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Inform

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Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities State Grants ($437.4) ... What could you easily start or implement in your state or local community? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Inform


1
Inform Influence
  • Advocating for Service-Learning
  • February 2005

2
Session Overview
  • Why We Cannot Wait 2005 Legislative Update
  • What You Can and Cant Do
  • Effective Strategies to Advocate for
    Service-Learning
  • Timing Targets
  • Message, Materials Media
  • Coalitions Contacts
  • Next Steps Mobilizing Service-Learning Advocates

3
Learn and Serve AmericaA program of the
Corporation for National and Community Service
  • Learn and Serve America supports service-learning
    programs in schools and community organizations
    that help nearly one million students from
    kindergarten through college meet community
    needs, while improving their academic skills and
    learning the habits of good citizenship. Learn
    and Serve grants are used to create new programs
    or replicate existing programs, as well as to
    provide training and development to staff,
    faculty, and volunteers.
  • Learn and Serve America is funded by the Labor,
    Health and Human Services appropriations bill.
    This program falls within the jurisdiction of the
    House and Senate Education Committees.

4
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5
Recent Policy Developments
  • Corporation scheduled to begin formal rulemaking
    process to develop new rules that govern Learn
    and Serve America programs
  • President proposes 3 million cut to Learn and
    Serve Americas funding
  • Forty-eight (48) education programs some of
    which used to support service-learning in local
    schools and communities are proposed for
    elimination in fiscal year 2006.

6
Implications of the Presidents FY06 Budget
RequestEducation Programs Proposed for
Elimination
  • All totals in millions
  • Civic Education (29.4)
  • Close Up Fellowships (1.5)
  • Elementary and Secondary School Counseling
    (34.7)
  • Even Start (225.1)
  • Gaining Early Awareness and Readiness for
    Undergraduate Programs (306.5)
  • Literacy Programs for Prisoners (5)
  • Safe and Drug-Free Schools and Communities State
    Grants (437.4)
  • School Dropout Prevention (4.9)
  • State Grants for Incarcerated Youth Offenders
    (21.8)
  • Teacher Quality Enhancement Grants (68.3)
  • TRIO, Talent Search (144.9)
  • TRIO, Upward Bound (312.6)
  • Vocational Educational National Programs (11.8)
  • Vocational Education State Grants (1,194.3)
  • Rationale for the Proposed Eliminations
  • consistent with the Administrations policy of
    terminating small programs that have limited
    impact and for which there is little or no
    evidence of effectiveness     
  • In another case, Safe and Drug Free Schools The
    program has not demonstrated effectiveness and
    grant funds are spread to thinly to support
    quality interventions.     

7
Understand What You CAN Do
  • Educate elected officials
  • Inform the media
  • Publicize results of your work
  • Create partnerships with government agencies
  • Provide technical assistance to policymakers or
    legislative committees

8
Safe Advocacy Strategies
  • 1. Direct communications with legislators or
    their staff about a general issue of concern
    where there is either (a) no reference to
    specific legislation or (b) no view expressed on
    such legislation.
  • 2. Most grassroots communications to the public
    about a general issue of concern where there is
    either (a) no reference to specific legislation,
    (b) no position taken on the legislation or (c)
    no call to action.
  • 3. Communications with executive officials (i.e.,
    president, governors, mayors) or their staff
    about a general concern where there is either
    (a) no reference to specific legislation, (b) no
    position taken on the legislation or (c) the
    official or staff person will not participate in
    forming the legislation.

9
Safe Ways to Affect Public Policy
  • 4. Actions to affect regulations or other acts
    implementing existing laws that are performed by
    administrative bodies.
  • 5. Class action lawsuits or similar public
    interest litigation in attempts to influence
    judicial bodies.
  • 6. Self-defense lobbying activities directed at
    legislators or their staff (but not to the
    general public) on matters that might affect the
    organization's existence, powers, duties, exempt
    status, etc.
  • 7. Responding to written request from a
    legislative body (not a single legislator) for
    technical assistance on pending legislation.
  • 9. Discussion of broad social, economic and
    similar policy issues requiring legislative
    solution so long as the discussion does not
    address the merits of specific legislation.
  • 10. Communications to members of an electing
    public charity (not applicable to members of a
    private foundation) that discuss specific
    legislation but do not urge action by the
    members.
  • 11. Private lobbying activity taken by foundation
    managers on their own time and at their own
    expense.
  •  
  • (Reprinted from Foundations and Lobbying Council
    on Foundations)

10
Understand What You CANNOT Do
  • Prohibited Political Activities
  • Lobbying an elected officials on a specific bill
  • Engaging in partisan political activity by
    endorsing a candidate for public office
  • Asking elected officials to vote a certain way

11
Examples of Prohibited Activities
  • organizing a letter writing campaign to Congress
  • printing politically charged articles in a
    Corporation-funded newsletter
  • taking part in political demonstrations or
    rallies
  • activities related to protests, petitions,
    boycotts, or strikes.
  • (excerpted from CNCS/Wofford memo January 29,
    1996)

