重口味SM

Shauna Brail (photo by Darren Calabrese)

How urban studies led the way in community engagement, service learning for undergrads

鈥淯sing those skills you are learning in school and then applying them in practice was a superbly valuable experience,鈥 alumnus says

Just over 40 years ago, a bold alliance of city builders scaled the ivy-covered walls of the 重口味SM and planted the seeds of the urban studies program.

Now the program is a catalyst in a dynamic new landscape for the university, students and city.

Firmly rooted in community engagement and experiential learning, the program has placed over 300 volunteers and interns at non-profits, civic services and community organizations over the past five years alone.

Many of its graduates are playing key roles in a new era of urban transformation, starting their own non-profits, working in government and the private sector and running community initiatives.

鈥淚f we look at where all of those students are and the contribution collectively that they are making, it is really very impressive,鈥 said Shauna Brail, a graduate of the urban studies program and associate professor, teaching stream.

鈥淭hey are really starting to make a difference in terms of some of the issues at the forefront, the things that make for a good, strong healthy city.鈥

Brail directed the experiential learning initiatives for urban studies for the past decade, and is widely acknowledged as the driving force behind the program鈥檚 growth.

Enrolment has more than doubled since she arrived in 2005, to about 200 students today. Although relatively small and lean, the program exerts an influence well beyond its size and boasts a number of distinctions.

Founded at Innis College in 1974, urban studies is the oldest college-based academic program at U of T, and its internship course is the longest running at the university. The program鈥檚 second-year gateway course 鈥 Multidisciplinary Approaches to Urban Studies 鈥 is the largest experiential learning course in the Faculty of Arts & Science.

The program has a strong reputation for collaboration both within and outside the university.

Other departments and even universities from the United States seek out urban studies instructors for their expertise in creating hands-on learning experiences, and the program鈥檚 growing legacy of building bridges to key initiatives in the city has not gone unnoticed.

Brail was recently tabbed by U of T President Meric Gertler 鈥 a long-time champion of the program 鈥 as a special adviser charged with helping faculty and departments from all three university campuses to connect with surrounding communities. (.)

鈥淥ne of the top priorities I鈥檝e articulated for the 重口味SM is to strengthen our contribution to city-building in the urban region we鈥檙e privileged to call home,鈥 said Gertler.

鈥淪o I鈥檓 absolutely delighted that Shauna Brail has agreed to take on the task of coordinating the efforts of our academic community to that end.鈥

Brail and the program hope to add to the contributions they are already making to city-building, playing key roles in everything from the revitalization of Regent Park 鈥 Canada's oldest and largest social housing project 鈥 to promising new citizen-based initiatives that are just getting started.

(Below: Regent Park during demolition, January 2015/photo by Timothy Neesam via Flickr)

photo of Regent Park during redevelopment

All of which makes it hard to believe there was a time when the urban studies program had to struggle for its very survival.

The program grew out of a groundswell of citizen participation and community-based development in Toronto in the 1970s, recalls former director Patricia Petersen.

From its beginnings, the urban studies program went against the grain. The college system had not originally been intended to run academic programs, and Innis College enlisted reform-minded councillors such as Jack Layton to help set up and teach the curriculum.

Petersen says it was an attempt to connect the university to the rapidly changing world outside its ivory towers, but the program had to hang on through some lean years as enrollment fluctuated, kept alive largely by the efforts of then-college principal Frank Cunningham and supporters such as Gertler, an urban geography professor at the time.

鈥淥ur message always was: 鈥淕uys, the world is urbanizing. Toronto is growing up,鈥欌 says Petersen.

The program鈥檚 multidisciplinary approach 鈥 students have to take courses in related departments such as geography to complete their degree 鈥 is a key strength, and a turning point came in 2006 when urban studies was allowed offer a minor.

photo of Tony De FrancoThe minor has generated hundreds of enrolments since its inception, attracting the likes of former student Tony De Franco, now working on several downtown city renewal initiatives as a planner with Urban Strategies.

De Franco (pictured at right) did his urban studies internship at the city鈥檚 planning department before going on to take his master鈥檚 degree and starting his career.

鈥淭oronto is its own kind of urban laboratory 鈥 it鈥檚 incredibly diverse 鈥 and so using those skills you are learning in school and then applying them in practice was a superbly valuable experience,鈥 he says.

The fourth-year internships are the most sought-after in the program, an academically rigorous combination of seminars, course readings, written assignments and eight hours a week at a work placement outside the university.

Brail had 45 applications this year for 20 placements, which are reserved for the highest achievers. The course also provides some of the most important 鈥渨in-win鈥 relationships between the city and the university.

鈥淭he students get to see what the bump and grind of politics is all about, and we get to interact with the academic and intellectual rigour that these students can provide,鈥 said Toronto Councillor Joe Mihevc, who has taken on several interns over the years.

鈥淚f we want to have a more thoughtful approach to city-building, I think these kinds of relationships are really important.鈥

Urban studies graduate David Fitzpatrick interned at the city鈥檚 planning office in 2006 and now works as special projects coordinator in the chief planner鈥檚 office.

鈥淭he internship not only gave me great insight into how the city actually works, but now I work professionally side by side with people I met while I was interning.鈥

Brail worked in economic development for the province and in the private sector 鈥 where she connected with the late city-building guru David Pecaut, among others 鈥 before a retiring Petersen encouraged her to apply for her job in 2005.

(Below: Regent Park community housing manager Barry Thomas speaks with Urban Studies students/photo by Brianna Goldberg)image of students at regent park

She arrived with the goal of diversifying the internship course, and now places students in a range of city planning and economic development offices, as well as non-profits and community groups such as The Centre for Social Innovation (CSI), Jane鈥檚 Walk, the United Way, Evergreen Cityworks, the Centre for Learning and Development in Regent Park, and research organizations such as U of T's .

