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New Mexico Civic Engagement

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January: NMCE Legislature Days - Strategic Briefing and Forum ... NMCE Legislature Days ... Rob Shumer, University of Minnesota, Consultant ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: New Mexico Civic Engagement


1
New Mexico Civic Engagement
  • Community Learning Public Service
    College of Education

University of New Mexico
2
NMCE Staff
  • Michael Milam, Senior Community Fellow Chair,
    NMCE Advisory Board
  • Albert Arocha, Senior Student Fellow
  • Stephanie Montoya, Administrative Assistant
  • Louis Jeantete, Student Intern
  • Fred Griego III, Senior Community Fellow
  • Michael M. Morris, Ed.D., Director, CLPS

3
NMCE History
  • Founded in February 2002 as 1 of 10 sites in
    the national Project 540.
  • Convene annual institutes for training and skills
    building to prepare youth and adult sponsors to
    address community issues and develop a strong
    collective youth voice.
  • Prepare Youth Legislative Agenda based on needs
    of youths respective communities.

4
lt 2005 NMCE Youth Radio Town Hall Youth
Panel of Storytellers
gt 2005 Champions For Youth Luncheon Youth Share
Thoughts and Ideas Over a Meal
5
NMCE History (Continued)
  • Over four years
  • 280 youth leaders and 46 adult sponsors
    representing 42 communities have trained and
    participated in various NMCE activities
  • NMCE promotes Youth Voice through
  • - Media Training
  • - Digital Storytelling Training
  • - Youth Radio Town Halls

6
Learning the basic techniques of Digital
Storytelling to enhance New Mexicos Youth Voice
2005 NMCE Summer Institute
7
NMCE Vision
  • NM Civic Engagement believes that civic
    engagement in New Mexico must be grounded in the
    people, places, culture and dynamics of our
    diverse state.
  • All citizens, youth and elder alike, are
    informed and passionate about building common
    good through active and engaged youth/adult
    partnership communities in our state.

8
NMCE Goals
  • The desired outcome is a comprehensive
    commitment by public and private sector groups to
    the increased Quality of Life for our youth and
    collaborative programs that address their Future,
    not just their Present.

9
Ecological Model Of Positive Youth Development
Society
School
Community
Family
Youth
10
Positive Youth Development
  • Holistic approach
  • - Seamless model
  • - Work collectively
  • Support Youth to acquire knowledge skills
  • Develop Strong Youth/Adult Partnerships
  • Create environment for youth to develop sense
    of
  • - ownership
  • - self-worth
  • - competence
  • - usefulness
  • - belonging

11
Why are Youth-Adult Partnerships Important?
  • Research has shown that youth benefit from
    partnerships with adults when they are seen as
    individuals who are competent and able to
    contribute to important decisions that impact
    their communities (Camino, 2000).
  • Youth-adult partnerships happen when young people
    and adults become engaged together in their
    communities they are relationships between youth
    and adults where there is mutuality in teaching,
    learning, and action (Zeldin, McDaniel, Topitzes
    Lorens, 2001).
  • Youth-adult partnerships focus on nurturance
    they emphasize youth and their contributions
    rather than problems. There are three components
    of successful youth-adult partnerships (Camino,
    2000).

12
Three Essential Components for Successful
Youth/Adult Partnerships
  • Challenge the roles and the power that
    characterize typical youth-adult relationships.
  • Master the skills and competencies that youth and
    adults need for successful partnerships
    communication, teamwork, and coaching
  • Partnerships involve the development of a plan
    for community action.

