The Importance of Urgency from Will Forsythe on Vimeo.
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
A sense of urgency: Education reform in Minnesota
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Working Together: Fighting Famine in Somalia
Working Together: A Community Forum to Address Famine in the Horn of Africa
Date: 08/31/2011
Time: 1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
Location: Cowles Auditorium Hubert H. Humphrey Center
Cost: Free
Description:
The Humphrey School of Public Affairs and Representative Keith Ellison will host a public forum and discussion on Wednesday, August 31 at 1:30 p.m. in Cowles Auditorium, on the ongoing famine in the Horn of Africa. Panelists will include House Democrat Leader Nancy Pelosi, Representatives Betty McCollum and Tim Walz, USAID Administrator Dr. Raj Shah, American Refugee Committee's Daniel Wordsworth, and the Somali Action Alliance's Hashi Shafi. RSVP required at MN05RSVP@mail.house.gov.
Monday, August 29, 2011
The world is not happening to us
Saturday, August 27, 2011
20 Questions for Minnesota Rising Un/Conference 2011 Network Partners
Thank you for serving as a Network Partner for the Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference: Building A Network For What’s Next! Please use any 3-5 questions of the following 20 prompts as a guide for writing your Network Partner blog post (300-600 words) for the Minnesota Rising blog. Please also include your organizational logo or a relevant photo in your email to minnesotarising@gmail.com by Friday, September 9.
1. In two sentences, what does your group/organization do?
2. Who makes up your membership?
3. What was your group/organization’s biggest accomplishment in the past year?
4. If you could have any celebrity/famous person join your group/organization, who would it be and why?
5. Where will your grup/organization be in three years?
6. Which quintessential Minnesota landmark best represents your group/organization?
7. What makes the members of your group/organization unique and rockstars?
8. What other Network Partner do you most want to partner with in the future and why?
9. If your group/organization were a Sesame Street character, which one would you be and why?
10. How do you determine who is on your board/in leadership positions? What does your board/leadership do in your organization?
11. Who has been the best speaker your group has featured at an event?
12. If your board members were cast on a TV show, what TV show would it be and why?
13. What’s the best way for people connect with your group/organization?
14. If your group/organization could only do one thing in 2011 - event, program, resource, etc - what would it be and why?
15. What is your group/organization’s theme song and why?
16. You’re ordering delivery for your board meeting. What do you order and from what restaurant?
17. A genie gives you one wish for your group/organization. What do you wish for?
18. Who has been an outstanding member of your group/organization this year and why?
19. The Governor wants your group/organization to counsel him on an important issue. What issue is it and what do you tell the Governor?
20. What’s one thing your group/organization is going to bring to the table at the 2011 UnConference?
Friday, August 26, 2011
Network Partner Invitation: Join us at the Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference!
Founded in 2009, Minnesota Rising is the network of emerging leaders in Minnesota. Minnesota Rising works to build relationships, trust, and a shared vision for the future of Minnesota, and engages emerging leaders and young professional organizations to work toward that call both now and in the future. Through Minnesota Rising’s online presence, annual Un/Conference, Minnesota Rising Council, and research, we are building the collective capacity of this generation for impacting Minnesota's future.The Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference: Building A Network For What's Next will be held on Saturday, October 22, 2011 from 10:00AM - 6:00PM at the CoCo coworking and collaborative space in St. Paul, MN. The daylong Un/Conference will bring together emerging leaders for innovative learning and dialogue, skills-building, and network-building with their peers.
Being a Network Partner is as simple as letting your membership know about the Un/Conference. During three promotional pushes leading up to the Un/Conference, we’ll provide customizable promotion text, including Twitter, Facebook, and newsletter blurbs, for you to adapt and use in your own social media outlets.
In return for your support, your organization will receive the following benefits:
- Listed on event materials and website as a Network Partner
- Opportunity to be featured on Minnesota Rising’s website through a blog post
- We’ve developed a list of questions that your organization can choose from in order to make writing an informational blog post easy and fun.
- Cascading Conversation tool kit
- A tool kit to help your leadership or organization facilitate cascading conversations with your members. This will be demonstrated at the Un/Conference.
- Highlighted at the event through Network Partner announcement
- Opportunity to share materials with Un/Conference attendees
- Priority in the workshop selection process
- Opportunity to highlight your organization’s events through the Minnesota Rising blog or Facebook page
If you are interested in becoming a Network Partner, please confirm your organizational interest by Friday, September 9, 2011!
