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Self Advocate: A Hero In ACTION. Molly Sullivan, Associate Center for Social Capital. WHAT ARE YOUR POWERS??. An Advocate’s Power. KNOWLEDGE = POWER Know yourself! Self-Awareness K now what change you want. An Advocate’s Power. KNOWLEDGE = POWER Know your community!
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Self Advocate: A Hero In ACTION Molly Sullivan, Associate Center for Social Capital
An Advocate’s Power KNOWLEDGE = POWER • Know yourself! • Self-Awareness • Know what change you want
An Advocate’s Power KNOWLEDGE = POWER • Know your community! • Rights and Responsibilities • Know what the process is to make change • Social Capital • Know who can help and know how to develop and maintain those relationships (Support Team)
What is Social Capital (Team Support)? • Robert Putnam defines Social Capital as: “the social networks and the norms of trustworthiness and reciprocity that arise from them.”
What is Social Capital (Team Support)? Social Capital (Team Support) Focuses on: • The people you know, and the people they know (Social Networks) AND • The Character of these Networks • The Strength of our Ties • Levels of Trust • Levels of Reciprocity
What Social Capital (Team Support) means to Advocates • Change takes a TEAM • You can be self-aware, know your rights and responsibilities, but without team support change might not happen
2 Types of Social Capital 1. Close Relationships (Bonding): Links people together like themselves (special interest groups, neighborhood associations, hobby clubs…) POWER in numbers: • Help you identify a job goal or find a job • Help you plan for living in your own apartment • Help you find resources and plan to become a home owner
2 Types of Social Capital 2. Acquaintance (Bridging): Social ties that attempt to cut across differences including Race, Gender, Disability, Class, Religion… POWER in numbers: • Rally people together to protest potential funding cuts at your state capital • Ask people to contact their legislature regarding a particular vote
How do you develop your Social Capital (Team Support) • Identify what your goal (self awareness) • Identify your rights and responsibilities • Identify WHO in your social network can help • Identify WHO is NOT in your social network that you need to help you reach your goal, and BUILD YOUR NETWORK!!
Maintain and Build your Social Capital Getting Others Interested & Involved in your goal: • Appeal to people’s motivations (shared personal & professional interests and self-interest, hobbies, affiliation needs) • Find ways to reciprocate (give and take) • Avoid yet another meeting or committee approach • Make the task appear reasonable
Use your Social Capital to help you TAKE ACTION! • Advocates can’t work in isolation • There is POWER in Numbers • There is POWER in Knowledge • Develop your POWERS---Use your knowledge of relationship building to build your Social Capital to help you TAKE ACTION!