1. Introduction
Variations in graduate student experiences persist across social identities (e.g., race/ethnicity, gender, social class, disability/able-bodied, and sexual identity) despite decades of national and local efforts [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7]. Racism, sexism, ableism, and other interlocking systems of oppression create higher education environments and shape graduate education experiences that are not conducive to the success of students from marginalized groups. The literature notes that Black women graduate students, for example, deal with invisibility, social and academic exclusion, tokenism, and a lack of support for scholarly research dedicated to women and communities of color to name a few issues [
5]. As another example, despite the passage of the Americans with Disabilities Act in 1990, ableism remains normalized in higher education institutions, so much so that scholars have needed to fight for disability accommodations to be viewed as shared accountability as opposed to a burden that undermines productivity [
2]. In essence, inequity in graduate education is omnipresent.
STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) fields are particularly notable for being challenging environments for several groups. The national government has explicitly expressed the importance of diversifying these fields so that the workforce better reflects the country’s demographic profile [
8]. Unfortunately, marginalized groups continue to have a significant disparity in degree attainment in these areas. For example, African American and Latinx doctoral students in STEM take longer to complete their doctoral programs or leave them between the first two years [
9,
10]. Moreover, extensive research has focused on exploring the experiences of STEM graduate students from historically marginalized groups and the challenges they encounter, such as isolation [
11,
12,
13], tokenism and exclusion [
14], inequality [
15,
16], lack of personal support [
10], and racial stereotyping [
17,
18,
19]. Scholars have explored these challenges from ecological and socialization perspectives, highlighting issues related to program environments, advisor–advisee relationships, program expectations, and social interactions leading to disruption in marginalized students’ persistence, time to degree, and attrition [
9,
16,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24].
Creating change that improves the experiences of STEM graduate students from historically marginalized groups is challenging and complex. As a National Academies Working Group [
8] articulated in its analysis of graduate student mentoring, university leaders do not know how to effectively change graduate education or develop integrated networks across organizational layers that include institutions, departments, programs, and individual advisors. As explained by Fleming and colleagues [
25], because graduate education tends to be controlled at the individual discipline or departmental level, as opposed to higher college or university levels of the organization, graduate student socialization happens at the discipline or departmental level [
26,
27,
28,
29]. Processes tied to students’ time in programs tend to occur at this level, including managing admissions, funding, and degree requirements, all of which are influenced by disciplinary norms and practices [
30].
To add another layer of complexity, a significant proportion of STEM graduate students in some disciplines, such as engineering, are funded via research assistantships, which tend to be managed by individual faculty members. Relative to life and physical sciences, graduate education in engineering is less coupled to the undergraduate enterprise from a funding perspective (i.e., via teaching assistantships), leaving colleges of engineering with even fewer internal resource mechanisms to incentivize or demand changes in graduate education [
31]. In short, the highly decentralized nature of graduate education in engineering makes integrated reform strategies extremely challenging [
25].
Critically, efforts to diversify student demographics, including different racial, ethnic, and gender groups, are not enough to promote degree completion, reduce attrition rates, or improve overall student experiences. Dr. Julie Posselt, the author of
Equity in Science, states that equity work is most effective via organizational change, which entails changing policies, practices, and mindsets [
32]. Instead of trying to make graduate students from marginalized groups change to fit within an inequitable system, we join scholars like Posselt in arguing that structural, political, and social transformation is needed to promote student success and well-being. Systems of oppression (e.g., racism, ableism, sexism, heterosexism, classism) and other disadvantages across the interconnected systems and processes that shape graduate education need to be disrupted. Furthermore, the common use of student-focused interventions (e.g., mentoring, tutoring, and bridge programs) cannot solely be responsible for combatting the effects of these oppressive systems. Thus, we believe transformative organizational change must occur to realize equity in engineering graduate education.