Many of those relationships were forged by Brail after attending events or making cold calls to organizations she identified as a good fit for students, the program鈥檚 academic goals and the city鈥檚 needs.

The ripple of benefits for both students and the city has been undeniable.

鈥淪hauna Brail came to me and said we can give you a student for a year,鈥 recalls Tonya Surman, the CEO of the Centre for Social Innovation (CSI), which provides work space and support for startups with a social mission.

鈥淭hat was around 2006, and at that time we only had three staff, so having one more set of hands, even for a day a week, was huge鈥 for CSI, which now boasts 50 staff and includes 800 organizations in three Toronto locations, generating 1,700 jobs and $250 million in revenue a year.

As an intern, Erin Kang was involved with the opening of CSI鈥檚 Regent Park office, which Surman calls a 鈥渂eautiful example鈥 of the synergy between the academic work Kang did as a student with the centre鈥檚 mission.

Now she is CSI鈥檚 events coordinator and one of Surman鈥檚 key staff members.

(Below, Kang talks about her experience with experiential learning and how it helped her put her education to practical use during the launch of the Council of Ontario Universities report, Bringing Life to Learning at Ontario Universities last year/photo courtesy the Council of Ontario Universities)

photo of Erin Kang

鈥淭hat鈥檚 why the internship program was so valuable,鈥 said Kang. 鈥淎 lot of it is all about making connections, and those connections result in a lot of their own ripple effects.鈥

Since finding her calling at CSI, Kang notes she鈥檚 also built relationships with many other parts of U of T, such as student groups at the Rotman School of Management, the U of T Alumni Association and the 重口味SM Scarborough.

photo of Matt BlackettAnother Centre for Social Innovation 鈥渁lum鈥 is Matt Blackett 鈥 publisher and creative director of Spacing Magazine and store (pictured at right at Spacing's first anniversary.)

Blackett is another who counts his relationship with Brail and the urban studies program as an important connection.

鈥淥ne of the great things about the people who come to us from this program is they have very strong research skills and a pretty deep knowledge of urbanism,鈥 said Blackett, noting that many still contribute to the civic-minded publication.

鈥淭hey are all people just like us who care about the city and are trying to improve it.鈥

The popularity of the internships with both placement organizations and students alike led to the creation of another experiential learning stream in 2009. To give students an earlier exposure to the concept, the program鈥檚 second-year introductory course was expanded from 40 to about 100 students and a new 鈥渟ervice learning鈥 option added. Brail teamed up with U of T鈥檚 which provided support to the program.

Now referred to as 鈥淐ommunity Integrated Learning,鈥 service learning was meant to match community needs with learning experiences. This past year, the program placed 54 students at 15 non-profit organizations such as food banks, shelters, community centres and neighbourhood associations.

(Image below: Brail with students at food bank/courtesy Donna Santos)

Phioto of Shauna Brail at food bank with students

Every student placed at an organization spends 12 hours volunteering and writes a reflective journal about their experiences that integrates what they learned at the placement with course readings and materials. Well over half of all students choose the service learning option each year, said Brail.

鈥淚t excites them in terms of being able to understand concepts we鈥檙e talking about in class and to contribute to the city.鈥

A study she did based on a review of 31 reflective journals submitted by students over a three-year period (2009-2011) concluded experiential service learning creates ongoing benefits for students and placements alike, a fact urban studies graduates continue to demonstrate.

Taylor Brydges did her service learning placement at the Fort York Food Bank and her internship at the Martin Prosperity Institute.

She continued to volunteer at the food bank for several years after her placement, and wrote her undergrad thesis on the gentrification of the surrounding neighbourhood. Brydges later wrote her master's thesis on fashion retailers in the area and worked as a researcher for the institute after her internship.

(Below: Urban Studies students walk through a development area of Regent Park/photo by Brianna Goldberg)students walk through regent park

Now doing her PhD at Uppsala University in Sweden on the Canadian fashion industry, Brydges says experiential learning is where she really saw the rubber hit the road.

鈥淯rban studies facilitated those opportunities for me. And faculty like Shauna are still some of my biggest mentors and supporters. They just care about their students.鈥

Brail says the work that goes into supporting students and maintaining program standards cuts both ways, turning out 鈥渢op-notch鈥 graduates and building the program鈥檚 reputation but limiting its ability to expand their internship course, for example, within their current resources.

(Below: listen to a podcast story featuring Shauna Brail's class touring Richmond and Spadina)

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鈥淚 think the greatest challenge is sorting out, both institutionally and departmentally, how to support the development of these types of courses and demonstrating an appreciation of the intensive work required to run them successfully over the long term,鈥 she said.

鈥淭his is a problem that has been documented elsewhere as well and it is not unique to U of T.鈥

That鈥檚 why Brail is understandably excited about the chance to create more opportunities for student placements by expanding collaboration with colleagues at U of T through the new adviser role and helping them leverage their expertise to connect with community needs.

She notes a solid foundation is in place through the work the urban studies program is doing in places such as Regent Park and elsewhere throughout the city, and their advice is already widely sought after by other departments trying to develop their own internship and experiential learning programs.

鈥淚ncreasing the number of experiential learning opportunities for our students is a key part of what we hope to accomplish, and Dr. Brail has a brilliant record of leadership and innovation in teaching and learning outside the classroom,鈥 said Gertler.

鈥淚n particular, she has shown tremendous skill and energy in building relationships with internal and external stakeholders, to provide invaluable opportunities for our students to learn by doing, in urban-focused settings.鈥

(Photo below of Brail with students at 401 Richmond by Brianna Goldberg.)

photo of Shauna Brail with students on roof of 401 Richmond

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