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2. The CASA Community
The Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) network consists
of:
National Court Appointed Special Advocate Association (National
CASA)
1150 CASA programs and remote offices across the country
70, 919 volunteers
Judges
Guardian ad Litem attorneys
Funders
Board members
Former foster youth
3. What does CASA do?
4. Building Community Through New Technologies and Social
Media
There are many types of new technologies and medias that are
intended to build and strengthen communities.For a community that
has been growing sincethe first program was established in 1977,
have these new technologies been effective for community
buildingand outreach? How does story telling strengthen outreach
efforts and ?This presentation will take a look at some of these
new technologies, how they are being used and the intended
outcomes.
5. Community Outreach in the past
From the national level:
Newsletters
Email
National CASA Conference
Listserves
Locally:
State conferences
Local trainings
Local fundraising events
6. Whats new?
Social Networking (Facebook, Twitter)
You Tube
Podcasts
Digital Storytelling
Webinars
Over the past two of years, National CASA has begun to
incorporatethese new tools into outreach, community building,
awareness and training.
7. New Technologies and Social Networking
Podcast on How New Technologies Help the CASA/GAL Network
National CASA CEO Michael Piraino talks about how new technologies
are helping members of the CASA network improve volunteer advocacy
for abused and neglected children.
8. Benefits of Social Networking
Increases ability to gather and share information that will benefit
children in court
Relationships are closer regardless of geography
Creates access to a pool of current and former volunteers with a
wealth of information
Not isolated but rather a part of something else
Increase in connections existing and new
Avenue for motivating people
Connections and sharing happens faster
9. YouTube
Life before You Tube:
Spreading the word about CASA meant purchasing air time on TV or
radio stationsto air a PSA, purchasing or receiving in-kind print
advertising space in magazines or newspapers , or mailing VHS or
DVD copies of PSAs to each program to show locally at trainings or
fundraising events.
You Tube = More Viewers:
You Tube has enabled National CASA to post all PSAs, appearances by
national spokespeople and the CEO on shows such as The View or Dr.
Phil as well as news coverage of events to reach more
viewers.
More Viewers = Greater Awareness
10. Benefits of You Tube
The February 1 Black Voices post included an embedded version of
the Make a Lifelong Difference YouTube video, which resulted in an
abrupt upward spike in video viewing. It also increased the number
of volunteer inquiries (25% of all February inquiries were received
on that day) and the number of podcast downloads, which were
listened to over 530 more times in February than in January.
11. Podcasting
What is Podcasting?
A podcast (or netcast) is a series of digital media files (either
audio or video) that are released episodically and often downloaded
throughweb syndication
(http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcast).
Many people liken podcasting to radio on demand. However, in
reality, podcasting gives far more options in terms of content and
programming than radio does. In addition, with Podcasting,
listeners can determine the time and the place, meaning they decide
what programming they want to receive and when they want to listen
to it.Listeners can retain audio archives to listen to at their
leisure. While blogs have turned many bloggers into journalists,
podcasting has the potential to turn podcasters into radio
personalities. (Housley)
12. National CASA Podcasts
National CASA posts weekly podcasts to educate the network on
various training topics and current events in addition to community
building through volunteer stories.
New Podcast: A Volunteer's Story by Jo-Anne Vanin
Massachusetts CASA volunteer Jo-Anne Vaninexplains how she views
her role as a volunteer advocate and why she chooses to do this
important work.
13. Social Computing & Online Interactions
New Volunteer Inquiries: 2,407 in February | 4,742
Year-to-date
New Email Newsletter Subscriptions: 313 new in February | 734 new
Year-to-date
YouTube Videos Watched: 3,350 in February | 5,205
Year-to-date
Audio Podcasts Accessed: 1,894 in February | 3,252
Year-to-date
New Twitter Followers (net): 57 added in February for a total of
233 followers | 96 new Year-to-date
Facebook Page Views: 10,294 in February (1,840 unique) | 15,214
Year-to-date (3,511 unique)
Facebook Fans (net): 909 new in February (5,246 total fans total) |
2,680 new Year-to-date
Facebook Page Member Interactions: 433 in February | 693
Year-to-date
(Forrester, 2010)
14. Facebook presence
The Facebook fan base continues to grow and a
resulting increase in interactions and page views wasevident in
February.
(Forrester, 2010)
15. What does this mean?
More people =
increased online interactions
Increased online interactions =
increased community building and outreach
16. What is Digital Storytelling
A short, first-person video-narrative created by combining recorded
voice, still and moving images, and music or other
sounds.(http://www.storycenter.org/index1.html)
Digital Storytelling is the practice of using computer-based tools
to tell stories. As with traditional storytelling, most digital
stories focus on a specific topic and contain a particular point of
view. However, as the name implies, digital stories usually contain
some mixture of computer-based images, text, recorded audio
narration, video clips and/or music. Digital stories can vary in
length, but most of the stories used in education typically last
between two and ten minutes.
