Keele Deal praised for commitment to the local community
Keele University has reaffirmed its commitment to Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire by pledging to put the economy and quality of life in the local community top of its list of priorities.
Keele joins 30 other institutions in committing to produce a “Civic University Agreement” in partnership with local government and other major institutions.
The new agreement is a key recommendation in a report published by the Civic University Commission set up by the UPP Foundation and chaired by the former Head of the Civil Service, Lord Kerslake.
The report sets out how universities like Keele have the capability, opportunity and responsibility to support the places where they are based to solve some of their most pressing and major problems.
These issues range from helping local business adapt to technological change, to boosting the health of local people, improving education for school pupils and adult learners, and training and developing new civic leaders in every field from politics to the arts.
The report aims to help universities like Keele to build on the excellent work that many of them are already carrying out in these areas, working alongside councils, employers, cultural institutions, schools and further education colleges.
Speaking at the launch of the Civic University Commission report, Chris Skidmore MP, Minister of State for Universities, Science, Research and Innovation, said: "Universities are crucibles of their local communities and are best-placed to help set up coordinated plans for local industrial strategies. I was pleased to read about Keele University's commitment to its New Keele Deal, designed to deliver a local industrial strategy for Stoke-on-Trent and the wider Staffordshire area, in partnership with local authority partners and the private sector."
Professor Trevor McMillan, Vice-Chancellor of Keele University, said: “At Keele, we are proud of the collaborative work that we are undertaking with our local partners to tackle some of the major issues affecting the local areas of Stoke-on-Trent and Staffordshire and beyond.
“Our research is amongst some of the best in the world and our student talent is among the most employable in the country. Initiatives such as The New Keele Deal and Keele Deal | Culture are enabling us to continue and expand our collaborations with local businesses and organisations, translating this expertise into tangible impacts such as the advancement of new products and services within the healthcare industry, the development of the smart energy technologies of the future, and the creation of innovation-led growth and high-value jobs within the local area.
“Through the programmes and projects within The New Keele Deal alone, we aim to support 1,000 local businesses and inject £210million into the local economy, whilst also working to improve local health and care and put the region at the heart of the UK’s transition to a lower carbon economy.”
Lord Kerslake, the chair of Sheffield Hallam University, and a former Chief Executive of Sheffield City Council and Permanent Secretary at the Department of Communities and Local Government, said: “The deep economic and social changes that are happening in Britain today have, alongside Brexit, made the civic role of universities even more vital to the places they are located in.
“The civic universities of the Victorian era were founded as expressions of civic pride, and as a way of sharing knowledge and opportunity at a time of rapid change.
“We are now entering a new industrial revolution when it will be even more vital that knowledge is accessible in as many communities as possible.
“It is not just people outside university grounds who will benefit. Universities are under unprecedented challenge and need to find a broader base of support. Universities need to be part of a community which is engaged, supportive and shares objectives.
“Universities have an irreplaceable and unique role in helping their host communities thrive – and their own success is bound up with the success of the places that gave birth to them.”
Richard Brabner, director of the UPP Foundation, said: “Universities have the ability to make a real difference to the places they are located in through reinvigorating their civic role. But this is not just a responsibility, it’s also an opportunity.
“This is an important report with concrete recommendations that all universities will want to consider. The UPP Foundation created the commission to look at what it means to be a Civic University in the 21st Century and ask local people what they wanted from their local institution.
“We know that many universities want to build engagement with the community around them. It is excellent news that such an impressive list of institutions has already signed up and the UPP Foundation strongly endorses the report’s findings.”
The report warns that there is a danger that any cut in the resources available to universities – for example, a reduction in student fees without the deficit being made up in funding from the Treasury - will mean that work already being done in this area – like help provided to schools and further education colleges – could be slashed.
The report was based on evidence-gathering sessions held across England. The authors also commissioned opinion polling and focus groups in cities and towns to hear from the public what they wanted from their local university.
This research discovered communities welcome opportunities to connect with universities, and there is great local pride about how universities put their hometown on the map.
The report says that the Government needs to fundamentally review policies to support further civic engagement by universities. Until the recent creation of an industrial strategy, government has for many decades been too indifferent about places within the United Kingdom – contributing to some regions falling behind.
But universities can take a vital step at this pivotal time by adopting the Commission’s idea of a Civic University Agreement setting out what they will offer local communities and which major local strategic needs they will seek to address. All this needs to be based on listening to the local community.
The Civic University Agreement signed by 30 universities includes four key points:
- Understanding local populations, and asking them what they want. Analysis of their place and people’s priorities are essential.
- Understanding themselves and what they are able to offer.
- Working with other local anchor institutions, businesses and community organisations to agree where the short, medium and long-term opportunities and problems lie for communities. Linking with local authorities and other local plans, such as the local industrial strategy is particularly important.
- A clear set of priorities. A process of agreeing clear priorities will therefore be necessary and, again, this is where collaboration and aligning resources with local authorities, LEPs (Local Economic Partnerships), NHS bodies and the like can help to identify the live issues that universities can most usefully help with.
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