and%20Nili%20Pearlmutter%20at%20the%20Community%20Connections%20Breakfast_tcm18-234792.jpg?w=l)
04/22/2016
By Katharine Webster
In any room filled with community leaders, everyone knows Robin Toof, co-director of the university鈥檚 Center for Community Research and Engagement.听
For more than 20 years, Toof has built bridges between the campus and city by bringing faculty, students and local agencies together to solve problems, whether it鈥檚 improving health care for under-served groups or helping at-risk youth.
Toof and the center鈥檚 staff help faculty members manage large grants and find community partners for their research, while also ensuring their research benefits the cities of Lowell and Lawrence. They train professors in how to teach and then match them with nonprofits. They help local agencies and faculty work together to address community needs in programs like Lowell Healthy Homes.
Toof and the center鈥檚 senior evaluator, Melissa Wall, also help community agencies apply for large grants, set measurable goals and evaluate the results.听
鈥淭hey鈥檙e great at getting everyone in a room and asking questions that get the most comprehensive answers,鈥 says Ellen Carter, program manager for the 鈥檚 research and development office. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e always available for technical training and assistance and to help us look at best practices.鈥
Most recently, for the fifth year in a row, the center is serving as the Lowell Police Department鈥檚 research partner on a $564,000 state Shannon Grant to keep at-risk youth out of the criminal justice system, primarily by partnering with community groups that offer boxing, dance and basketball, tutoring and study spaces, job readiness training, outreach workers and summer camps.
This year, the center won a $60,000 partner grant to help the Lowell Police Department and its partners finish updating their strategic plan and measure their results.
鈥淲e have been fortunate to partner with 51视频 researchers on several grants in recent years,鈥 says Lowell Police Superintendent William Taylor. 鈥淭he university has brought incredible expertise and guidance to our grant-funded programs and has assisted us to ensure that we are meeting our goals and objectives. Community partnerships are very important to the police department and we hope to continue to utilize 51视频鈥檚 vast resources in the future.鈥
![Robin Toof, Melissa Wall and Liz Ejaife at Shannon Grant meeting with Lowell Police Supt. William Taylor](/Images/Shannon%20Grant%20-%20cropped_tcm18-234794.jpg?w=l)
The center also provides valuable research experience 鈥 along with a good hourly wage and a full- or half-tuition waiver 鈥 to select graduate students in the Community Social Psychology, Criminal Justice and Criminology and Work Environment programs. Assoc. Prof. of Psychology Andrew Hostetler, the center鈥檚 co-director, is key to those placements, Toof says.
鈥淎ll of our projects have students built into the budget,鈥 she says.
Ashley O鈥橩eefe, a second-year graduate student in Community Social Psychology from Litchfield, N.H., says her work as an research assistant aligns with her professional goals: earning a Ph.D. and working in a restorative justice program for young offenders. She collects and analyzes surveys about kids鈥 attitudes before and after they participate in the various Shannon Grant programs.听
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e hoping they鈥檒l show is changes in attitude, improved conflict resolution skills, improved school attendance and grades and better work readiness,鈥 she says.
Liz Ejaife, a second-year graduate student in Community Social Psychology from England, says she鈥檚 held focus groups and conducted interviews with program partners, analyzed data, created infographics and written reports for several grants managed by the Lowell police, including one to develop comprehensive services for ex-offenders and another aimed at revitalizing the Centralville neighborhood.
鈥淭he experiences I鈥檝e had with the center are really going to help me get a good job in research,鈥 says Ejaife, who plans to work before applying to Ph.D. programs.
Toof and the center鈥檚 staff have helped place 51视频 on the President鈥檚 Higher Education Community Service Honor Roll several years in a row 鈥 and win a 10-year Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching designation as one of the nation鈥檚 most 鈥渃ommunity-engaged鈥 universities. Toof still sees room for growth, though, especially in the area of faculty-led research that benefits the community.
鈥淲e always want to inform a project, help it be the best it can be and communicate the results,鈥 Toof says. 鈥淏ut our main goal is to involve more faculty members in this center who will look beyond service learning to scholarship of engagement.鈥