(http://digitalstorytelling.coe.uh.edu/)
17. A New Project: Storytelling Booth
Each year, National CASA brings togetherstaff and volunteers from
the state and local CASA programs from across the country at the
National CASA Conference.Due to various reason, not every program
or volunteer can attend, so the location rotates regionally to
provide more opportunities.The conference not only provides
training, but is a place where people can connect in person and
provide support and inspiration to each other in an often draining
field of work.This year a new project was developed to set up a
storytelling booth for people to tell their story.
18. Intended Outcomes (Interview with Rebecca Grossman, National
CASA Training Specialist)
Q:What do you hope to accomplish?
Two things: obtain stories we can post over the web via audio or
video mainly as a way to explain what we do.I think our mission
will come across much more understandably when it is told through a
story than any other way.
Q:How will you measure success?
If we actually get some stories that we can use for the web or if
we find folks who are willing to be contacted in the future for
story sharing.
Q:What challenges might arise?
Lots!This is the first time we are doing this so I am sure there
are a lot of things we dont know that we dont know. We dont have a
ton of time to get the stories from people.15 minutes with one
person does not allow us to really dig deep into the narrative.What
if no one is willing to do it?Technical issues with equipment or
editing might arise.
Q:How will this project benefit the CASA Community?
I think good stories could be used for telling our story to future
volunteers, people who donate money, potential staff, judges, youth
and the public at large.Plus, for folks who are already in the CASA
community it helps to hear stories to relate to and learn
from.
19. The Project in action
Feedback in real time:
Although many announcements were made to the network via the
website and online newsletter, the team wished that they had
networked more with programs and people they had already made
connections with and asked them to spread the word instead of cold
recruiting at the conference.
Roving interviews were incorporated to pick up reactions and
feedback to use as publicity and to share with those that were not
able to attend the conference.
Overall, people were excited, encouraged and eager to share. All of
the 15 min interview slots were eventually filled and a few
contacts were also made with people who wanted to share their
stories at a later date.
The interviewer was a former foster youth that wants to enter the
field of journalism.With the guidance and coaching from the
communications and training team, the youth conducted many of the
audio and video interviews.
20. How Did it Go? (Follow-up Interview with Rebecca Grossman,
National CASA Training Specialist)
Q:How many stories were collected (on-site and connections for the
future)?
Q:What was the most notable success or positive outcome?
Q:What lessons did you learn?
Q:Will you do this project again?
21. Community Media Across the Network
Many local and State CASA programs are creating their own videos
and posting them on You Tube.The Maryland CASA Association used
their local Public Access TV station to film an informational video
on the work of CASA volunteers and posted it to You Tube.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A5P5oN60VR0&feature=related
Several state and local CASA programs have created Facebook and
Twitter pages for their organizations as an additional way to
connect.
22. Extended Community
Digital Stories from the Field
The National Resource Center for Permanency and Family Connections
(NRCPFC) at the Hunter College School of Social Work, A Service of
the Children's Bureau has created a new website with a series of
stories told from the perspectives of former foster youth, social
workers, supervisors, parents, family partners, advocates,judges
andCASA workers that are useful for individuals and organizations
providing TA to States, Localities, and Tribes, or those inSocial
Work educational settings, as these stories literally bring the
voices and experiences of those most affected by the child welfare
system into the room. The stories cover a wide range of topics
including permanency, adoption, reunification, youth
development,the importance of parent and youth voice in case
planning, and the role of courts and the judicial system in
planning for and with families.
http://www.nrcpfc.org/digital_stories/
23. Extended Community Continued
Many other organizations within the child advocacy field are also
using social networking tools like Facebook and Twitter.These tools
enable organizations to connect in another way and reach out to
create awareness and support.These tools do not take the place of
newsletters, conferences, in-person trainings or other forms of
connectionsand communication that were already in place.These
organizations are friends of National CASA and through this new
online friendship, people that may have been familiar with one
organization is all of a sudden exposed to all of them.
24. Conclusion
New technologies are not intended to be instead of they are in
addition to.National CASA, like many other organizations, is using
online tools and new media forms to build and strengthen its
already growing community.New technologiesprovide another way to
create a stronger more connected network where people feel more
supportedand more connected.Storytelling provides a community
separated by distance a source ofinspiration and is another way to
explain the mission and create more awareness for the organization.
These tools provide a fast and easy way to reach out to new people
as well as stay connected with those already established in the
community.
25. The answer is Yes
Community Building
Anther Way
Outreach
Stronger
Storytelling
More Supported
Outcomes
More Connected
26. Sources:
Center for Digital Storytelling. (n.d.).
http://www.storycenter.org/index1.html
Forrester, Dave. February Online Metrics Report.March 24,
2010.
Grossman, Rebecca. Personal Interviews.April 2, 2010 and May3,
2010.
Housley, Sharon.(n.d.). What is Podcasting.Retrieved April 28, 2010
from: http://www.podcasting-tools.com/what-is-podcasting.htm
Wikipedia. (n.d.). Podcast. Retrieved April 30, 3010 from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Podcast
Educational Uses of Digital Storytelling. (n.d.). Retrieved April
30, 2010 from the University of Houston
website:http://digitalstorytelling.coe.uh.edu/
www.CASAforChildren.org