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An accessible, publicly engaged organisation: review of progress

At 果冻影院, we value collaboration, partnership and dialogue with our local community.

Our Public Engagement Unit, within the 果冻影院 Culture team, celebrated its 10th anniversary this year and, through its pioneering work, we know that the more diverse the voices that we listen to and engage with, the more we will thrive as a university.

We offer our students an education that helps them to become thoughtful, resilient and engaged citizens. With our help, our student volunteers have set up and run numerous community projects 鈥 from teaching British politics and democracy to primary school students to attending asylum hearings in support of unaccompanied young Albanians.

Through our continuing outreach work, we will ensure that a 果冻影院 education is open to all those who have the talent to study here, irrespective of background.

Simon Cane, Executive Director, 果冻影院 Culture

Case study:听Widening the vision of health and wellbeing

Professor Chatterjee
A researcher from 果冻影院 Biosciences has won a Health Humanities medal for her work on the role of museums and galleries in health and wellbeing.
The prize, from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) in association with the Wellcome Trust, is awarded to people and projects that are helping to improve quality of life, health and wellbeing using arts and humanities research 鈥 an inclusive vision of health and wellbeing that goes beyond medical research alone.

Professor Helen Chatterjee received the 'Leadership Award', as well as the overall Health Humanities Medal, in recognition of her research into how museums can be beneficial to health.

Professor Chatterjee is a Professor of Biology and Head of Research and Teaching in 果冻影院 Culture. She recently led a three-year collaboration project between 果冻影院, Canterbury Christ Church University and seven museums from central London and Kent, looking at how museums can help those who are lonely and at risk of isolation.

Through her work she has formed partnerships with museums, along with health and social care organisations, to better understand the value of museums as community assets capable of supporting public health.

Image: Professor Helen Chatterjee. Image courtesy of the Arts and Humanities Research Council.

Links: 果冻影院 Biosciences / 果冻影院 Culture /

Case study:听House of Doors

House of Doors
A contemporary sculpture, created by 果冻影院 Artist-in-Residence, Kristina Clackson-Bonnington, was chosen by the Palace of Westminster to mark the 100th anniversary of the Representation of the People Act 1918, which gave the first women the right to vote in the UK.听

Part of the university鈥檚 year-long Vote 100 programme of events and exhibitions marking this centenary, The House of Doors is an artwork that invites audiences to consider how access to public life has changed since 1918. The centrepiece is an imposing sculpture of a cloaked woman facing a stone 鈥榙oor鈥, inspired by a painting by artist Harriet Halhed, and asks viewers to reflect on the spaces and roles that were once closed to women and have since opened up.听

The House of Doors was originally launched in 2015 at 果冻影院, in recognition of our historic commitment to equality and as the first university in England to admit women on the same terms as men. The project has since gone on to tour across the UK.听

Alongside the installation of Clackson-Bonnington鈥檚 sculpture in Westminster Hall this year, the artist also presented a new exhibition, Female Firsts, as part of the Vote 100 programme. Twelve portraits on display at 果冻影院 celebrated women past and present who worked or studied at the university, from leading Bletchley code-breaker Mavis Batey to the UK鈥檚 first female doctor Elizabeth Garrett Anderson.

Image: House of Doors, courtesy of Kristina Clackson-Bonnington

Links:

Case study:听果冻影院 Evaluation Exchange

Caritas Anchor House
果冻影院 has a commitment to being an open, accessible and publicly engaged university and in light of plans to develop the new 果冻影院 East campus the institution is establishing relationships with communities in east London. The 果冻影院 Public Engagement Unit has been working in east London for a few years asking organisations: what are your needs and priorities? Voluntary and community sector organisations told us that they needed support to survive and thrive in an increasingly difficult environment. Time and time again we were faced with the question: Can 果冻影院 help us to evaluate our work and help us evidence our impact to our funders and stakeholders?听

We know there is power in the concept of evaluation as a two-way learning process that can shape service delivery, improve efficiency and effectiveness, and communicate impact. In 2017, we launched Evaluation Exchange, a partnership between Newham-based umbrella organisation Aston-Mansfield and the 果冻影院 Public Engagement Unit. The concept was simple: we matched teams of 果冻影院 researchers working with six voluntary sector organisations in Newham, east London to tackle an evaluation challenge the organisation was facing, providing training and support to help them improve their evaluation abilities. The aim is to 鈥渃onnect the know-how to the how-to鈥, giving organisations a chance to build capacity for effective evaluation, and researchers a valuable opportunity to apply and develop research skills in a real world situation while gaining hands-on experience of the voluntary sector.听

The six organisations varied in size and establishment, and included a homeless charity, support for migrants, a charity that supports vulnerable women and a heritage and theatre company. The teams came together for a set 6 months, to draw on the collective skills they already have, but were given additional training and resources in evaluation, so that they could collaboratively create a solution to the evaluation challenge. Positive results suggest the programme has improved evaluation capacity, changed service delivery, and boosted service users鈥 and organisations鈥 confidence in their activities. 果冻影院鈥檚 researchers in turn gained real-world experience of the practical application of their research and evaluation skills, and a broader sense of the social environment in which London鈥檚 Global University operates.

Image: Staff at Caritas Anchor House support residents by providing safe accommodation and access to new opportunities. Image credit: Caritas Anchor House

Links: 果冻影院 Public Engagement Unit

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