1.1. Purpose
The purpose of this exploratory research paper is to investigate the applicability of the Collective Impact framework [
33,
34,
35,
36] to organizing and establishing change efforts focused on promoting equity in engineering graduate education at the college level. Because Collective Impact is traditionally used to address social problems beyond the purview and authority of a single organization, our project focused on adapting this approach to the context of engineering graduate education. For example, Collective Impact led us to emphasize cross-unit partnerships and collaboration instead of working through a single organization, such as an individual department or the dean’s office. Ennis and Tofa [
37] note the need for contextual adaptation or translating to advance understanding of where and how the Collective Impact framework has been used and to what extent it has been useful. Accordingly, the remainder of this paper further describes our process for translation using action research. We focus on the development of a research- and practice-based center focused on organizational change across a college of engineering at a large, predominantly white, research-intensive institution.
1.2. Case Context
The center discussed herein came to fruition following a call from the National Science Foundation (NSF). In 2021, NSF requested proposals focused on developing centers focused on equity in engineering that are intended to catalyze systemic cultural change. Building on the practical and scholarly backgrounds of the faculty and administrators on our team, we successfully proposed a project focused on developing a center focused on transforming graduate education throughout the College of Engineering (COE) at a single institution. The center is called Partnerships and Research on the Equity of Graduate Education in Engineering (PROTEGE). The NSF specified that the development of the center take place over a two-year period. At the time of writing this paper, we were in the middle of Year 2.
PROTEGE is located at Virginia Tech, a large, public, predominantly white, research-intensive institution. Our project team includes COE leadership, education researchers, engineering faculty, postdoctoral researchers, and graduate students. The COE dean is the principal investigator for the grant, with the Associate Dean for Graduate and Professional Studies, the Associate Dean for Equity and Engagement, and two faculty members serving as co-principal investigators. We approached this work from the perspective that engineering graduate education is a multilayered system and that, if we are to address inequities across engineering graduate education, we must take a systematic approach. These approaches must consider the entirety of graduate education and not depend on student-focused interventions alone. We believe it is the system that must sustainably transform, not the students navigating this system.
2. Adopting a Theory of Change: Collective Impact
We situated our center’s organizational change strategy in the Collective Impact approach (and language), popularized by John Kania and Mark Kramer [
33,
34,
35,
36]. Although Collective Impact is most commonly used within community organizing contexts, we chose this approach because of its emphasis on cross-sectional partnerships [
34], an approach we presumed to be vital given the decentralized nature of graduate education in engineering. Though the terminology of Collective Impact more recently gained traction and popularity in the United States, several scholars and organizers have noted that the ideas themselves are not new. “Against [a] backdrop of decades of work on coalitions and other forms of organizational partnerships, collective impact can best be understood as a synthesis of practice-based principles for those seeking to build alliances and coalitions to tackle complex problems in local communities” ([
38], p. 426). Collective Impact also centers on systemic approaches focused on the dynamics between contributing organizations [
34].
In contrast to adopting an isolated impact perspective, where organizations work independently on isolated interventions, Collective Impact emphasizes the need for cross-sector collaboration and partnership, where many organizations commit to a common agenda for lasting, effective social change [
33,
34,
39]. Such partnerships have proven successful in scaling up initiatives and supporting large-scale change [
40], and prior work demonstrates the usefulness of this lens within the broadening participation in the STEM space [
41,
42,
43,
44]. For example, Edwards and colleagues [
41] used the Collective Impact framework to analyze the success of the National Society of Black Engineers’ (NSBE) Summer Engineering Experience for Kids (SEEK) program, a large, national scale STEM outreach program. They used Collective Impact as a lens for understanding how NSBE scaled up SEEK nationally, given the need for collaboration across schools, companies, and other partners in various cities across the United States. Fletcher and colleagues [
42] explored Collective Impact as a framework for coordinating systemic changes necessary to remove structural barriers for marginalized students accessing computer science education across multiple states. The Expanding Computing Education Pathways Alliance leveraged Collective Impact along with a five-stage model of change to serve as a guide for state leaders to develop broadening participation solutions relevant to their state-specific needs while utilizing common language and a common approach across all projects. Uddin [
43] discussed the early application of Collective Impact as a solution to increase Latinx students’ access to STEM education in the northeast Tennessee region. Local non-profit organizations, educational institutions, industries, and the State Education Department were identified as necessary partners that collectively created an initiative to increase access to STEM education for a growing Latinx population.
