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Global Youth Service Day 2012 Service-Learning and Mini-Grant Technical Assistance Webinar November 28, 2011 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. Michael Henneberry, Americorps*VISTA Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service Phone: 515.725.3179 E-mail: michael.henneberry@iowa.gov. Justin Villere, Program Officer
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Global Youth Service Day 2012Service-Learning and Mini-Grant Technical Assistance WebinarNovember 28, 20111:00 – 2:00 p.m. Michael Henneberry, Americorps*VISTA Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service Phone: 515.725.3179 E-mail: michael.henneberry@iowa.gov Justin Villere, Program Officer Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service Phone: 515.725.3074 E-mail: justin.villere@iowa.gov
Webinar Agenda • Introductions • Brief Global Youth Service Day Overview • In-depth Service-Learning Overview • Extended Service-Learning Mini-Grant Announcement, Tips, and Guidelines • Questions
Global Youth Service Day 2012: April 20-22 • Global Youth Service Day (GYSD) is an annual Day of Service, organized by Youth Service America, that focusesupon engaging youth (ages 5-25) in meaningful opportunities to serve their communities. • Established in 1988, GYSD is now the largest service event in the world. In 2010, GYSD was celebrated in more than 100 countries around the world. • GYSD focuses upon utilizing the “youth voice” and Service-Learning to celebrate and encourage the positive impact of youth in local communities.
Global Youth Service Day: Iowa • The Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service (ICVS) has been awarded, for the second consecutive year, the Lead Agency for GYSD in Iowa. • As the Lead Agency for our state, the ICVS supports a GYSD planning coalition, spearheads local marketing and media initiatives, encourages local participation in GYSD projects, organizes a statewide kick-off event, develops resources and distributes mini-grants in support of local projects. • In 2010, 29 GYSD projects engaged 2,375 volunteers (1,890 of which were children and youth) in meaningful opportunities to serve their communities.
What is Service-Learning? • A strategy that integrates meaningful community service with instruction and reflection to enrich the learning experience, teach civic responsibility and strengthen communities (www.servicelearning.org) • Hands-on approach to helping youth learn the importance of civic engagement & leadership. • Service-Learning projects are developed by youth and focuses on what they see as important needs. • Youth involved in active learning that tackles real issues in their community
Steps of Service-Learning • STEP 1: INVESTIGATE • STEP 2: PLAN/PREPARE • STEP 3: ACT • STEP 4: REFLECT • STEP 5: DEMONSTRATE/CELEBRATE
Investigation • Research Community Needs • Choose a Need to Address • “Nothing has such power to broaden the mind as the ability to investigate systematically and truly all that comes under thy observation in life” • Marcus Aurelius, Roman Emperor
Planning and Preparation • Plan ways to meet the community need • Collaborate with Community Partners • Decide what to do • Who will do what, in what time frame, what materials are needed
Action • Implement your plan • Making sure it is meaningful • And has value and purpose
Reflection • Examine the difference you made • Discuss thoughts and feelings “To look backward for a while is to refresh the eye, to restore it, and to render it more fit for its prime function of looking forward” -Margaret Fairless Barber, author
Demonstration/Celebration • Show Others • Friends, Family, Community Members • Share what you have learned and accomplished
How is Service-Learning Different From a Traditional Community Service Project? • Helps the community but also provides a powerful learning opportunity for youth • Not a “one-time” effort • Service-Learning projects are developed and implemented by youth • Allow youth to connect learning outcomes and skills to real world experiences • Provides an opportunity for civic engagement
Example of a Traditional Community Service Project: • Youth and community members work together to develop the town’s first community garden • Youth establish a garden bed, work the land and move dirt, and plant flowers and seeds.
