Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Notes on Mentoring Youth & Young Parents Guidebook


Mentoring Youth and Young Parents
A Guidebook for Programs Helping Youth
 & Young Parents Navigate a Pathway
to Self-Sufficiency

Download: click here
U.S. Department of Labor
Social Policy Research Associates

Since 2011, the CJYO coursework has involved students developing Youth Program Proposals that follow a set of specific steps and requirements highlighted in this report.  Along with being a good resource for learning about mentoring, including other available resources, this can also compliment projects that involve proposing a community based geared towards serving youth.  Will continue reading... So for noted its emphasis on high quality mentoring as promoting positive behaviors and attitudes as well as defining mentor roles that are built on consistency, endurance, and instead of the term "close", I'd prefer to utilize a term like "genuine".  Other notes in the report characters the mentor relationship as one characterized by mutuality, trust, and empathy "that spans a signficant period and is focused on the young person's interests and preferences.  

As we've stressed in semester's past the report states, "it is important to have an understanding of the current economic and social factors in your community that might affect your population."  These notes are from the first step in laying the groundwork for building a program.  I think readers that are interested in finding ways to improve their understanding of current economic and social factors would benefit from participating in local councils and regional service providers that provide technical assistance and training on how to use sites like Census.gov.  Also linking with existing programs is another point emphasized in this article especially to study the data, trends, and issues that they're learning from the community from their own data collection efforts, surveys, etc. 

I like that the first step in this report is titled groundwork... especially since the passion and drive that people start with can often be extinguished by the amount of research, though, writing, and planning that goes into carrying a project like this.


Keywords + Tag = mentor | mentoring | mentee | youth | young parents | Department of Labor | employment | training | criminal justice | youth outreach | consistency | census | self-sufficiency | guidebook | Federal Mentoring Council | Elements of Effective Practice for Mentoring | health | mentoring relationships | opportunity | youth unemployment | juvenile justice | social justice | social change | mass incarceration | juvenile detention

Sunday, September 21, 2014

The Story of Barney Lee and the CYA / August 1942

The Story of Barney Lee 
**click on the image to enlarge**

California Youth Authority's 1st Charge

Click on the image to enlarge.  The article was discovered utilizing the Newspaper Archive and was accessed from the Oakland Tribute, published Friday, August 14, 1942.  It is about the first youth committed to the California Youth Correction Authority after his stay at San Quentin's prison hospital.  The article mentions youth under the age of 16 were segregated from the adult population by state law.  This article was found out of interest to learn more about the CYA's inception and why it was built.  Inspired also by Will Roy's interview and Nell Bernstein's Burning Down the House, The End of Juvenile Prison text, specifically chapter 2, 'Birth of an Abomination: The Juvenile Prison in the Nineteenth Century'.

Below is a quote from the article:

"The action came in the wake of widespread protest against the child slayer's commitment to prison among hardened criminals - protest that came even from the convicts themselves."


Keywords + Tag = Barney Lee | California Youth Correction Authority | California | CYA | CA | California Youth Authority | Will Roy | Nell Bernstein | Burning Down the House | The End of Juvenile Prison | 19th Century | prison | incarceration | Mercedes | institutionalized | San Quentin | life sentence | second degree murder | Superior Judge H. C. Jorgensen | Father O'Meara | Preston School of Industry | Nell Bernstein | juvenile justice | CJYO | Criminal Justice & Youth Outreach | NMSU | New Mexico State University | Las Cruces 

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Music Lessons May Boost Poor Kids' Brainpower, Study Suggests

Music Lessons May Boost Poor Kids' Brainpower, Study Suggests
by Linda Carrol (Today Contributor)
Article: click here

Each semester, the energy of the course content ends up connecting with current events and local happenings.  Whether it was last semester's visit of Dr. Cornel West to the border community, literally during the same week we were scheduled to begin reading the introduction of Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow, Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, or the racial explosion of recent police shootings as we studied the history and impact of the drug war and its relationship to policing and a lock-up process gone bad.

