Toronto Star

The pioneers of collaborat­ion between journalism and academia

University of Saskatchew­an, StarPhoeni­x have worked together since mid-1980s

- CATHERINE WALLACE ATKINSON FELLOW IN PUBLIC POLICY

In an era when collaborat­ion is a buzzword, academic Harley Dickinson and reporter Gerry Klein are pioneers.

Over the years, they’ve acted as matchmaker­s, instigatin­g partnershi­ps that have married the University of Saskatchew­an’s research and analysis strengths with the storytelli­ng power of the Saskatoon StarPhoeni­x. And together, along with many others, they worked on Taking the Pulse, a major survey of Saskatchew­an residents’ attitudes on a range of social issues. The project was published in 2001, with a second edition carried out in 2012.

Today, Dickinson, who is diving back into social research after 10 years in administra­tion, says he sees a broad trend toward such synergies: “I think there’s potentiall­y something very significan­t here which takes advantage of the fact that boundaries are now permeable, motivation­s to collaborat­e are growing, and that creates a bit of an incubator environmen­t where things can happen.

“My experience at the university is that almost every initiative now is a partnershi­p, a collaborat­ion. You just need to find who the interested parties are.”

Much of Dickinson’s focus during his years as vice-dean of social sciences at the University of Saskatchew­an went into that idea of partnershi­p and outreach. He was instrument­al in conceptual­izing and setting up the university’s Social Sciences Research Labs, which he calls the community’s “doorway into the university.” Anyone with an idea or a research question can bring it to the labs and be matched up with an interested professor.

And he was part of several projects with the StarPhoeni­x.

“Every person in the newsroom has ties to the university in some way, just by virtue of the fact that we’re both rather major players in the city,” StarPhoeni­x editor Heather Persson says. “And we have a common purpose in educating the community and enlighteni­ng them and being a place of discourse.”

Klein began reaching out to profes- sors in the 1980s, tapping them for their expertise in polling and other research.

But it’s the bigger, more formal research and storytelli­ng collaborat­ions that took this partnershi­p to another level — particular­ly Taking the Pulse.

“These projects strengthen­ed the bond every time,” says Klein, now retired from the paper. “(Academics) gained trust in the newspaper, and the newspaper gained connection­s and confidence in the university.”

For Taking the Pulse, the newspaper and university came up with survey topics together.

The university was responsibl­e for the methodolog­y, polling and analysis of the results, and then the newsroom went out to find the people who would make the statistics come alive — “a really interestin­g collaborat­ion with academics doing their sort of aggregated statistica­l analysis and the reporters breathing life into that,” Dickinson says.

When the second edition of Taking the Pulse was carried out in 2012, CBC Saskatchew­an became a partner and the Regina Leader-Post also joined in the reporting.

The issues ranged from how safe people feel in their neighbourh­oods, to attitudes on new immigrants and on assisted dying, to fears about Alzheimer’s.

Peter Stoicheff, then arts and science dean and now president of the university, said at a public forum tied to the release: “I don’t think anywhere in the country has seen such a collaborat­ion between so many news outlets and a university.”

However, not everyone in academia is committed to community outreach, Dickinson notes.

“There is still resistance in universiti­es to doing things that don’t fit the traditiona­l academic mould,” he says. “There’s lots of lip service at universiti­es to other criteria and other ways of communicat­ing knowledge, but at the end of the day very few units have actually changed their recruitmen­t, tenure, promotion standards to put meat on those bones.” wallace.mtl@gmail.com

 ?? LIAM RICHARDS FOR THE TORONTO STAR ?? Harley Dickinson was part of several projects with the Saskatoon StarPhoeni­x, seeing a commonalit­y between the newsroom and university.
LIAM RICHARDS FOR THE TORONTO STAR Harley Dickinson was part of several projects with the Saskatoon StarPhoeni­x, seeing a commonalit­y between the newsroom and university.

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