Example of a Service-Learning Project: • Investigate/Identify: • Youth see a hunger issue in their community, or a vacant lot in need of cleaning up or “beautifying” • Plan/Prepare: • The group decides a community garden would be a practical way to meet this need. • They collaborate with the local gardening club. • The youth create a list of materials needed and ask the local gardening center and hardware store to borrow tools and receive donated materials. • Determine that produce grown can be donated to the local food pantry and used by soup kitchens feeding the hungry
Example of a Service-Learning Project cont. • Act: • Youth and community members work together to establish the town’s first community garden • Reflect: • Youth learn what crops yield the most produce and can be grown in their region. • Youth become aware of the needs of their community members • Youth feel as “part of the community” by partnering with the garden club and local businesses
Example of a Service-Learning Project cont. • Demonstrate/Celebrate: • The local newspaper writes an article about the youth and their work • The youth are able to tour the garden with their family and other community members to teach others of the importance of giving back to the community
Ways to Insure a High-Quality Experience • Let the youth have a voice in choosing and designing the project • Make sure activities are age and developmentally appropriate • Activities should address needs that are important to the community and to the youth • Collaborate with community partners • Allow the project to extend over a long period of time to insure the youth have time to reflect on the service
Global Youth Service Day Mini-Grant Program • In 2010, the Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service (ICVS) utilized a $2,000 planning grant to award 10, $200 mini-grants to support local GYSD projects that incorporated the “youth voice” throughout the project planning and implementation process. • With matching Iowa’s Promise funds, the ICVSawarded an additional 8 mini-grants to local projects. • Mini-grants were completed by youth membersof the applying organization (with assistance from adult representatives) and were reviewed by a committee of ICVS staff members.
2012 Mini-Grant Program • In an effort to encourage quality Service-Learning projects for Global Youth Service Day 2012, the ICVS will award four $500 mini-grants to youth-led projects. • To be considered for funding, projects must include a Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, Semester of Service, and a Global Youth Service Day component. • Mini-grant applications are available in Survey Monkey and must be submitted by December 9th, 2011. Award recipients will be announced December 16th. • Applications will be reviewed by members of the 2012 GYSD planning coalition.
2012 Extended Service-Learning Mini-Grant Tips • Successful projects will not only be submitted by a young person (age 5-25), but will be researched and designed by children and youth to address a specific community need. • Projects that include evidence of diverse funding streams (including potential in-kind donations or community-based funding) will receive higher scores than those that present less diversified budgets. • Youth Service America’s Friends for Change Mini-Grant and the ICVS’ Inclusion Mini-Grant are both accepting applications • To be considered for funding, applications must provide a specific plan for incorporating an MLK, Semester of Service, and a GYSD Component.
2012 Extended Service-Learning Mini-Grant Tips cont. • Successful applications will designate a “fiscal agent” to receive reimbursement payments after each Day of Service. Reimbursements will not be issued to individuals. • Projects that include all five components of quality Service-Learning projects (Investigating; Planning; Action; Reflection; Demonstration/Celebration) will be scored higher than projects that do not present evidence of all five components. • Applicants are encouraged to develop innovative projects (“what makes your project stand out among the rest?”) that foster partnerships with other community agencies or community members
2012 Extended Service-Learning Mini-Grant Guidelines • Organizations receiving Service-Learning funds through the ICVS’ Volunteer Generation Fund are ineligible to apply. • Only one mini-grant application perschool or organization will be considered. • Proposals must be made for the $500 mini-grant competition. • Applications must include an itemized list of the project’s proposed budget. Reimbursements will not be issued for food, staff time, or individual supplies that exceed $200.
2012 Extended Service-Learning Mini-Grant Requirements • Global Youth Service Day projects supported by Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service (ICVS) mini-grants must be posted on Volunteer Solutions and GYSD.org. • Following the completion of each component of the project, detailed project invoices, reports, and itemized receipts must be provided to the ICVS before reimbursements are issued. • Final reports for each component of the project must be submitted to the ICVS within 30 days of project completion
Contact Information • For questions related to Service-Learning or questions regarding Global Youth Service Day (GYSD) grant applications, or GYSD in general, please contact: Mike Henneberry, AmeriCorps*VISTA Iowa Commission on Volunteer Service Phone: 515-725-3179 E-mail: michael.henneberry@iowa.gov