03/02/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/02/2026 10:00
Earlier this year, Buffalo State received the 2026 Carnegie Community Engagement (CE) Classification, an elective designation awarded by the American Council on Education (ACE) and the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching that highlights an institution's commitment to community engagement. This is a renewal of the same classification Buffalo State was granted in 2016.
"Higher education is a vital economic engine for us all. Our colleges and universities not only fuel science and innovation, they build prosperity in rural, urban and suburban communities nationwide," said Timothy F.C. Knowles, president of the Carnegie Foundation. "We celebrate each of these institutions, particularly their dedication to partnering with their neighbors-fostering civic engagement, building useable knowledge, and catalyzing real world learning experiences for students."
The CE Classification has been the leading framework for institutional assessment and recognition of community engagement in U.S. higher education for the past 19 years. The application was a multi-year effort, beginning with a process of self-study by each institution, with a focus on specific criteria from the 2023-24 academic year.
"The institutions receiving the 2026 Community Engagement Classification exemplify American higher education's commitment to the greater good," said ACE President Ted Mitchell. "The beneficiaries of this unflagging dedication to public purpose missions are their students, their teaching and research enterprises, and their wider communities."
"Buffalo State has had an ongoing commitment to community engagement for a long time, and this was a reaffirmation of that," said Alan Delmerico, director for Learning, Engagement, and Development Services (LEADS). "This really reflects our underlying nature, what's in the DNA of this institution."
Delmerico led Buffalo State's 2026 Carnegie Classification application with support from the Buffalo State Community Partnership Council-a campuswide group that reflects the institution's diversity and includes by including representatives from Academic Affairs, Marketing and Communications, the Small Business Development Center, and the Burchfield Penney Art Center.
"Buffalo State has had an ongoing commitment to community engagement for a long time. This really reflects our underlying nature, what's in the DNA of this institution."
"Earning the Carnegie Elective Classification for Community Engagement is the result of an extraordinary, two year effort by many," said Scott Goodman, assistant vice president of graduate, research, and special programs. "It is gratifying to have an external review affirm the depth and impact of our work with the community. This process challenged us to highlight the most significant accomplishments from a wealth of meaningful examples."
"No single person is going to know everything that's happening at the level you need to know them at to apply," Delmerico added. "You've got to really reach down deep with your roots and draw information up to accurately respond. I think we put a great application together that was representative of our institution and what our strengths are and continue to be."
The application process involved collecting and providing information about the institution's community engagement efforts, including institutional mission and culture; leadership priorities, vision, and strategic plan; how the institution ensures that students, faculty, staff, and community partners have equitable access and opportunity to community engagement activities; how the institution tracks and assesses engagement with communities; examples of academic-community partnerships; and more.
"Community engagement isn't something extra for us," Goodman said. "It's central to who we are and how we embrace our role as an anchor institution in the urban core of Buffalo."
As SUNY's urban-engaged anchor institution, Buffalo State emphasizes civic and community engagement, coordinating high-quality, reciprocal partnerships with local, regional, national, and international community-based organizations that positively influence students, the university, and the broader community. Even without a centralized office dedicated to these efforts, community engagement remains an integral part of the Buffalo State's ethos in numerous ways, including (but not limited to):
"The nature of Buffalo State's connection to the community remains," Delmerico said. "The things that Buffalo State has done over the past decade are part of our set of values. The mutual benefit that the community and we as an institution have been able to experience is at the heart of what the Carnegie Classification is about."
About the Carnegie Classifications
The Carnegie Classifications are the nation's leading framework for categorizing and describing colleges and universities in the United States. Utilized frequently by policymakers, funders, and researchers, the Classifications are a critical benchmarking tool for postsecondary institutions. ACE and the Carnegie Foundation announced a partnership in February 2022 to reimagine the Classifications to better reflect the diversity of postsecondary institutions and more completely characterize the impact that today's institutions have in society.