Funders, postsecondary intermediaries, and institutional leaders must work in radical collaboration with one another for a comprehensive and sustaining paradigm shift toward equitable outcomes in higher education. That means collaboration is deeply rooted in trust, organizational selflessness, and individual curiosity. In higher education, collective efforts have shown to be one the most important avenues for scalable systems change and transformation within higher education institutions. Since collective efforts often include a wide-range of goals, objectives, perspectives, and resources, each collective effort should be thoughtfully and uniquely approached. A one-size-fits-all approach does not work. Accounting for these variations in people, platforms, privilege, and money, can enable collective efforts to meet their moment.
In support of the collective effort of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Intermediaries for Scale Initiative, Catalyst:Ed worked for 2.5 years as the network manager to empower the community to meet their moment. This blog highlights the approaches we employed, how we pivoted to meet the community’s needs, and lessons learned.
In the summer and fall of 2019, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (the foundation) awarded 13 grants to organizations interested in becoming “Intermediaries for Scale” (IFS) in higher education. Catalyst:Ed was honored to be chosen as the organizational capacity-building partner and network manager for this community because of our central focus on supporting education organizations’ capacity-building journeys, our proximity to and deep knowledge about capacity-building in Networked Improvement Communities (NIC) through our work with the Gates Foundation’s Networks for School Improvement, and because of the sheer impact potential and power of working with these 13 intermediaries, who collectively work with almost three-quarters of the nation’s public two- and four-year institutions.
As originally designed by the foundation and proposed by Catalyst:Ed, this journey was to take a traditional, linear plan like many learning community experiences: we would first engage in a needs sensing/assessment process, then develop a series of monthly conversations to discuss key challenges and surface new ideas, with an iterative cycle of revisiting those needs and planning for conversations. However, as we began engaging with the IFS community, we identified several deep-seated and likely long-standing issues that, if not addressed, could negatively affect community health and impact in the field. Specifically, intermediaries had various exposure, experiences, and funding histories within the postsecondary funding ecosystem. Intermediaries also had varied cultural contexts and positionalities in the postsecondary sector. These factors often enabled uneven power dynamics and a deep desire among community members for equitable approaches throughout all parts of our work. Given this context and with support from our Program Officers, Catalyst:Ed made a dramatic pivot and set up an emergent, sociocratic, and wholly participant-driven learning community that lifted lesser-heard voices, focused on strategic learning, moved away from notions of singularity in the direction and control, and constructed psychologically safe environments while being generative and productive.
With those principles in mind, Catalyst:Ed established systems, structures, habits, and routines to run a different kind of collaboration network. In doing so, we also pushed our own thinking about what needed to be true to foster the kind of equitable learning environment we sought to create, especially in a remote environment. The key philosophical principles and what we learned about them are below:
Ultimately, we feel proud of our work leading the IFS NIC and honored to have spent two-and-a-half years – despite a global pandemic and racial justice crisis – in community with the people and organizations in this portfolio. We heard the same feedback from many participants of the NIC: in our closing celebration, one of our participants said, “I can’t think of another single professional experience that I have had that led to so much connection and depth of relationships and learning.”
As we progress with our work in building the capacity of K-12 and Higher Education organizations, we will continue to live by the lessons, principles, and relationships we have built through this work. Our team at Catalyst:Ed will continue to support education leaders and organizations to understand their needs, building capacity, and ensure that a diverse and healthy provider ecosystem exists for equity-oriented leaders seeking short-term talent for key projects. Reach out to our postsecondary team anytime for more information.