Forum Activity for @ron-dwyer-voss

Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
02/05/10 12:18:33PM
48 posts

Whose connecting who?


ABCD and Youth

That is, more or less, what the youth did from a youth perspective - and captured in the videos on their google map and included in their comic book. You are right that the charette "outreach" should involve those two activities to recruit folks to the charette.Peter Eckart said:
Call me crazy, but how about these two cutting-edge, digital-age ideas?

+ Interested organizer hang out in parks and talk to the people who use it now.
+ Interested organizers go door to door in the neighborhood surrounding the park and talk to the folks most likely to use it if it reflected their interests.

I know it doesn't involve a computer, so it's not as good as the ideas you suggested above ...
Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
02/05/10 11:40:09AM
48 posts

Whose connecting who?


ABCD and Youth

I am working with a community where the city has decided to overhaul a long neglected park. Folks in the community are either excited or pissed off. The angry ones have immediately assumed that this is all moving forward without checking with and incorporating neighbors into the planning.
"We know what parts of the park people use and what part they don't"
"The baseball diamond and BBQs should never have been put near the neighbors fences, but nobody asked 20 years ago and a new master plan without our experience won't make the park better."
"How are you going to make it fun for kids again and keep the gangs and taggers out?"

The assumption that the city and its paid experts would design, plan and rebuild the park. The assumption is based on a long pattern in this particular community.

At a large community meeting where a number of city initiatives were announced, including the funding for the park master plan and construction, city officials assured skeptical residents that this news was hot off the press and their plan was to use a community planning process, including a large charette event that creative landscape architecture firm had offered to facilitate. Some were encouraged, some didn't buy it.

Months later the park staff in charge was still trying to figure out how to do "community outreach" so that enough community members would participate in the charette to make it effective. They had meetings and identified community groups to contact, but they had not left the office. Literally. The hired landscape architect was a little more creative and started using the internet to get to know the neighborhood and found out that teens in the area had created a google-map with video links and a comic book with recommendations for a number of public places in the city, including the park. The youth had done this as part of a project to tell elected officials how to make the town more youth friendly. Most of the councilmembers were familiar with the project, few of the city staff new about it.

So, the architect emails the park staff and asks who these teens are that are already rethinking the park. Park staff emails other city staff, some of who were aware of the teen group and its work. Some even sat on the group's advisory committee.

Now the teens are being trained to co-facilitate break out tables with the landscape architects and planners at the charette next month!

Two lessons here:
1. Youth are resources -- whether the rest of us bother to ask or use them as resources is on us.

2. While local government can sometimes be a connector of community resources that are unaware of each other, the community can also be a connector of resources and people within local government who have been blocked from knowing each other's assets by the de facto silo-ization of the institution.



updated by @ron-dwyer-voss: 10/25/16 02:06:45PM
Mina Brown
@ron-dwyer-voss
12/14/10 02:13:28PM
1 posts

Multi-generational planning


ABCD and Youth

James Rojas sent me an email that I thought would be of interest to the ABCD and Youth group, so Im posting it below with his blessing. His website www.placeit.org has more information about the workshops he facilitates.

-Mina Brown

I facilitated a great interactive workshop at Franklin High School's parent teacher night, in Los Angeles. It was powerful to watch Latino high school students take charge of the urban planning process and walk their parents through the interactive exercise to create a better community. These students explained the essence of planning to a largely Spanish-speaking audience. This was done with the use of thousands of small objects and pieces of construction paper, which helped stimulate dialogue and creative thinking.

A few weeks prior I had facilitated an interactive workshop with the Franklin High School students. This workshop investigated how to design and plan their ideal walking street, which was part of a project to create access to the Cornfields Park. The students enjoyed the exercise, which stimulated their creative thinking to investigate the urban landscape around the Cornfields from Highland Park to Downtown LA. With this education they were later able to facilitate a similar workshop with their parents--with stunning results.

The participants were asked to improve the neighborhood, community or city they come from, by any means they saw fit. They were given no constraints, and there were no right or wrong answers. This made the planning exercise accessible to everyone and allowed for maximum creativity. Plus, who has not thought about how they would improve their community!

The participants had twenty minutes to build a model on construction paper using hair rollers, buttons, yarn, shiny beads, blocks and thousands of other small items. These materials help the participants re-create their personal experience in the built environment: green yarn becomes grass, blue poker chips form the edges of the ocean, and hair rollers shape a skyline of apartments or office buildings.

By using their hands to shape these spaces, the participants manipulate their relationship with the built environment. As they rearrange and move objects on the model, they create and discover relationships between objects and activities, thus creating small vignettes of urban life.

After the twenty minutes were up the participants had one minute to explain their model. Since people interject their own personal experience and memories of place the explanations become very interesting with the interjection of random yet relevant ideas.

With the help of the students, the adults as well as a few children were able to look inside themselves to create solutions. They tapped into memories of their favorite places, their neighborhood landscape, and new fantastic places only envisioned in their minds. These provided a rich, creative, motive for their solutions. These solutions were visualized physically through their models and briefly summarized.