12
Organizing Service-Learning Advocates Around the
CountryThe 2005 Call to Action
  • Our Legislative Appeal
  • Restore the 3 million cut to Learn and Serve
    America
  • Invest an additional 2 million in pre-service
    teacher education to equip the next generation of
    educators
  • Invest an additional 1 million to support
    rigorous, scientifically-based service-learning
    research
  • TOTAL REQUEST
  • 46 million in fiscal year 2006

Snapshot of Service-Learning Advocates Across
the Country
13
What Service-Learning Advocates Must Do Right
NowSpecific Advocacy Action Steps
  • Share your best stories that illustrate how
    service-learning and Learn and Serve America
    impact the lives of young people, schools and
    communities
  • Invite Michigan Representatives to join the House
    National Service Congressional Caucus
  • Organize opportunities to showcase
    service-learning at your state capitol or state
    department of education
  • Resources
  • www.servicelearningunited.org
  • www.ysa.org
  • www.compact.org
  • www.seanetonline.org www.ecs.org

14
What Service-Learning Advocates Must Do Right
NowSpecific Advocacy Action Steps
  • What You Can Do in Your Own Backyard
  • Invite federal, state and local elected officials
    to visit your service-learning site
  • Meet with staff from the local offices of your
    Members of Congress or state legislators
  • Join online forums of service-learning advocates
    to receive regular news and updates about policy
    that impacts service-learning
  • Resource
  • www.service-learningpartnership.org

15
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Ts of Mobilizing
  • Targets Be specific about who to influence and
    why.
  • Who do you want to reach at the Federal level?
  • Who do you want to reach at the State or Local
    level?
  • What do we know about what works and doesnt work?

16
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Ts of Mobilizing
  • Timing Be strategic about when to activate your
    allies and supporters.
  • Are there key times during the legislative cycle?
  • Are there strategic holidays or special events?
  • When should you activate your base?
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

17
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Ms of Mobilizing
  • Message Position what you want.
  • What is your policy agenda?
  • What message resonates with Federal policymakers?
  • What message resonates with State or Local
    policymakers?
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

18
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Ms of Mobilizing
  • Materials Package your message.
  • Develop and distribute City/Town, Campus,
    Regional, or State Profiles of Service-Learning
  • Develop your Legislative Message and Appeal
    (Talking Points/The Ask) Designed Especially
    for Your Legislators
  • Compile Politically-Relevant, Succinct Research
    Summaries
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

19
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Ms of Mobilizing
  • Media Get the most out of service-learning in
    the news.
  • How can you leverage national print media to
    bring attention to SL in your state or local
    community?
  • Leverage Campus Presidents Speeches.
  • Consider holidays as opportunities to place op-ed
    pieces or letters to the editor.
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

20
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Cs of Mobilizing
  • Coalitions Find strength in numbers.
  • With whom in your state (or at the national
    level) should you form coalitions? Who gives you
    added voice or credibility and in what areas?
  • How can you leverage student involvement?
  • How can they express support through collective
    sign-on letters or promotion through their
    networks?
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

21
Effective Strategies to Advocate for
Service-Learning The Cs of Mobilizing
  • Contact Make contact with key officials and/or
    their staff in effective ways.
  • Capitol Hill/Statehouse Days to Showcase Your
    Work.
  • Targeted Campaigns to Send Faxed Messages to
    Select Members of Congress and their Staff
  • Virtual March on Washington/the Statehouse.
  • Collective Sign-On Statements from Michigan
    Supporters
  • Individual Appointments and Visits to
    District/State Staff
  • What have you tried that works or doesnt work?

22
Next Steps
  • Think about the T-M-C approach to grassroots
    mobilization.
  • What are your policy goals and how and when will
    you mobilize?
  • What pieces do you already have in place?
  • What could you easily start or implement in your
    state or local community?
  • How are you collectively going to organize to
    take action considering recent developments in
    Washington DC?
  • What additional information or support to you
    need state or national organizations?

23
One Last Word
  • Additional Tools Resources
  • Campus Compact
  • www.compact.org
  • Education Commission of the States (Natl Center
    for Learning and Citizenship)
  • www.ecs.org
  • National Service-Learning Partnership
  • www.service-learningpartnership.org
  • Service-Learning United
  • www.servicelearningunited.org
  • SEANet
  • www.seanetonline.org
  • Youth Service America
  • www.ysa.org

24
Contact Information
  • Nelda Brown
  • State Education Agency K-12 Service-Learning
    Network National Service-Learning Partnership
  • One Massachusetts Avenue, NW Suite 700
  • Washington, DC 20001
  • nslp_at_aed.org info_at_servicelearningunited.org
  • www.service-learningpartnership.org
  • www.servicelearningunited.org
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