Thursday, August 25, 2011
You're Invited: Citizens League Member Appreciation Event
Member Appreciation Event
5:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m.
Wilde Roast Cafe
65 SE Main St, Minneapolis
Join the Citizens League to celebrate the end of summer and YOU, our members, for our end-of-summer member appreciation get-together.
This is a great opportunity to meet fellow Citizens League members, and learn more about our current policy work and opportunities for you to get involved. Light appetizers will be provided.
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
MinnPost YPN5Q: Diane Tran
YPN5Q: Diane Tran
YPN5Q is a weekly Q&A series spotlighting the state's top young business and civic leaders and creative minds -- professionals propelling change through entrepreneurship, the arts, public service, social media, and community involvement.
This week, we hear from Diane Tran, a project manager at Grassroots Solutions, a national consulting firm specializing in grassroots advocacy, organizing, strategy, targeting, and political field consulting.
Outside of work, Tran serves on the boards of Citizens League, Kids 'n Kinship, and the Leaders of Today and Tomorrow (LOTT) program of the League of Women Voters Minnesota.
Tran was named one of Ten Outstanding Young Minnesotans in 2008 by the Minnesota Jaycees, served as a 2006-2007 Humphrey Institute Policy Fellow and was awarded a 2004 Institute for International Public Policy Fellowship. Tran blogs about active citizenship, emerging leadership and the Millennial generation at Minnesota Rising.
Name: Diane Tran
Age: 27
Residence: South Metro
Current Job Title: Project Manager
Current Employer: Grassroots Solutions1. What accomplishment are you most proud of in your career so far?
Throughout my high school years, I was an active leader with Target Market, Minnesota's grassroots anti-corporate tobacco industry youth movement. I was honored to receive the 2002 Dakota County Youth Public Health Achievement Award and be recognized that same year by then-Minnesota State Health Commissioner, Jan Malcolm, for my youth tobacco prevention efforts.I continued to educate and organize around public health issues during my college years and upon graduating, managed a local grassroots education and advocacy campaign to advance the Freedom to Breathe Act of 2007, a statewide smoke-free workplace policy protecting Minnesota workers from the harmful effects of secondhand smoke.
It was especially moving to be part of an effort over thirty years in the making, the success of which came as a result of the collaborative work of thousands of passionate and dedicated Minnesotans.
2. What is Minnesota Rising and what's next for it?
Minnesota Rising is the network of emerging leaders and young professionals groups that works to build relationships, trust and a shared vision for Minnesota.The Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference: "Building a Network for What's Next" is slated for Saturday, Oct. 22, 2011 at CoCo St. Paul, and will be an daylong event of skill-building, network-building and leadership development hosted by and for emerging leaders. We'll also be kicking off a two-year tour of cascading conversations, partially designed at the Un/Conference, that will help to build collective consensus and capacity for impacting Minnesota's future.
3. What do you do for fun?
I was given the social title of "The Adventurer" at work. I love exploring and am ever challenging myself to expand my comfort zone.I bungee-jumped off the bridge that separates Zimbabwe and Zambia over Victoria Falls on its 100-year anniversary, drove stick-shift on the left side of the road through Lesotho, Swaziland and South Africa, whilst in-country for the 2010 World Cup, and took in majestic views of an organic coffee plantation on the Mombacho Volcano Canopy Tour in Nicaragua last year.
Locally, I'm a fan of skydiving, go-kart racing and flying airplanes. I recently became engaged to the most incredible person I have ever known, who is the best adventure buddy, and so I'm now embarking on a whole different kind of journey!
4. What is your favorite book, and why?
I adore "Candide, ou l'Optimisme" by Voltaire. Mostly because it pokes fun at me and my sensibilities. A pragmatic optimist, I think we make meaning of our lives. More to the point, I think humility is critical and I appreciate how Voltaire's satire gives the Candide in me a run for my money.5. What is your Myers-Briggs personality type and do you agree?
I first took an official Myers-Briggs survey in high school and still hold to that initial analysis that I'm an ENFJ. This description I came across seems to say it all; I identify especially with the last part:"ENFJs are motivated by external human situations, primarily by other people; their talents, their needs, their aspirations and their cares forming the world in which an ENFJ lives. They thrive when able to 'make things right' for others, to enable and empower their co-workers, friends and family through valuing their human strengths and abilities. When gifted with the added ENFJ ability to intuitively adapt their feelings to the way they are affected by others, the ENFJ has a positive drive to find cooperative pathways leading to the best possible outcome for all, including themselves."
