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Trust & Transformation: Sustaining Extension
Relationships in New Wisconsin Communities
Matt Calvert, Mary Thiry, Anthony Hooker, Jean Berger
University of Wisconsin-Extension
CYFAR Conference 2006
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Trust and Social Capital
• Social Capital: The process and conditions of social networking among people and organizations that lead to accomplishing a goal of mutual social benefit, usually characterized by trust, cooperation, involvement in the community, and sharing.
--Centers for Disease Control
3CONTENT
RELATIONSHIP
Scholarship of Discovery, Integration,
Application of Knowledge
low
high
Information
FacilitationTransformational
Education
Content Transmission
high
PR
OC
ES
SEducational Processes
Adapted from Merrill Ewart Model, Process and Content
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CYFAR in Milwaukee
• Goals– Connecting youth with the rest of Wisconsin’s
community including 4-H opportunities– Youth achieving academic and life skill
success– Helping neighborhood adults share their skills
with youth– Provide opportunities for youth and adults to
demonstrate their valuable power to create transformation at all levels
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Milwaukee Collaborators
Communities at-risk in Milwaukee– CYFAR site is located within the neighborhood of 21st
Street & Center– Affiliations with UW-Extension staff, community
leaders, and – AmeriCorps/VISTA– IOU sports and other
Community groups
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Milwaukee?• It is the largest urban area in the State
• It has Wisconsin’s most diverse yet segregated population
• It has the highest drop-out rate of African Americans in the nation
• In the CYFAR neighborhood 56.4% of the males are unemployed
• It is a community of distrust in “the system”
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Whose trust and what transformation?
It is not our trust but the trust in themselves that causes transformation
It is the white community valuing people of different ethnic communities
It is Milwaukee and then the rest of the state overcoming their fears and mistrust that will help a larger transformation begin
It is possible but not without a lot of work
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CYFAR in Milwaukee
• Valuing community resources and transformation within
Teen mentors show they want to help youth in academics.
Local mentor shows she cares.
Local CYFAR staff are the reason transformation is happening
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CYFAR in MilwaukeeActivities• That focus on life
skills • New or ones that
the youth thought were not possible
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Trust in Milwaukee ?• Creators of Trust
– Understanding that it is not trust in us but rather it is trust in themselves
– By consistently being there over time and providing life skills and opportunities that the adults and youth deem valuable
– Hiring adults from the community to run the program
– Not being a savior– Helping them understand and give pointers of
walking through Wisconsin’s barrier
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Transformation in Milwaukee
• It can only come from within– We can only provide
safe opportunities away from their neighborhood
– CYFAR, Affiliates and community leaders provide time and resources
– Input from the community
Milwaukee youth sleeps on bus on the way home from a county fair made up of all whites, he clutches his hard-won blue ribbon
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Safe Opportunities, and their trust in
themselves
Youth take action in protesting violence in the community
At the UWEX camp in the woods
At a predominately white county
fair
Cleaning up the community
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CYFAR in Wausau
• Goals– Provide an integrated program in an environment that
is like the community– Provide opportunities for gaining confidence and
leadership skills in a structured environment – Helping youth experience 4-H who would not normally
be exposed to it• Experiential learning• Relationships – older youth support younger, connecting
youth to community resources
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Wausau Collaborators
• Communities at-risk in Wausau– 21st Century grant and Wausau school district– Affiliations UW-Extension staff, 1st Hmong
Missionary Alliance Church, 21st Century grant coordinators, Neighbor’s Place Community Center of Wausau
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CYFAR in Wausau
• Supporting Newcomers this Summer– High level of social
capital helps at opportune moments
UW-Extension staff and community partners support newcomers.
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CYFAR in Wausau
• Examples of activities– Summer Club
community projects• Car Wash for Heifer
Club International
Wausau youth wash cars and use proceeds to purchase livestock they chose for families in Africa through Heifer International.
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CYFAR in Wausau
• Examples of activities– Older youth working
with younger youth• Afterschool• Newcomers
Older youth mentor younger youth in Wausau.
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CYFAR in Wausau
Mr. Josh Yang and Jean Berger work with Wausau youth in their afterschool program during its inaugural year.
Mr. Xa Yang works with Wausau youth in 2005.
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Trust in Wausau
• Creators of Trust– Consistency in people working in/with/for the
program, it becomes a personal commitment to the program
– Choosing the right people in the community to work with us
– Respecting the culture and that 4-H can include Hmong traditions
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Overcoming Barriers to Trust
• Us (4-H, Cooperative Extension) overcoming our own rules
• Involve people in a generous way in the beginning– Milwaukee
• All 4-H clubs don’t have to look the same• Don’t get hung up on words or labels
– Wausau• Church and government issue• Leaders Federation• Be inclusive of people as individuals
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Overcoming Barriers to Trust
• Maintain core commitments – commitment to youth development
• Transformation within our own staff – Who and what is 4-H? Whom does it belong to – those who pay their dues or to everybody?
• Don’t bring the answers, bring yourself
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Community Transformation
• Milwaukee– Parents are not apprehensive with UW-Extension– Youth are now volunteering to help even when there is not a
program– Ninety youth because of their trust are now involved in the
CYFAR project– This is the first time the CYFAR youth went to 4H camp and it
was commented that they were the best behaved youth there.• Wausau
– United Way supported Leaders Federation– Change in the mindset and the transformation of the people and
the people who connect their program to a larger community– Not “us and them” and “all of us”– Accepted, equal part of the 4-H program