Guidelines For Community
Guidelines For Community
Guidelines For Community
Introduction
A series of guidelines were developed by a Grundtvig 4 programme 2005-2006
and worked on by the Consortium for Training and Learning for Community
Development funded by the European Union 2007-2009. (See www.cebsd.org
and www.tl4cd.wordpress.com for reports and discussion documents and a
blog.) These Guidelines have been summarised for dissemination and
discussion under the following headings:
a) Diversity
b) Relationship between Vocational education and Community
Adult Education
c) Recognition of learning in Community Development
d) Sustainability of training and learning programmes
e) How to improve support for public participation and
involvement.
5. Guidelines
Diagram 1 represents the diversity of the target group with division into three
categories of Public, Political and Professional. Each category should be seen
at different levels, local, and national, European.
Political
Community
Development
Core Principles,
Definitions and Values
Training and learning should create Multipliers
Public Professional
The content should include elements designed for both individual and collective
development, political rights and should have an orientation towards specific
problems and identifying solutions. In addition to training in empowerment, skills
and capacities, groups should be offered knowledge that helps understand
community life. Some suggested topics are:
Identities
Social analysis including norms/values, principles of equality
Initiative and motivation
Personal development such as building confidence, being assertive,
dealing with conflicts.
a) Needs Assessment
To meet the different learning and training needs of the diverse actors, learning
and training for community development must be based on a needs assessment
- i.e. a “mapping” of what the learning and training needs of community
development actors and their organizations are. “Mapping” in this context is, a
design to visualize actors in small communities and the strength of their
relations of conflict and/or cooperation with one another.
At the level of an individual community development worker, a needs
assessment involves answering questions such as: what training do I need to be
effective in my work? What are my strengths and weaknesses? Similarly, at the
level of a community development organization, a needs assessment involves
an organization answering questions such as: what are our competences in a
particular area? In what areas do we need to invest to be more effective?
Participants proposed that one useful approach to carrying out a needs
assessment is by using an “inspiration list” - i.e. a scheme that may stimulate
community development actors to identify their needs with regard to:
.
b) Process and Product
There should be an interlinking of themes and topics in the form chosen for
delivery of training and learning for Community Development and it should be
diverse because people are diverse. (See section on organisation for meeting
diversity). Training can be organised at a local/national or ‘community’ level.
Independence is needed in designing the form or format so that it can be
adapted to the context and to ensure that participants gain skills and abilities to
change and shape their own context. Community-based training may be formal
or informal but formal training is more likely to be concerned with ‘results’
whereas informal training is more likely to be organised from the ‘bottom-up’ and
put emphasis on the process.
Progress reports
Journals
Self-Assessment to own goals
Different forms of feedback
Monitoring and Evaluation by external expert
Arrangement for mentoring
b) Design of Programmes
c) Planning
Some suggestions:
Motivation and the joy of learning should be paramount in designing
your initiative
Make the selection competitive to promote motivation
Involve people, who work in the same institution but who have
different perspectives on the same issue (e.g. Politicians and ‘clerks’
i.e. elected representatives and civil servants)
Select people/organisations based on their background
Use an interdisciplinary approach
Use diversity
Look at each participant as someone who contributes
Use field visits/ study visits and ways of learning from each other’s
experiences
d) “Made-to-measure”
The planning group for the training should ask itself how to generate maximum
involvement and motivation. The TLCD project has produced many suggestions
in answer to the following questions:
a) Diversity
One of the barriers to equality is that there is a paper commitment but this is not
reflected in the reality. One group identified some bad practice in this field. For
example, Government and non-government organisations, Community Workers
and trainers may invite those that they felt comfortable with not people who
would challenge them. Sometimes a minority representative is ‘chosen’ by the
majority because they can rely on that person to express majority opinion and
the ‘chosen’ one is not connected to the minority community.
There are tensions and challenges between the local, national, European and
global dimensions of “community” life. There are forms of encouragement for
public participation for example the Aarhus Convention but this and other
initiatives are limited to informing citizens and that is not public participation. The
European Union and Council of Europe have taken active steps to engage
citizen participation but there is still a sense of alienation between “communities”
and European institutions and no strong sense of interaction. There is not a
sense that citizens can set the agenda. The project on Training and Learning for
Community Development has been funded as a result of the European policy
commitment to lifelong learning. One of the ….of the Lisbon waiting to be ratified
by the member states of the European Union.