To nominate a young professional for "YPN5Q," emailypn@minnpost.com with the nominee's full name, employer or contact info, and one or two brief sentences supporting your nomination.
Posted by Audra Otto
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
Requesting RFPs: Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference
Founded in 2009, Minnesota Rising is the network of emerging leaders in Minnesota. Minnesota Rising works to build relationships, trust, and a shared vision for the future of Minnesota, and engages emerging leaders and young professional organizations to work toward that call both now and in the future. Through Minnesota Rising’s online presence, annual Un/Conference, Minnesota Rising Council, and research, we are building the collective capacity of this generation for impacting Minnesota's future.
The Minnesota Rising 2011 Un/Conference: Building A Network For What's Next will be held on Saturday, October 22, 2011 from 10:00AM - 6:00PM at the CoCo coworking and collaborative space in St. Paul, MN. The daylong Un/Conference will bring together emerging leaders for innovative learning and dialogue, skills-building, and network-building with their peers. Content for the Un/Conference is developed by and for emerging leaders in our community in order to showcase this generation's talent and knowledge. The Un/Conference will feature three periods of five 50-minute breakout session options for attendees, as well as several 4-minute Show and Tell presentations to the large group. The Un/Conference Content Committee is now accepting proposals for presentations of unique topics that would be of interest to our target audience.
We are looking for proposals for 50-minute breakout sessions that fit into the following 2011 Un/Conference Tracks:Track 1: Me, Myself, and Minnesota | Personal CultivationHave an idea you want to test out? Have unique expertise you want to share? Want to begin a dialogue with other emerging leaders about how our generation can improve Minnesota? We invite you to submit a proposal for a session at this year's event! We are accepting proposals until Friday, September 9, 2011 and look forward to your submission!Focused on self-leadership and personal development, particularly as it relates to being an active citizen in Minnesota. Sessions should allow for self-reflection and life skills-building.Track 2: COM.MN Cause | Organizational EvolutionFocused on skills and practices to improve organizational capacity of emerging leader groups and community organizations. Sessions should highlight organizational development, management, and team-building principles.Track 3: Making Our Mark on Minnesota | Public LeadershipFocused on opportunities for individuals and institutions to contribute to the existing civic infrastructure of Minnesota. Sessions should leverage tools of collaborative leadership and urge re-envisioning community engagement.Track 4: State of the State + Future State | Generational EmergenceFocused on question of how emerging leaders can develop relationships, trust, and a shared vision for the future of Minnesota. Sessions should provoke questions that advance strategies around movement-building and developing a common generational agenda or operating principles.
Monday, August 22, 2011
Stories move in circles
Friday, August 19, 2011
The Art of Hosting: Framing Open Questions
Framing Open Questions
By Caryl Hurtig Casbon
Some guidelines for asking open questions include the following:
1. The best single mark of an honest, open question is that the questioner could not possibly anticipate the answer to it.
2. Ask questions aimed at helping the focus person rather than at satisfying your curiosity.
3. Ask questions that are brief and to the point rather than larding them with background considerations and rationale—which make the question into a speech.
4. Ask questions that go to the person as well as the problem—for example, questions about feelings as well as about facts.
5. Trust your intuition in asking questions, even if your instinct seems off the wall.
6. Consider holding a question rather than asking it immediately, particularly if you're not sure it's a good question. If it keeps coming back to you, ask it later.
7. Allow questions to "bubble up" or emerge, rather than force them.
8. Watch the pacing of your questions. Questions coming too fast can feel aggressive.
9. Avoid any storytelling, or behaviors that call attention to yourself.
10. The best questions are simple questions.
11. Avoid questions with right/wrong answers.
12. Sometimes questions that invite images or metaphors can open things up in ways that more direct questions don't.
13. As you listen deeply to what is being said try to allow questions to come from your heart, rather than your head.
"Be patient toward all that is unsolved in your heart . . . Try to love the questions themselves . . . Do not now seek the answers, which cannot be given you because you would not be able to live them. And the point is, to live everything. Live the questions now. Perhaps you will find them gradually, without noticing it, and live along some distant day into the answer."