With this semester's focus on creative expression in juvenile detention, I'd like for everyone to read an article recently published by USA Today, titled "Music Lessons May Boost Kids' Brainpower, Study Suggests".  From the onset of course instruction we read and discussed the Carnegie Hall music report posted here, and are learning about the adolescent brain through Scott Wier's experience Teaching Behind Bars.  

I hope this article helps you understand the present day momentum and importance of creative expression in not only juvenile detention (justice settings), but the community as well.  


Here is a quote from the article:

"Researchers from Northwestern University found that after two years of music lessons, the brains of kids from poor, gang-infested neighborhoods interpreted speech sounds more quickly and precisely, an improvement that might lead to better language and reading skills, according to the study published in the Journal of Neuroscience.  

The new findings come as tightening budgets have led more and more schools in poorer districts to chop arts programs, including music instruction, as nonessential to kids’ educations.

Though earlier research had shown that music training seems to have a global impact on kids’ academic achievement, there was no proof that it actually affected kids’ brains."




Keywords + Tag = music | brainpower | Linda Carroll | lessons | academic gap | research | Northwestern University | speech | school | instruction | kids | global impact | creative justice | criminal justice | justice | social justice | music justice | music training | smart | intelligence | passion | drive | sound processing | poverty | wealth | process |
Harmony Project | Isaac's Story |  University of Oxford | England | Los Angeles | sounds | brainwaves | Mozart | training | panacea | Robert Bilder | Tennenbaum Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Psychology | University of California | NBC | Today | The Concussion Crisis Anatomy of a Silent Epidemic

Carlos Watson & CNN Discuss Today's Leaders | Video


Carlos Watson & CNN Discuss Today's Leaders
CNN Video: click here

For students of CJYO and visitors, here's a video with Carlos Watson discussing today's leaders that may be of interest to your goals looking forward in your justice careers.  The question is what defines your justice work?  Is it Social justice?  Criminal justice?  Non-profit justice work?  Juvenile justice?  Creative justice?  All of the above?  Is there a specific field you'd like to pursue?  Most importantly, who is your mentor?

Keywords + Tag = Carlos Watson | Lupe Valdez | CNN | Cable News Network | Michaela Pereira | @michaelaCNN | civil rights | leaders | Ozy | Ozy.com | future | next steps | career | justice | social justice | Dr. King | attorney general | police brutality | California | Kamala Harris | Dallas | LBGTQI | @carloswatson | migrant worker | Dallas | DEA | Department of Homeland Security | sheriff | Latina | law enforcement | Roland Fryer | Geoffrey Canada | Harlem | Waiting for Superman | Bronx | education | Harlem Renaissance | high school | college | jobs | employment | safety | community | empowerment | President Obama | Barrack Obama | Harlem model | gangster | Harvard | economic professor | McArthur genius | school | poverty | tutoring | professor | Houston | Denver | implementation | change | top performers | Teacher's Union | battle | charter schools | reformers | bridging the gap | opportunity | research | care | care deeply | personal | experience | choice | mentors | support | angels 

Sunday, September 14, 2014

Researching the Carnegie Hall Report - A TED Talk (Janet) | CJYO 2014


TED Talks w/ Sarah-Jayne Blakemore: click here

The Sarah-Jayne Blakemore TED resource was shared by CJYO student Janet of Fall 2014 for the 8.25 reading of the Carnegie Hall report titled "May the Songs I Have Written Speak for Me, An Exploration of the Potential of Music in Juvenile Justice".  Connects to the brain science written in the Carnegie Hall report, and this semester's Wier text, Teaching Behind Bars.  Learn more by clicking on the link above.

A quote from the TED Talk:

"So brain research has shown that the adolescent brain undergoes really quite profound development, and this has implications for education, for rehabilitation, and intervention. The environment, including teaching, can and does shape the developing adolescent brain, and yet it's only relatively recently that we have been routinely educating teenagers in the West. All four of my grandparents, for example, left school in their early adolescence. They had no choice. And that's still the case for many, many teenagers around the world today. Forty percent of teenagers don't have access to secondary school education. And yet, this is a period of life where the brain is particularly adaptable and malleable. It's a fantastic opportunity for learning and creativity.
 