Scholars assert that Collective Impact initiatives typically rely on the presence of five conditions: (1) Common agenda, (2) shared measurement systems, (3) mutually reinforced activities, (4) continuous communication, and (5) backbone support. Each condition is summarized in
Table 1. In addition to pursuing these conditions, we also reviewed literature proposing additional conditions, such as assessing community readiness (e.g., [
45,
46]); highlighting dilemmas that emerge during the early stages of Collective Impact, such as deciding when to combine existing efforts as opposed to taking up new initiatives (e.g., [
47]); and forefronting its deficiencies, such as not addressing the need to meaningfully engage those most affected by the issues (e.g., [
48,
49]). The insights gained from these efforts will be discussed in the Results and Discussion section.
3. Materials and Methods
To establish a system that can sustain change efforts and work through the process of contextual adaptation systematically, we took an action research approach. Our view of action research is the same as [
50]: it is a phenomenological methodology for researching organizational processes and practices. Action research aligns with the principles of Collective Impact, whereby, “the involvement with practitioners over things that actually matter to them provides a richness of insight that could not be gained in other ways … and likely to be of practical values” ([
50], p. 388). According to Susman and Evered [
51], action research typically involves five cyclical phases: (1) Diagnosing, (2) action planning, (3) action taking, (4) evaluating, and (5) specifying learning. Throughout this two-year project, we have engaged with each of the five phases, albeit non-linearly, with the purpose of establishing the infrastructure needed to sustain equity-focused changes to graduate education across a college of engineering.
In this section, we discuss the activities (
Table 2) we engaged in as first attempts at implementing the Collective Impact framework. The team engaged in this work included the College of Engineering leadership (e.g., COE Dean, Associate Dean of Graduate and Professional Studies, Associate Dean of Equity and Engagement), education researchers, the engineering faculty, postdoctoral researchers, and graduate students. Although our methods are not traditional (e.g., surveys, focus groups), we believe that sharing our approach can establish a blueprint for others who may similarly want to adopt the Collective Impact approach for their own context.
3.1. Team Meetings
Team meetings were regularly held, primarily focusing on overseeing change efforts led by team members and ensuring the team was cognizant of efforts ongoing elsewhere in the COE. These meetings also included discussions about translating the five conditions of Collective Impact, using formal and informal reflection activities that we discuss in subsequent sections. Because it was logistically infeasible to identify a single meeting that worked for everyone on a team of more than 10 people, we held multiple weekly or biweekly meetings that targeted different stakeholder groups. For example, during the first semester of the project, we held three different meetings. The first meeting included the non-administrative members of the team (i.e., regular tenure-track faculty members); the second meeting included team members most actively involved in the project, often referred to as members of the Backbone Organization; and the third meeting included administrative members of the team (i.e., the dean and associate deans). The center director attended each of these meetings to ensure communication channels were open across these different groups. During all meetings, detailed notes were documented and later used as a data source for synthesizing our findings for this paper.
3.2. Reflection Activities
We conducted reflection activities periodically to ensure team members could share their honest opinions and perspectives with each other without the potential power dynamics that can be present in a team meeting. These activities focused on the conditions of Collective Impact. For example, two reflection activities occurred during the first phase of the project: (1) a
common agenda reflection activity and (2) a
communications reflection activity. Project team members were prompted to reflect on the essential elements of a common agenda, including (a) guiding principles, (b) common problem definition, (c) goals, (d) framework for change, and (e) a plan for learning and evaluation [
52]. For the communications reflection activity, the purpose was to help the teamwork toward developing a communications plan, another key element of Collective Impact [
33]. For each activity, individual responses were synthesized, summarized, shared with team members, and discussed in subsequent team meetings. Given that Continuous Communication and the Common Agenda are two of the five conditions for Collective Impact, the individual responses from each activity were also used as data sources for this paper. The artifacts produced from these activities will be further discussed in the upcoming sections.
