Texas Even Start Administrative Manual
June 2004, (Revised January 2008)
Application and Funding
Collaboration and Partnerships
Partnerships with the Community
Successful collaborations between adult education programs and the
communities that the programs positively affect require considerable
effort in the beginning phase and require continuous attention in order
to be sustained. Programs should collaborate with the communities they
serve in regards to develop and maintain partnerships that prove effective
for all involved parties: students, adult education programs, the business
community, and the social community.
Elements that assist the success of collaboration include a strong
leadership and a convergence of needs and interests, legislative priorities,
and the readiness of agencies and their personnel to work together for
non-duplication of efforts and of sharing of resources. A project goal
may be to develop a collaborative process using a shared governance approach
to support the activities developed with a shared outcome to serve adults
needing academic, employment, and/or training services.
Manageable collaborations strike a balance between the breadth and
depth of membership. It is important to understand how organizations
operate, their cultural norms and values, and their limitations and expectations.
This is important because each member of the collaboration has specific
policies and mandates which apply to that organization. For example,
agencies will have to educate partners regarding limitations that both
data privacy laws and related liability concerns impose, and the limitations
that regulated use of multiple state or federal funding streams impose.
Overlapping duplicative data collection and reporting requirements are
examples as well.
In developing collaborations with other agencies, local programs are
cautioned not to create new bureaucracies, but rather to take advantage
of the strengths of each in the application of their own mission to facilitate
information exchange, decision making, and resource allocation. Partners
must each have a stake in the process of collaboration and expected outcomes.
All members of a partnership must be involved in participatory decision
making. At all times, the client should be the focus.
Good communication is a key to building trust in collaborations. Communication
is enhanced through setting up systems – personal, paper, and electronic – for
information sharing, clarifying each entity’s responsibilities,
clearly expressing expectations, and listening. Communication must be
open and frequent, using formal and informal channels. Privacy issues
for clients may be discussed among all partners for their similar and
different requirements. Professional development training and materials
are provided for cross-training purposes among the partners.
Collaborative partners should have a shared vision, that is, a common
understanding of what they are trying to achieve, with an agreed-upon
mission, objectives, and strategies. A shared vision builds trust and
commitment. This vision must involve the community at large, and should
make clear the expectations and responsibilities of each partner. Each
organization should contribute uniquely to the collaboration to avoid
duplicating efforts while respecting the mission of individual organizations.
Concrete, attainable goals for accomplishing the vision heighten enthusiasm
and sustain momentum in a partnership.
Programs should collaborate with their partners for the effective use
of resources including funding, technology, staff, and professional development.
Financial resources include those that member organizations are able
and willing to commit and those that the group obtains from outside sources.
Such outside resources may be comprised of in-kind contributions on the
part of the partners including: paid staff time; facilities, including
custodial services, utilities, supplies, materials, or volunteer time.
Human resources that can be committed to projects can include skilled
coordinators, committed leaders, and a bountiful mix of knowledge, skills,
and abilities among the collaboration’s members.
The benefits of collaboration can include the delivery of services
where they have never been delivered before, and often resulting in fewer
resources; resolved propriety issues between organizations and agencies;
a gain in ownership among all parties; establishment of a systematic
and consistent approach to problem solving; provision of a cost savings
and the potential for additional revenue generation. Shared resources
can increase maximum capacity building capabilities and provide added
resources to the programs and services of all participating partners.
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