So what's sometimes seen as the problem with adolescents — heightened risk-taking, poor impulse control, self-consciousness — shouldn't be stigmatized. It actually reflects changes in the brain that provide an excellent opportunity for education and social development." 
 
Keywords + Tag = Sarah-Jayne Blakemore | Criminal Justice & Youth Outreach | CJYO | juvenile detention | NMSU | New Mexico State University | TED | talks | TED talks | Carnegie Hall | juvenile justice | creativity | creative expression | rehabilitation | intervention | education | songs | Scott Wier | Wier | adolescence | brain science | science | developmental changes | brain | cognition | impulse | decisions | scientific study | TED Global | environment | stigma | learning | emotional impact | decision making | consequence | intuition  

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Raising the Bars by Scott Wier | 9.2 Who Is Scott Wier? (Akeisha)

One of the initial activities in CJYO this semester involves digging for background info on this Fall's lead text, Teaching Behind Bars by Scott Wier.  Below is an article found by Akeisha titled "Raising the Bars: Professor Recounts Teaching Inside the Prison System".  See the link below for the full read.

"Years after, when I would lecture on the subject of conduct disorders as part of my Abnormal Psychology course, the response from the undergraduate population was inspirational.  Granted, they made it clear it had less to do with the academic subject matter and more about the stories I would share from my years spent with inmates and guards that dovetailed with the text." 


Wier, Scott. "Raising the Bars: Professor Recounts Teaching Inside the Prison System." Western News 4 April 2013. Web. 11 Sept 2014. http://communications.uwo.ca/western_news/stories/2013/April/raising_the_bars_professor_recounts_teaching_inside_the_prison_system.html

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Technology, Imagination, and Organizing With Storytelling

This post is for CJYO students from the Fall semester of 2013 and activities related to the subtitle of the course last year, "Connecting Memoir to Social Change".


Technology, Imagination, and Organizing With Storytelling
Storytelling Summer: Answers to Common Questions About Motivating Your Audience
By Paul VanDeCarr

This week, the last entry in the Storytelling Summer series, I’ll answer two questions:

What trends do you see happening in storytelling for social change? In particular, how do you anticipate storytelling will evolve given the technology available? 

How can we frame the need for new and fair revenue to improve outcomes for youths, given opposition to taxes and the counternarrative against investment in public institutions such as schools?

I’ve been involved in storytelling projects for almost 20 years, and the most heartening trend I see  is that change-makers are thinking more in terms of stories.

Stories have always been with us, of course, but more populist storytelling has been given a boost in the last two decades by projects and programs like This American Life, The Moth, and StoryCorps. In the public-interest sector, there’s the excellent work of people like storytelling trainer and strategist Andy Goodman and community organizer and Harvard professor Marshall Ganz, with his leadership-development method of “Public Narrative.”

As a result of this and other work, we have a nonprofit world that is more attuned to the value of good stories to rally support for a cause, build leadership, strengthen communities, and change policy.

On Digital Technologies and Interactivity

I’m less interested in how storytelling may change with new technology than I am in the principles of good storytelling that transcend medium, such as I’ve written about in previous columns “Don’t Tell a Boring Story” and “Are You Really Telling Stories?” That said, we can’t ignore technological change, and digital tools have already enabled a particular kind of interactivity.

Users tend to have expectations about certain story mediums: web videos should be short, Vines should be shorter, and viewers should be able to comment, share, rework the original video or create their own video responses. The same is true of social media in written form.

What’s more important than the medium is the connection you make with your audience—or as the buzz-phrase of a few years ago had it, “the people formerly known as your audience” but now known as your co-creators and respondents. How you make that connection and what technologies you use to do it should be guided by a strategy, but some experimentation with new forms can help keep things fresh.

What a grant maker once told me about foundations applies to other nonprofits as well: “We’re in an era of constant technological change, and it requires continuous professional development. We don’t have to be ahead of our grantees”—or nonprofits don’t have to be ahead of their stakeholders—“but we can’t be behind them.”

Imagination Over Medium

Whatever the medium, stories work if they fire the imagination.

