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Supplemental Training Resources

Page history last edited by Ariane Hoy 10 years, 7 months ago

 Developmental Model for Skills and Knowledge at a Glance | 

View the sample training calendar at a glance |  Using a Trainer Guide  |

 

First Year Training | Second Year Training | Third Year Training | Fourth Year Training  

Supplemental Training Resources  |  Issue Based Trainings  |  Faith3 Trainings (Faith/Year of Service Programs) |

 

Full List of Trainings by Title and Description |  

Creating Your Own Program Training Calendar |

 

Connecting Service and Politics

a model for revitalizing our democracy through civic engagement


Below is a schematic for how Bonner Programs can intentionally support the development of students' skills and knowledge of broad civic and political engagement.  Click on the links for the curriculum and interactive activities.

 

Levels of Civic Agency:

Bridging the gap between service and politics can be best achieved along the Student Development Model. Here's a brief breakdown of each level (or class year). Click on each stage to learn more about it as well as relevant academic connections, readings, reflections, trainings, and skill-building techniques.

 

Exploration (First Year)

Bonner students focus on developing place-based knowledge of the community in which they're serving, as well as reflecting on that community's assets, needs, and the complexity of issues that community partners are working to address.  Click Here for the sequence of trainings for First Year (Exploration).

 

Experience (Second Year)

Bonner students focus on developing an understanding of different forms of civic engagement by distinguishing types of service and political engagement. Bonner students deepen their place-based knowledge with an issues-based understanding of root causes and possible solutions to the issues they're confronting.  Click Here for the sequence of trainings for Second Year (Experience).

 

Example (Third Year)

Bonner students will begin making thoughtful decisions about they ways they want to participate in the political process.  They focus on the ability to research and interpret public policies connected to their service, as well as forming policy or other structural responses. This policy-based knowledge give students the ability to articulate other courses of action and expand the impact of their work.  Click Here for the sequence of trainings for Third Year (Example).

 

Excellence (Fourth Year)

Bonner students focus on the ability to participate effectively in the political process based on their skill set and civic capacities in ways that extend their service to include broader and more complex solutions, perhaps those that combine direct service with engagement with policy and other resources. This action-based knowledge will help students plan for a future of life-long civic engagement.  Click Here for the sequence of trainings for Fourth Year (Excellence).

 

 

Resources


  • Learn to Love Lobbying — Most nonprofits don't know how to lobby and, worse, think that it entails cutting shady deals with sleazy characters. In this lively and inspiring talk from theStanford Social Innovation Review's recent Nonprofit Management Institute, Fraser Nelson, nonprofit consultant and former executive director of the Disability Law Center of Utah, debunks the "it's not allowed," "it's too dangerous," and "it's too sleazy" arguments, demonstrating that lobbying is nothing more than educating legislators—a right that our democracy guarantees. To make the changes they want to see in the world, nonprofits must learn to lobby. And who knows? They may even learn to love it.   

>>Click to hear Fraser's talk (podcast) 

>>Click to read Fraser's SSIR article  

 

 

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