3.3. Mini-Projects
Mini-projects were engaged to provide us with real-time feedback on what it is like to pursue change in our local context. These projects were initially conceptualized and led by faculty team members. To ensure that the activities aligned with the common agenda and focused on the appropriate systems component within graduate education, each researcher led a mini-project focused on one of four focus areas—Expectations and Accountability, Access and Resources, Culture and Skill Development, and Community and Advocacy. Postdocs and graduate students were also encouraged to propose ideas for projects relevant to the focus areas. These projects carefully considered the timeline/cycle for their respective graduate processes (e.g., graduate admission occurs in the early spring). Each group was responsible for leading efforts that facilitated a connection between research and practice in that particular area, leveraging existing information whenever possible. Examples include providing a series of one-pagers to the system changers that synthesize research on particular topics and analyzing existing documents to highlight areas for improvement. Attempting to enact change while establishing the center ensured that our discussions did not simply remain theoretical and grappled with the organizational realities and constraints of the local context.
3.4. Stakeholder Meetings
Stakeholder meetings were organized and attended to ensure that our team considered the perspectives of those beyond its core members. For example, we assembled an advisory board of experts outside our organization to provide formative feedback to the center. Advisory board members were college/university-level administrators from a diverse set of institutions and early-to-mid-career scholars with strong records in graduate education, diversity, equity, and inclusion. It was our hope that, with this mixture, we could facilitate brainstorming and feedback that pushes our initiatives to new spaces while learning from prior implementation experiences of advisory board members. Beyond the advisory board, we similarly engaged stakeholders local to our context, such as graduate program directors and coordinators, graduate students, faculty/staff, and department heads.
3.5. External Evaluation
We leveraged external evaluation to obtain an outside perspective on the process we were adopting. During the first year of the project, we used an external evaluator to assess the center’s ability to provide equitable and inclusive graduate education. The overarching evaluation question used to guide the external evaluation was as follows: “To what extent did the Center for Equity in Engineering (CEE) create an infrastructure that provides a more equitable and inclusive graduate engineering education where every graduate student is provided with opportunities to develop their technical and professional skills, establish their identities as professional engineers, and be included and engaged in the community?” We underwent a process evaluation approach to evaluate the progress toward this question. The external evaluator collected data via semi-structured interviews with members of the project team and a document analysis of documents in the project team’s cloud storage and sharing system. The final report was shared with the entire project team and was used to inform the approach to Year 2 of the grant.
3.6. Writing/Synthesizing
Lastly, we used writing/synthesizing to more explicitly specify learning. As activities were completed, multiple team members worked on writing and synthesizing the products of the mini-projects and activities implemented. These outputs are both internal to the center and the COE graduate education environment and external via conference and journal publications. Internal to the center, we conducted audit trails to reflect on decisions being made in real time and noted insights that emerged as we engaged in center activities. Audit trails are oftentimes used to establish trustworthiness and validity in the research process [
53]. While it is not a widely adopted practice, it was established by Halpern [
54] as a method to control quality issues that may arise in the qualitative research process. It is defined as a record of how the study was conducted and concluded by researchers [
53]. We used the audit trail to practice reflexivity by documenting our thoughts, feelings, and reactions. Because we also took meeting notes, in the context of this project, audit trails were used primarily to document our reflections on decisions that were being made in relation to the activities described in this section. Similar to the meeting notes, the audit trails were later used as a data source for synthesizing our findings for this paper.
4. Results and Discussion: Contextual Adaptation of Collective Impact
After exploring and/or adopting all five conditions of Collective Impact, we strengthened our approach to each and gained insights about the application of Collective Impact in the engineering graduate education context. In the following sections, we discuss the possibilities ofdrawing on this framework to advance equitable support for graduate students.