13
A Year With NMCE is a cyclical experience
  • June Summer Institute Youth Radio Town Hall
  • Summer Homework Assignment
  • October Legislative Preparation
  • November Legislative Roundtable Youth
    Legislative Radio Town Hall
  • January NMCE Legislature Days - Strategic
    Briefing and Forum
  • March Legislative Debrief and Summer Institute
    Planning

14
NMCE SUMMER INSTITUTE
  • A years end and
  • anothers beginning
  • Training workshops
  • - Community Research
  • - Community Mapping
  • - Digital Storytelling
  • - Legislative process
  • - Teambuilding
  • - Media Training
  • Youth Radio Town Hall with Debriefing
  • Year-End Report Out by each community team
  • Reflection of previous years activities
  • Homework assignment in preparation for next
    legislative session

15
4TH ANNUAL NMCE SUMMER INSTITUTE - June 2005
16
Summer Homework and Legislative Preparation
  • Wall of Burning Issues
  • Issue Identification and Prioritization
  • Develop consensus on issues to research for
    consideration for teams legislative agenda
  • Select presenters for Legislative Roundtable
    Town Hall
  • Prepare issues for panel presentation to
    legislators
  • In October, all groups meet for mock
    presentations to obtain critical feedback

17
gt NMCE Participant Youth Groups Preparing
Issues and Finalizing Presentations
lt Summer Homework Coming to Fruition Prior to
Legislative Roundtable
18
Legislative Roundtable and Youth Radio Town Hall
  • Two day training to prepare researched
    presentation each communitys issues to state
    legislators
  • Network with legislators to build working
    relationships
  • Live Youth Radio Town Hall to voice their
    issues to a wider audience
  • Energize other youth build youth voice through
    an open mic process

19
NM State Legislators
Young Women United (ABQ)
Radio Town Hall Rehearsal
20
New Mexico Civic Engagement Youth Making Their
Voice Heard At Youth Radio Town Halls
21
NMCE Legislature DaysStrategic Briefing and Forum
  • Convene for two days for training and
    legislative advocacy
  • Recognizing the legislators, learning their
    background and legislative power position
  • Rehearse and role play interactions with state
    legislators in different situations
  • Develop strategy and draw up schedule to execute
    strategy for advocacy and building alliances for
    support

22
Studying the Legislators, Reviewing Advocacy
Presentations and Role Playing For Legislative
Lobbying Effort
23
NMCE Legislature Days
  • Day Two - each participant youth group implements
    the strategic plan The Roundhouse (State Capitol
    Building)
  • Early start with breakfast and a motivational
    address from a prominent legislator or government
    official
  • Appointments begin early and day ends with
    lunch, a debrief and evaluation of the days
    activity

24
NMCE 2006 Legislative Team
Young Women United (ABQ) With Sen. Mimi Stewart
Breakfast at Ghost Ranch Retreat
25
Legislative Debrief and Summer Institute Planning
  • Debrief on Legislative Days activities and
    proposed legislation
  • Review evaluation of Legislative Days
  • Conduct Wall of Burning Issues process to take
    temperature on current prominent issues
  • Breakout groups of Youth and Adults to Brainstorm
    ideas for agenda
  • Create list of recommendations for planning
    committee to develop a learning agenda

26
Working the Brainstorming Process
The Wall of Burning Issues
27
NMCE SI 06 - MOVEMaking Ourselves Voices of
Engagement
As a beginning point, those attending for the
first time will begin to learn the importance of
civic engagement. Those who have been here
before, approach their end point of the current
year and will have an opportunity to inform and
teach others using their past years experience
furthering the issues they have selected to
champion. They will spend four days and three
nights, learning, sharing, questioning,
socializing and preparing to serve their
communities through action.
28
Learning the Lay of UNM Campus Scavenger Hunt
2005 NMCE Summer Institute Orientation
Expectations
29
NMCE Process
  • Site Selection and Commitment
  • NMCE Network Support and Commitment to Sites
  • Evaluation

30
Site Selection and Commitment
  • Site selection based on poverty level, scarce
    resources, diverse population and the community
    is at the education, social and economic margins
  • Youth at site are organized and have a sponsor
  • Youth must choose 1-3 issues in their community
    to wish to address
  • Youth and sponsor must be willing to work on
    their issues year around

