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Applying Community Organizing Principles to FASTWorks

Applying Community Organizing Principles to FASTWorks. FAST Training of Trainers January, 2001 William Ashton, Ph.D. Goal / Format of Talk . Exposure to basic ideas of community organizing in order to allow you to apply these ideas to FASTWorks

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Applying Community Organizing Principles to FASTWorks

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  1. Applying Community Organizing Principles to FASTWorks FAST Training of Trainers January, 2001 William Ashton, Ph.D.

  2. Goal / Format of Talk • Exposure to basic ideas of community organizing in order to allow you to apply these ideas to FASTWorks • No intention to make you community organizers • May community organizing ideas can be used in FASTWorks

  3. Applying Community Organizing Principles to FASTWorks • History of Community Organizing • Theory of Community Organizing • Putting It Into Action • Example: Neighbor Network • Applications to FASTWorks

  4. History of Community Organizing • Alinsky’s Conflict Model • The Truly Disadvantaged • Consensus Organizing

  5. Alinsky’s Conflict Model • Airport Noise • Movie Theater Segregation • Bank Segregation • Competent and angry citizens

  6. The Truly Disadvantaged William Julius Wilson • Inner-city Neighborhoods of the Past • Loss of Middle Class • Decline of basic institutions (churches, stores, schools etc.) • Decline in social organization (sense of community, ID, norms and sanctions)

  7. Consensus Organizing • Response to Wilson’s argument • Time & Labor Intensive • Stimulate Citizen Participation & Leadership Development • Enhance Capacities of Residents • Build Sustainable Linkages between Residents and Institutions

  8. Theory of Community Organizing • Empowerment • McKnight & Kretzmann’s Assets • Focus upon People & Relationships

  9. Definition of Empowerment Empowerment is a process in which a person, a community, or an institution gains mastery over their own affairs. - Rappaport • The Process is Important • “Own Affairs” - tangible resources & ability to affect one’s future • Empowerment is opposite of powerlessness

  10. Gateways to Powerlessness • Blaming the Victim - define difference as cause of social problem • The Giving Enemy - gives people what they have, but at the same time robs them of dignity and personal sense of control “There can be no darker or more devastating tragedy than the death of man’s faith in himself and in his power to direct his future.” -- Saul Alinksy

  11. Definition of Empowerment • Self-Efficacy - one’s belief in one’s ability to act • Empowerment is both a psychological attitude and an observable behavior. • Getting things done • Problems with Consciousness Raising

  12. Development of Empowerment • Charles Kieffer • Integrity & Mobilizing Episode • Support - peer and professional • Experience: Action - Reflection Cycle • Reconstruct beliefs about self, community • 4 years of intense experience

  13. Empowerment: A Focus upon Strengths • Deficit Model • Illness • Blaming the Victim • Giving Enemy • Strengths Model • Develop Existing Community Strengths

  14. Assets McKnight & Kretzmann • Asset Mapping • Building Relationships • Mobilizing the Community’s Assets for Economic Development & Information Sharing • Developing a Community Vision & Plan • Leverage Outside Resources o Support Locally Driven Development

  15. Putting It Into Action • Community Organizing Process • Helpful Hints

  16. Community Organizing Process 1. Familiarization with Community 2. Initial Contact 3. Gauging Community Interest 4. Relationship Building 5. Concrete Activity 6. Transition 7. Professional Termination

  17. Early Stages • Familiarization with Community • Research existing materials • Initial Contact • Media, Local Leaders • Draw out others with interest • Gauging Community Interest • At least: Advisory Board

  18. Relationship Building • Work with Existing Community Organizations • Go Door-to-Door or Hang Out for 1-on-1’s • needs/assets/interest survey • Information & Referral • Small Wins Focus upon Strengths

  19. Small Wins • Large Problems • frustration, arousal & helplessness • From ‘sexual disorder’ to ‘sex life’ • One Day at a Time • 1000 card problem • deconstruct large problems into small problems • Reinforces success

  20. Concrete Activity • Find a McGuffin • Asset Development • Leadership / Organization Development • Win-Win Projects / Small Wins • Develop Community Vision

  21. Be Explicit About Your Role • Support, Assist & Aid • Celebrate • Don’t do for someone what they can do for themselves • You will leave and they need to prepare for that

  22. Transition & Professional Termination • Have you stayed long enough? • Are there (new) indigenous leaders? • Identify timeline for termination • identify goals to continue termination • Reenter Process

  23. Helpful Hints • Organizations live in action; die in committee • Look for small wins and win-win • Celebrate Successes • Focus upon Strengths

  24. Neighbor Network ProjectGoals • Asset-building program based upon McKnight & Kretzmann • Identifies strengths, skills, talents, knowledge and experiences and link to others in their neighborhood • Develops win-win relationships between neighbors

  25. Neighbor Network ProjectGoals • Develop Leadership Skills • Identify and Develop ‘Block Brokers’ • ‘The provision of services will be by the neighbors themselves’ • Keys to Success • use citizen advisory board to • select neighborhood • select coordinator

  26. Neighbor Network ProjectReality • Change in Funders & Priorities • No Leadership Development • Lack of Interest in Advisory Board • Block Brokers only lasted the summer • Coordinator supported existing leaders and initiated projects

  27. Applications to FASTWorks • Transition to FASTWorks • FASTWorks Goal & Community Building • Experiential Exercises • Development of Empowerment • Community Organizing Process • Hints & Concerns

  28. Transition to FASTWorks “The leadership hierarchy shifts from team-centered to parent-centered.” • Difficulty changing expectations and norms about effort requirements and leadership

  29. FASTWorks’ Goal To be a place where parents support each other as they lead their families and work with the school and the community to advocate for their children toward success in school and a healthy life. • Indicates need for community development skill building among parents

  30. Exercise --Development of Empowerment Charles Kieffer • Integrity & Mobilizing Episode • Support - peer and professional • Experience: Action - Reflection Cycle • Reconstruct beliefs about self, community • 4 years of intense experience

  31. Exercise --Community Organizing Process 1. Familiarization with Community 2. Initial Contact 3. Gauging Community Interest 4. Relationship Building 5. Concrete Activity 6. Transition 7. Professional Termination

  32. Hints & Concerns • Parents’ roles must be made explicit and made early • FASTWorks organizer must reach out to families and do “relationship building” • Leadership / Organization Development • Small Wins • Celebrate

  33. Rights of Use of This Material • Some trainers are very protective of their materials – they’re afraid that they’re giving away their business. I feel that freely distributing information like this is just good advertising for a trainer or consultant. So please use my material as you see fit; with the provision that you, in print, reference me. Please use the following information – in full: • William Ashton, Ph.D. • The City University of New York, York College • Department of Political Science and Psychology • www.york.cuny.edu/~washton

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