4.1. Common Agenda
Creating a common agenda proved to be a useful activity, establishing a shared understanding of the problem and approach among our team members. Creating a common agenda also helped us to recognize and discuss our different perspectives. To do so, a reflection activity was drafted and completed by all team members individually. The activity asked members to reflect on various aspects of the center, including what principles and values should guide our work, what the biggest issues are in relation to equity in the COE, and how we might prioritize improving various levers of the graduate education system. The center director conducted a thematic analysis to synthesize responses into one document. The results of this activity follow below.
Because our team was initiated through the development of a grant, it was relatively easy to agree on a vision: Our vision is to catalyze more equitable and inclusive graduate engineering education, where student experiences and outcomes are not predicted by demographic variables and every graduate student is provided with opportunities to develop their technical and professional skills, establish their identities as professional engineers, and be included and engaged in the community. However, through reflection and discussion, we realized that team members had varied views on the extent to which equity was an issue locally, often noting that it depended on student level, departmental context, and the faculty involved. Although we were not able to reach a consensus on the exact nature of the problem, we were able to identify patterns in relation to how our team describes the problem and how it could be divided into four aspects.
First, graduate education policies and practices are seldom built with equity in mind from the onset. Second, inequities are not often addressed in graduate education, leaving many with the perception that there is no accountability (i.e., tolerance of poor behavior and incivility). Third, promoting equity is not an existing skill amongst most administrators, faculty, and staff. Lastly, equity is one of many values and can often conflict with other values held by the college. Although we had varying opinions on the lived experiences of graduate students, our team was able to rally around the need to address each of these four issues. A collective understanding of our vision and how we define the problem of equity in engineering graduate education helps ensure that all team members can contribute in ways that best fit their skills and expertise while knowing that all efforts work towards a shared goal.
In addition to agreeing on the problem, we also found it productive to establish a shared approach via guiding principles that represented how we would go about doing this work. We agreed on five principles. First, we would pursue equity through organizational change. Second, we would pursue changes that would be likely to have a lasting impact. Third, we would ensure the work remained the college’s responsibility. Fourth, we would pursue change in a manner that empowered graduate students while leveraging existing resources wherever possible. These principles (summarized in
Table 3) have guided our team’s work and provided us with easy reference points for ensuring that our approach to change aligns with our shared vision.
4.2. Backbone Organization
Because the primary goal of the first year was to develop an organizational structure and a clear description of what the center does and does not do, it was critical that we establish a clear understanding of what role a backbone organization would play in this context. We identified three different roles, as displayed in
Table 4, that needed to be fulfilled. First, the backbone organization needs to enable changing the system, focusing both on changing processes and changing attitudes. Second, the backbone organization needs to provide direction, ensuring that equity is more often a guiding principle in work across the organization. Lastly, the backbone organization needs to support leadership development, cultivating ownership and leadership among the departments while supporting the training of administrators (e.g., department heads, graduate program directors) and any other department-level bureaucrats (e.g., coordinators) to ensure the main issues are not perpetuated through their practices and enactments of policy. Establishing clear roles for a backbone organization allowed our team to identify what contribution the center could make in the local context.
4.3. Mutually Reinforcing Activities
“
Advocacy can point out problems and recommend solutions, while managerialism has a role in implementing change”—Julie R. Posselt ([
32], p. 141)
Ensuring that activities across graduate education in a college mutually reinforce each other is a daunting task, primarily because graduate education is a complex and multifaceted system. As Posselt notes in the quote above, it is also important to ensure that activities leverage both advocacy and managerialism. To enact change, we identified 13 levers within this system (i.e., system components) that need to be addressed to realize the change we want to see. The identification of levers came from the experience and expertise of team members and was facilitated through the development of the common agenda and our shared understanding of the problem (discussed in
Section 4.1), where each team member was instructed to note how they would prioritize each lever on a scale of 1–5, with 1 being “Not a Priority” and 5 being “Essential”. The levers were further refined in our team meetings and through our attempts to summarize how all the components of our project fit together. These levers represented the components of graduate education that we identified as (a) being vital to achieving an equitable graduate education and (b) within our project team’s sphere of influence. We also considered necessity and feasibility. Focusing on one area or lever at a time will not bring the transformative change that we seek; thus, following the conditions of Collective Impact, our goal is to push on more than one lever at a time.
