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Friday, November 15, 2024 at 8:31 AM

W&L Receives National Designation For Community Engagement Efforts

Washington and Lee University has been awarded the 2024 Carnegie Community Engagement Classification, an elective designation that indicates an institutional commitment to community engagement.

Washington and Lee University has been awarded the 2024 Carnegie Community Engagement Classification, an elective designation that indicates an institutional commitment to community engagement.

W&L was one of 40 U.S. colleges and universities to receive this classification from the American Council on Education (ACE) and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching during its 2024 certification cycle. W&L is one of 368 institutions that currently hold the classification endorsement.

“Meaningful collaboration between our campus and community partners is an important part of the W&L experience, and we are grateful to be recognized for our commitment to community engagement,” said University Provost Lena Hill. “Professor Sascha Goluboff’s leadership has been critical in developing an umbrella for our Community-Based Learning efforts, and I look forward to seeing how our students, faculty and staff continue to prioritize the needs of our community and make a positive difference in Lexington, Rockbridge County, and beyond.”

The Carnegie Community Engagement Classification has been the leading framework for institutional assessment and recognition of community engagement in U.S. higher education for the past 19 years with classification cycles in 2006, 2008, 2010, 2015, 2020 and now, 2024. The classification is awarded following a process of selfstudy by each institution, which is then assessed by a national review committee. As one of only 15 private institutions included in this year’s cycle, W&L has demonstrated dynamic and noteworthy community engagement through its mission, campus culture, leadership, resources and practices, said a spokesperson.

W&L’s commitment to community engagement can be found across the university’s campus, with many programs and initiatives facilitated by the Office of Community-Based Learning (CBL). Community-based learning is an educational approach that integrates learning and mentorship with meaningful community partnerships, and the CBL office offers numerous opportunities for W&L students, faculty and staff to support these partnerships through coursework, research, service projects and internships.

“Washington and Lee’s receiving the Carnegie Elective Classification for Community Engagement marks the successful completion of a year-long process in which the Office of Community-Based Learning, the Community Engagement Service-Learning Committee, and key staff, professors, instructors and administrators collaborated in an unprecedented effort to showcase W&L’s commitment to our community engagement efforts on campus and with our community partners,” said Sascha Goluboff, professor of cultural anthropology and director of community-based learning. “We are honored to receive this recognition, and I can’t wait to see how our institutional commitment to community engagement will continue to grow in the near future.”

During the 2023-24 academic year, 24 community-based learning courses were offered to students across a range of academic disciplines, including English, education, sociology and anthropology, cognitive and behavioral science, accounting, and poverty and human capability studies.

W&L also facilitates community engagement and mentorship opportunities for faculty members, particularly through the CBL Faculty Collaborative, which trains faculty and instructors on the best and most innovative practices in community-based learning, as well as provides them with critical resources and connections across campus to foster professional growth and course development.

Recent examples of W&L’s community-based learning classes include: - Physics and engineering students partnered with the Rockbridge Area YMCA to enrich science programming for students enrolled in the YMCA’s after-school program.

- W&L’s Student Consulting group pursued collaborations with local businesses and non-profits.

- Students in an introductory CBL course met with residents in Glasgow to strategize ways to increase the well-being of their community.

To learn more about W&L’s Office of Community-Based Learning, visit https://my.wlu.edu/office-of-community-based-learning.


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Dr. Ronald Laub DDS
W&L Athletics