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Community Learning Resources
Participatory Research and Monitoring
Housing
Moving to Scale
To have a major impact in increasing low income people's access to good affordable housing, groups must expand their organizing and advocacy, marshalling sufficient power and influential allies to convince government and the private sector to change their policies and provide the resources and reforms which are needed to save and expand the stock of affordable housing. This report demonstrates why these changes are needed, focusing on several case studies of how community organizing and coalition-building has enabled grassroots groups to move to scale in their impact. Read the full Moving To Scale report.
- Organizing is Transforming Housing (PDF)
Jobs and Economic Development
Increasing Funding
Funding Collaboratives for Organizing
Over the last decade three statewide and local coalitions have pioneered an important new approach to strengthening their member groups and their constituencies. Each has worked with several
funders to create funding collaboratives to expand grant support for community organizing and advocacy by their members. Read the full report.
Educational Pathways
University Education for Community Change
Grassroots community organizations face a major leadership crisis. It takes many skills and broad experience to be Executive Director of multi-issue community groups which are trying to bring about major positive changes in their low income communities or on broader policy issues related to poverty, race and justice. Universities can play a critical role in preparing young people to enter this field, or in providing midcareer education for people on the front lines as community organizers, social change activists, or leaders in the process of community change. This scan reviews the current status of university-based education on community organizing and social change, and recommends a series of steps to strengthen the role of universities in providing the combination of classroom teaching, field experience and reflection which community change leaders need.
- Current Priorities
- International Working Group:
Organizational Learning and Development
Evaluation and Organizational Development
Andrew Mott, Director of the Community Learning Partnership and former Executive Director of the Center for Community Change, stresses the importance of building on existing grassroots approaches to assessment and learning.
Evaluation - The Good News for Funders
Program evaluation continues to be one of the most challenging aspects of the grantmaking process. While there are many approaches to evaluation, this publication focuses on participatory approaches. Given the decrease of funding and increased focus on accountability, funders are under increasing pressure to demonstrate that they are using their dollars strategically. Funders have different priorities as they approach evaluation. Some are concerned with assessment, others are committed to using evaluation as a learning tool, while still others see capacity-building as central to their mission. Whatever the focus, a participatory approach can help funders achieve their goals. A well-planned, inclusive process can build knowledge among the grantees, the grantmaking institution and the broader field. An evaluation that adds the perspectives of the primary stakeholders in the grant's success - the beneficiaries - gives the funder vital information concerning the extent to which the grant is meeting its goals. By including the beneficiaries in the process it enables them to identify problems within the program and to provide potential solutions to these challenges. The information and resources contained in this publication have been provided to assist you in selecting an evaluation process that will help you achieve your goals. The tools and strategies suggested have allowed many foundations across the country to increase the impact of their grantmaking and improve relationships between grantors and grantees.
Strengthening Social Change Through Assessment
In September, 2003, a remarkable crosssection of people came together in Canada for an international exchange on the different approaches they were using to strengthen the forces for positive social change in different parts of the world. The Gray Rocks conference convened more than three dozen community organizers and activists, evaluators and other "learning partners" from eleven countries to focus on how they were building strong systems to help social change organizations analyze, explain and strengthen their work. Over three and a half days they discussed how, as organizers or outsiders, they were helping activist groups meet their internal need to keep assessing, reflecting on and strengthening their work so they could increase their impact, while also meeting their external need to help their partners, funders and others outside their organizations understand, evaluate and learn from their work.
Further Reflections on Assessment and Change
Several months after the Gray Rocks conference on Strengthening Social Change Through Assessment and Learning, several people who had worked on the conference interviewed almost all the participants to learn what they currently saw as priorities for action on the organizational learning and evaluation questions we discussed in Quebec. We used a common approach to the interviews, starting with open-ended questions designed to give interviewees maximum latitude to express their views on what would be the most helpful to them and to the field of social change. We then asked interviewees for their current views on the tentative priorities which were discussed on the conference's last morning.
Organizational Development Practitioners' Report
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The Community Learning Partnership, 1301 Connecticut Avenue, Suite 500, Washington, DC
All rights reserved. Copyright 2008 Community Learning Partnership
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