To support a systemic approach to using these levers, additional organization was needed to help the team conceptualize the work we needed to do. We decided to group these levers into four focus areas that align with the dimensions of organizational justice, as shown in
Table 5,
Table 6,
Table 7 and
Table 8. Organizational justice is a framework for conceptualizing equity within this context and refers to an employed individual’s perceived fairness of their treatment in an organization [
55]. There are four dimensions of organizational justice, including (1) distributive, (2) procedural, (3) interpersonal, and (4) informational [
55,
56].
Distributive justice refers to the fairness of the resource distribution and outcomes, whereas
procedural justice refers to the processes that lead to decisions being made [
56,
57]. Informational and interpersonal justice, grouped under interactional justice, refers to how people treat one another through sharing information
(informational justice) and respect (
interpersonal justice). When considering which activities to pursue, we consider each focus area, its associated levers, issues or opportunities for change, and its goal for change.
4.4. Shared Measurement System
Members of the center identified the following goals and constraints for the targeted set of metrics: (1) each metric must be directly related to a process or outcome of at least one change lever (refer to
Table 5,
Table 6,
Table 7 and
Table 8); (2) metrics should align with measures identified in strategic plans of the COE or the university, when possible; (3) metrics should rely on data that are currently being collected by the COE or the university, or that will be naturally produced as part of center activities. It was important to the center that our efforts focus on enacting change, not on collecting data, and our plan for a shared measurement system reflects this emphasis. With these constraints and goals in mind, the center explored existing datasets to identify which constructs and outcomes are currently being measured and what data can be disaggregated by demographic groups.
During a collaborative and reflective process, we developed a targeted set of metrics to measure overall center progress, as well as progress related to each of the change levers. Student success and student satisfaction are both crucial components in regard to evaluating the center’s performance; we will monitor demographic-specific data on graduate degrees awarded, withdrawal rate, and graduate students’ overall satisfaction with their experience. However, equity-focused changes resulting from center activities will not be immediately apparent in these measures, as multiple years must pass between recruitment and degree completion. Therefore, we will also monitor progress related to each change lever. These metrics take multiple forms, such as logging changes to departmental manuals and policies and tracking involvement in equity-focused change efforts.
As new data points are available, the metrics in the shared measurement system will be used to evaluate the overall COE performance, as well as the progress related to individual change levers. Furthermore, members of the center will discuss whether any changes are needed in the shared measurement system and whether data-collection and data-analysis efforts can be improved in any way. Updated trends for each of the metrics will be made available to stakeholders through center communication channels. With all stakeholders using a common set of measurements, the center will be facilitating communication among these individuals and groups while also keeping the center accountable.
4.5. Continuous Communication
As a collective, we found the following to be the most representative of the center’s purpose when communicating with constituents: educating the COE about the issues our organization addresses; rallying supporters or the COE to action for our cause; countering the arguments, misunderstandings, or, occasionally, the lies or misrepresentations of those opposed to our work; connecting center activities with existing and future COE activities; and becoming known, or better known, in the COE. As a team, we also all agreed on a set of communication principles (
Table 9) and strategies (
Table 10) that would support us reaching target stakeholders.
5. Implications
We found that, in our context, Collect Impact appears to have the potential to be a useful framework for organizing change efforts. To make this a reality, we had to be mindful of a few considerations along the way. First, the challenge of organizing large change efforts requires patience and intentionality. It is very easy to fall into the trap of implementing changes, programs, or initiatives without ensuring sustainability. We wanted to be mindful of this, as our goal is sustainable systematic transformation. Additionally, we found significant value in the establishment of our guiding principles. Given the size of our project team and the significance of the center, it was key that everyone had some set of guidelines to gauge their work, as we were still in the process of determining what the center was and how it would operate within the COE. Next, we found a great utility in understanding the priorities and operations of our COE. This understanding helped inform what activities we even considered as options for us to engage in. We knew there would be no use in taking up projects that would not garner the support of college-level administrators.