I want a piata city, one four-year-old presented to the audience as he pointed to a bubble gum and other small candies. We need crosswalks in my neighborhood, as the woman pointed to a series of Popsicle sticks which formed a crosswalk. I want a bike path down North Figueroa that connects the Carneceria, beauty shop, many other small shops as well as Metro station, as he pointed to a string of shiny beads which formed his bike path. We need a park in north of Figueroa because all the parks are south of Figueroa, as the woman pointed to a green yard. I wish all the buildings had beautiful skylights to bring in the sunshine, a woman said as she pointed to a fantastical structure created with green mess. I want a zoo for the children of the community. They need to learn about animals, a man stated as he pointed to an elaborate maze created with rollers and cocktail stirrers that housed animals. We need to beautify our community with green, a woman said as she pointed to an elaborate mini model of Highland Park. In her model pink yarn represented the Arroyo Seco and yellow the bridges which crossed it. She used a small piece of bark to simulate Debs Park. These were just a few of the comments from the twenty or so people who participated in the exercise, which were by and large said in Spanish.

The array of design approaches participants used to solve the design challenge was fascinating. Some approaches were very conceptual, while others were literal. Each participant captured the essences of how to improve their community. Given the opportunity of approaching the topic from their perspective, participants were able to shape the community as they saw fit. Everyone brought in their baggage to the exercise, which made all the models very different in scope, scale, concept, and details.

It was nice to see a multi-generational planning process where the whole family could work together to find solutions to improve their community. We need to train all students to become planning ambassadors to facilitate workshops. We also need to create equity in the planning process through the visual arts.


updated by @ron-dwyer-voss: 10/25/16 02:06:45PM
Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
10/12/10 12:18:26AM
48 posts

Community leadership by youth - good for the community, good for the youth


ABCD and Youth

Here is a short but insight packed article on the effect of youth engaging in community leadership
http://www.theinnovationcenter.org/docs/cbyl.pdf

I see the U.S. government spending lots of money on obesity education and alcohol/drug prevention efforts, few of which prepare adults and communities to engage youth in the community leadership process. I don't see much federal support for youth leadership. It seems if we made room for young people at decision making tables, they would be healthier and our communities would be stronger.

What do you think? What is your experience?


updated by @ron-dwyer-voss: 04/30/19 06:49:06AM
Peter Eckart
@ron-dwyer-voss
02/16/10 10:28:28AM
2 posts

ABCD in Public Health "Needs Assessment"


ABCD and Youth

I'm not an ABCD expert at all, but as a former social services and community development guy now working in public health, I find myself having to explain (what I consider to be) fairly basic ideas about the application of ABCD to my new field of work.

I'm quoting belowmy comments to another NING network on Community Health Assessment, but it got me thinking about whether anyone is already applying ABCD explicitly in a public health context. Public health has begun to take on more of a systems perspective with its emphasis on the "Social Determinants of Health," which recognizes what social workers have known for years, that it matters to your (health) outcomes if you're poor, or disenfranchised, or oppressed. But public health still relies pretty strongly on community "needs assessment," and it may take more than just a cultural shift to change that structure of analysis.

So ... (1) what are ABCD experts doing with public health and (2) does my characterization of ABCD ring true for you?

This may look like a semantic issue, but there has been, in the social services field, the idea that "needs assessment" is a deficit-based model which focuses on what is negative about or lacking in a community rather than what is positive about or can be built upon in a community.

Asset-based models of community development (again, not hisorically from a public health perspective) focus on what is working in communities, and builds on that. It can be revolutionary to change your perspective to recognize the good things that are present, even in impoverished or disenfranchised communities, and build upon them. It changes the individuals and insitutions to empowered actors on their own behalf, rather than objectified vitims or recipients of outside aid.

Of course, a proper assessment of a commuity would include strengths AND weaknesses, but we have tended towards the needs in the past, espeically in public health, and are perhaps in greater need of a corrective.

I'm not an expert on asset-based commuity development (ABCD) but I know one of its principle academic architects and an ABCD consultant very well. You can find more on this at http://www.abcdinstitute.org/


updated by @ron-dwyer-voss: 10/25/16 02:06:45PM
Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
02/16/16 10:15:04AM
48 posts

ABCD IN EGYPT LUXOR


ABCD and the Environment

Hi Lis,

How is your project coming along? Please give us updates so we can all learn from your experience.

Ron

Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
02/16/16 10:11:39AM
48 posts

Asset Maps


Asset Mapping & Gift Inventories

Hi James,

The best I have seen for your purposes is Google Maps. As you have pointed out, that has limits. BatchGeo works well too. I like Google because you can use a variety of icons to represent individuals, associations and institutions. Batchgeo on the other hand has a more attractive and simpler output. Google Maps is a little easier to crowdsource, but you have to share login, etc.

Ron

Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
11/24/15 09:34:18AM
48 posts

Evaluating Relationships with Community Partners


ABCD and Institutions (Universities, Hospitals, Government, Libraries, NGOs, etc.)

Hi Teryn!

I am a co-founder of this site and am thrilled to see you/UCDavis here. I live in South Natomas and would be happy to meet or chat by phone on ways to assess and improve your relationships with community partners. Maybe we could develop a tool that we could share with the rest of ABCDinACtion.

The program you work with is so innovative and valuable!

Let me know if you want to chat,

Ron Dwyer-Voss

Ron Dwyer-Voss
@ron-dwyer-voss
03/17/15 11:19:55AM
48 posts

When the Internet generation thinks ABCD is a dinosaur?


ABCD - Getting Started/Challenges

In my trainings I usually have 1-2 folks in their 20s or 30s that think the obstacle to participation is lack of external incentive. They usually respond to their assumption by proposing 'mandatory" requirements, or providing more information to cognitively convince people that they want to participate. Of course, both solutions are short lived at best. I find it useful to ask them what they believe about the people they want to participate that making participation "mandatory" will solve.

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