Just because some stories use interactive technologies doesn’t mean that they achieve their goals any better than a story told at a campfire. To cite a personal example, Franz Kafka’s novel The Trial is still perhaps the most powerful vision of an arbitrary justice system I’ve ever read. That book has shaped my political imagination in ways that no YouTube video or immersive “story environment” like a video game ever has.

That is because our view of social problems and social change are shaped by our experience and our imaginations.

Take any issue—such as funding for public education, the topic of our second question—and we each have stories, impressions, fantasies, and personal experiences that fill our minds. One person might think, “I benefited from my public schooling, and I want to pay it forward through my taxes.” Another might say, “Public schools are in ruins thanks to a dysfunctional government. We should starve the beast and privatize education.” Or still another may believe, “I’m sure whatever happens, kids will learn and everything will be fine."

Such feelings guide our actions in the world: what causes we donate to, which ones we like on Facebook or stand up for in our everyday lives.

Framing the Story

If imagination is the field on which social problems (and change) are played out, then that field is delineated by a frame.

A frame is an interpretive structure or a way of seeing things. Thinking about the education debate, the frame may be that we have a collective responsibility to make sure all kids get an excellent education.

A story is what fills the frame and supports it. That may be narratives of people who wouldn’t have succeeded but for public school or of people who paid taxes and saw their communities improve.

I don’t have a ready answer for how to better frame the question of revenue for public education or what stories to tell to support it. But I do have an idea about what process to follow to create frames and stories.

Storytelling as a Form of Organizing

Throughout the “Storytelling Summer” series I have written about storytelling mostly as a form of communication in the sense of transmitting a message to an audience. But just as important, storytelling is also a form of organizing.

Participants in a political campaign or movement come together around shared values as expressed in stories, like the tales from the 1969 Stonewall riots in the LGBT movement. And when people in a movement or campaign deliberately share their own stories, they learn about each other’s experiences and dreams.

If you solicited stories from your constituents that dramatized the value of public education, you could begin to create a frame. Depending on the kinds of stories you received, a “shared responsibility” frame might begin to take shape, or one of “strong economy through universal public education.”

This story-sharing could take the form of videos you post on your website, a live open-mic storytelling show, short written narratives, or even Instagram photos that suggest a narrative.

By facilitating story sharing, you are not only gathering material for a frame and the narratives that fill it, but, as I wrote previously in this series, you are also developing your membership. People become more invested in an organization if they have given a part of themselves, and if you meaningfully incorporate it. Your organization is no longer “those people” – it is me, you, and us.

This is the final installment in the “Storytelling Summer” series. However, Paul VanDeCarr will continue writing periodically for The Chronicle on the topic of storytelling and social change. Submit your topic ideas to paul@workingnarratives.org. Questions used in future columns will be edited and made anonymous.

Mr. VanDeCarr is the managing director of Working Narratives, an organization that works with advocates, artists, policy groups, media-makers, and others to “change the story” on the big social-justice issues of our time. He is also the author of that organization’s publication “Storytelling and Social Change: A Strategy Guide for Grantmakers”; he is working on a second edition of the guide, this time for nonprofits and activists, and to be released this winter.

Find his organization at workingnarratives.org, on Facebook, or on Twitter at @wnstory.


VanDeCarr, Paul. “Technology, Imagination, and Organizing With Storytelling.  Storytelling Summer: Answers to Common Questions about Motivating Your Audience." The Chronicle of Philanthropy 27 August 2014. Web. 3 Sept 2014. http://philanthropy.com/article/Technology-Imagination-and/148487/?cid=pt&utm_source=pt&utm_medium=en


Keywords + Tag = technology | audience | imagination | policy change | leadership | interactivity | public narrative | organization | digital tools | community | Paul VanDeCarr | storytelling | cause | Working Narratives | digital | technology | Facebook | strategy | story environment | social problems | social change | frame | narrative | universal public education | story-sharing | Chronicle of Philanthropy | NMSU | Connecting Memoir to Social Change | CJYO | Criminal Justice & iYouth Outreach