-Rainer Maria Rilke
Thursday, August 18, 2011
Recruiting Racial Justice Facilitators: YWCA of Minneapolis
August 2011It’s Time to Talk: October 18, 2011Facilitators Needed!Circle facilitation is a great skill to have for any type of conversation, especially around difficult topics like race and racism. We are recruiting returning and new facilitators for ITT 2011. You or someone you know can become a trained circle facilitator. Take the first step by completing a volunteer form. If you are a returning facilitator, please sign up for ITT 2011 and the two-hour skills training session. |
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
Touchstones for trust and renewal
- Come to the work with 100% of ourselves
- Presume welcome and extend welcome
- Believe that it's possible to emerge refreshed, surprised and less burdened than when we came
- There is always invitation, never invasion; always opportunity, never demand
- No fixing or advising
- Openness to learn from each other
- When the going gets rough, turn to wonder
- Speak for yourself
- Listen to the silence
- Observe confidentiality
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Accepting Applications: Common Grounds 2011-2012 Client
The Common Grounds Steering Committee requests proposals for a consulting project for the 2011-2012 academic school year. This year, we are opening up projects for semester or year long timelines in order to better fit client and student needs.
Guided by the principle that complex problems require collaboration across disciplines, Common Grounds brings together approximately thirty students from the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management, Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, and Law School. Common Grounds engages community issues from an interdisciplinary approach by providing professional research and consultation to businesses and organizations. In addition, Common Grounds provide students with a forum to develop collaborative ideas and to promote integrative leadership.
Members of Common Grounds will work together in groups to research the project over a two-month period. We will ask you to direct us to materials you think we should investigate and take our own initiative to find resources to provide the best research product.
We ask that any participant is able to attend a meeting of our whole group on a Monday morning in early October during which you can present the project and outline several areas of research for our members to pursue. We also would like to schedule a midpoint and final presentation of deliverables where appropriate.
We are happy to answer questions about past projects and our method of working, and find that gaining the basic information this form provides is a great starting place. We would also ask to have at least one meeting with your organization prior to selection so we can shape the project together and set expectations. Common Grounds does not charge for these services, but may ask your organization to contribute something of value for our members, for example a meal for a meeting.
COMMON GROUNDS STEERING COMMITTEE:
Amelia Brunelle (Chair), Astrid Brouillard, Jay Creagh, Leah Lundquist, Chris Schmitter http://commongroundsmn.org/
If you have any questions, please contact us at: info@CommonGroundsMN.org
Monday, August 15, 2011
The way it is
Friday, August 12, 2011
Cause for Connection: Mark and Lisa Adopt
Thursday, August 11, 2011
Announcing the 2011-2012 Humphrey Policy Fellows!
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
You're Invited: Greater Twin Cities United Way Speed Volunteering
Speed Volunteering
Whether you have 15 minutes or an hour, you can make a difference by joining a flash volunteer group in downtown Minneapolis or Saint Paul.
Popular local celebrities and entertainment will appear at volunteer stations to help make Find Your Way Day one to remember.
Find a way to make a difference.
A variety of events will be available for you to participate in.
Healthy Snack Packs
Create healthy snacks and provide essential nourishment to hungry children in our community. In our state, 39 percent of food shelf recipients are children.
Dental Supply Packs
Assemble dental supply kits and provide bright smiles for children and pregnant mothers. Tooth decay is a leading cause of school absenteeism.
Laundry soap
Bring dignity to low-income families by providing them with laundry soap so they can wash their clothes. Government food support programs do not allow recipients to purchase laundry soap and personal hygiene products with the funds.
Education Kits
Help families experience the joy of learning together with early education kits made just for them. Only 51 percent of Minnesota kindergarteners are fully prepared for kindergarten in the areas of language and literacy.
Blankets
Make a blanket to help comfort a child. 60 minutes = 1 blanket and warmth and comfort to a child in crisis.
Sign Up NowTuesday, August 9, 2011
You're Invited: YNPN-TC The Insider: Subsector Smorgasbord
You are invited to attend:
The Insider: Subsector Smorgasbord
Wednesday, August 24, 2011 from 5:30 PM - 7:30 PM
It's a true buffet of informational interview opportunities!
YNPN Twin Cities is bringing those interview opportunities to you. We've assembled a group of highly knowledgeable people across a wide variety of the nonprofit subsectors, and they'll come ready to answer your questions. Want to know what it's like to work in economic development? What it takes to break in to philanthropy? Who the people are to know in the capacity building world? Have we got an event for you! Great for people who:
- Are currently working in one subsector, but interested in shifting into another
- Are new to the sector, exploring which subsector they would like to be involved with
- Know the area they’d like to work, and need to find the key to unlock those opportunities
- Feel stagnated in a particular subsector and want to get to their career to the next level
Be sure to come with all the questions you've been dying to ask about the nonprofit subsectors!
See the event page for more details, a sample of the line-up, and to register!
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