31
NMCE Network Support and Commitment to Sites
  • NMCE support in the form of training and
    skills-building based on the needs of youth and
    their work to create a collective youth voice
  • Support positive youth development and the
    nurturing of youth/adult partnerships at all
    network sites
  • Commitment will come in the various forms of
    access to decision-makers and governmental
    officials for youth to advocate for their
    respective issues
  • Provide steady encouragement and information
    about opportunities to all the youth to continue
    on with a post-secondary education

32
Evaluation
  • Every activity will be evaluated by a survey
    completed by every attendee in order to determine
    its efficacy
  • An outside evaluator will evaluate all major
    events
  • Ongoing overall program evaluation will be
    conducted in order to consider adjustments to
    make all events of NMCE are effective learning
    opportunities

33
NMCE Future Needs
  • Full-time Director
  • Half-time Graduate Assistant
  • Full-time Administrative Assistant
  • Curriculum Materials
  • Regional Youth Summits/Forums
  • Regional Seed Monies

34
NMCE Future Growth
  • Partnership with NM Youth Alliance
  • Curriculum Development
  • Expansion to community-based youth
  • groups
  • Partnerships with university departments,
    e.g., sociology, political science, etc.

35
NMCE Future Activities
  • Promotion of Youth Commissions statewide
  • Regional Youth Summits and Town Halls
  • Expand youth legislative action
  • Target NMCE youth for post-secondary education
    and provide service and leadership opportunities
    within institutions
  • of higher education

36
NMCE Network Sites
  • Acoma Boys Girls Club (Acoma) APS Violence
    Prevention Research Project (ABQ) Crownpoint
    Teen Court Eastside Weed Seed (ABQ)
    Guadalupe County Health Council (Santa Rosa)
    Health Education Livelihood Programs Anthony,
    Gallup, Lordsburg, Roswell, Santa Rosa (5) Las
    Vegas YouthBuild Las Vegas Youth Commission
    Luna County Teen Voices Coalition for Healthy
    Resilient Youth (NIYLP-Gallup) Robert F.
    Kennedy Charter HS (ABQ) So. Doña Ana County
    Action For Youth Sierra Blanca Youth Leader
    Corps Bosque Youth Conservation Corps (ABQ)
    Young Women United (ABQ) NM Youth Radio Network
    (5 sites) Youth Action (ABQ) Sunland Park
    Sawmill-Wells Park Community History Project
    Amy Biehl Charter HS (ABQ) Sembrando Semillas
    (NM Acequia Assn. -Taos)

37
Thank You To Our Supporters
  • Surdna Foundation
  • New Mexico Department of Health
  • New Mexico Community Foundation
  • Daniels Fund
  • Corporation for National Community Service
  • New Mexico Commission on Volunteerism
  • UNM College of Education

38
NMCE Advisory Board
  • Robert Baade, RFK Charter School, Educator (Head
    Teacher)
  • David Lee Garcia, Acoma Boys and Girls Club
  • Karlene Martinez , Las Vegas Youth Commission
  • John Martinez , Exec. Director, HELP New Mexico
  • Michael Milam, Doña Ana County Youth Advocate
    Chairman, NMCE Advisory Committee
  • Wendy Wintermute, Service Learning Network, NM
    Forum for Youth in Community
  • Daphne Harvey Strader, Albuquerque Public Schools
    Prevention/Intervention Specialist
  • Karen White, NM Dept. of Health, Office of School
    Health
  • Rob Shumer, University of Minnesota, Consultant
  • Fred Griego, Senior Community Fellow -NMCE
    (Ex-Officio Member)
  • Michael M. Morris, Ed.D., Director, Community
    Learning Public Service, UNM

39
For More Information about NMCE Contact -
Albert Arocha NMCE Senior Student
Fellow Ph (505) 764-9523 Email
aarocha_at_unm.edu
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