Additionally, we reasoned that prioritizing what the dean prioritized would make it much easier to entice departments to support changes that they were already expected to make, even if they may have been a little resistant. We also found ourselves contending with the centrality of the student-employee tension. The landscape of graduate education places graduate students in a space where they are both students seeking a degree and employees, oftentimes even working for the person who is supposed to support their degree attainment. Thus, there are at least two roles that graduate students have to play and, therefore, two sets of expectations that they must be aware of while navigating academia. This dual role can pose great challenges when engaging in community-centered work where graduate students are temporary occupiers within the community and already have enough to balance. The center had to intentionally consider the totality of the graduate student experience as we navigated our work and our approach to evolving graduate students.
Finally, we found that, despite its utility, Collective Impact alone was not enough to guide our thinking for what equitable change would look like in our context. While a helpful approach for surfacing what, where, and how to devote our attention, we found that using an additional lens (in our case, organizational justice) helped us further refine and organize our actions into meaningful and transferable outcomes.
6. Limitations and Future Work
The purpose of this grant was to ‘stand up’ a center focused on equitable transformation of graduate education in the COE at a single institution. Therefore, we found ourselves trying to build the plane while we were flying it; in other words, we were attempting to build an infrastructure for sustainable change while trying to engage in various change efforts. Although we were intentional about our engagement with this work, it is not without limitations.
The primary limitation comes from research design limitations. Because our research team is early in the process of adapting Collecting Impact, we do not yet have empirical data to support the efficacy of our application, leaving us unable to definitively suggest that this theory of change is efficacious in promoting equity in graduate education. For instance, we cannot yet address how well the Collective Impact approach withstands the transiency inherent in graduate education (i.e., people come and go quite frequently, including graduate students, some faculty, and administrators). The Collective Impact framework is typically utilized in contexts where the community members have a larger buy-in and attachment to the work being conducted and its outcomes. We are operating in a context of an academic and work environment where community members, namely graduate students, are not fixed, and we are committed to not asking students to take on the burden of fixing environments and systems that they did not break. Additionally, community members may not feel beholden to fix these environments because they only serve as a place of work or learning. To date, we can only speculate as to whether the Collective Impact approach will support overcoming such challenges. This limitation does not negate the value of this work or the utility of this framework. For example, there is plentiful evidence of graduate students and faculty serving in various roles aiming to improve the experiences of marginalized communities in graduate education. There is also a strategic commitment by the dean of our COE to prioritize the transformation of graduate education. Nonetheless, our lack of longitudinal data should be noted for those wishing to adapt this approach for their own context.
Additionally, this effort sits alongside several other change initiatives within the institution (which is the case of higher education everywhere) that were not described here. Tensions arise regarding the allocation of resources, both financial and time, that have an effect on these objectives, and members of our team are responsible for advancing those sometimes-competing initiatives simultaneously. For example, leading campaigns to bolster undergraduate scholarships could be perceived as taking time and philanthropic potential away from graduate education. Managing these competing demands presents an additional layer of complexity for applying the Collective Impact framework to the graduate education context.
Future work for this project must include longitudinal studies whereby we monitor and evaluate the impact of our strategic efforts. Although we are confident in our claim that Collective Impact offers a useful framework for organizing change efforts, future work is needed to examine the impact of this organizing by using empirical data collected against the efforts’ success metrics.
Future work should also explore the applicability of other theories of change. There are a plethora of other change theories and frameworks that change agents could consider, such as resource dependency theory [
58], shared governance [
59], institutional isomorphism [
60], communities of practice [
61], Kotter’s eight step model of change [
62], Torres’ transformational resistant leadership theory [
63], and the Competing Values Framework [
64]. Although we chose Collective Impact for our context, other theories may be more appropriate in different situations.