Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Building Towards Role Plays and Drama-Based Learning

Wednesday, June 27th
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Facilitator: Jessica Levy
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

Please RSVP here: http://tinyurl.com/PTCjun27

Love it or hate it, role plays seem to pop up all over the place as an educational tool. What can they achieve? What is the potential for using theater- and drama-based activities in educational settings? And how do you prepare people who might resist such techniques (lots of us, right?) for giving them a shot? In this gathering, we’ll experiment with a progression of activities that build toward doing drama-based work, and then discuss objectives and strategies for using drama-based techniques in training settings. Whether you’ve facilitated role plays, played person A or person B, or are looking for strategies for designing interactive sessions, your experiences and ideas will be welcome!

Jessica Levy comes to the meeting place of theater, education, and civic engagement from a background as a community educator, organizer, facilitator, and event coordinator. She has designed and implemented civic participation initiatives for younger adults, arts-based cultural awareness programs for teens, and a variety of education, service, and advocacy events. She holds an M.A. in Applied Theater from CUNY and an M.A. in Adult Education and Community Development from the University of Toronto.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Incorporating Restorative Principles Into Our Work With Youth

Wednesday, May 23rd
6:30-8:30 p.m.
Facilitator: Wanda Moore
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

Follow this link to RSVP: http://tinyurl.com/May23PTC
Restorative principles are not only relevant to the justice system; they are the underpinning of any fair and just cultural climate. Youth often have their own cultural norms which can have destructive elements, and the adult response is more often than not punitive. This has led to harsh consequences for youth which have the potential to foster their disconnection and cause more destruction in their future. Creating youth serving environments that offer care and compassion along with rules and expectations have shown promising results. This workshop will share some basic principles and tools of restorative justice and give participants time to reflect on how to work restoratively with youth in their setting.

Wanda R. Moore
, MSS/MLSP, currently provides clinical intervention and research coordination for Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia on their violence prevention interventions in Philadelphia elementary schools and community centers. For several years she directed youth programs in peace leadership and life skills for truant and disconnected youth. She has trained on popular education methods with United for a Fair Economy in Boston, Training for Change and the Alternatives to Violence Project in Philadelphia and holds a dual Masters in Social Service and Law and Social Policy from the Bryn Mawr Graduate School of Social Work and Social Research.

Gatherings are open to the public and cost $5-10 (sliding scale). No one will be turned away for inability to pay. Light refreshments are provided.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

PTC Winter Line-Up 2012

Gatherings are open to the public and cost only $5-10 (sliding scale). Light refreshments are provided.
All gatherings are held from 6:30-8:30 p.m.

To RSVP, please email: phillycollaborative@gmail.com

Interactive Curriculum Design
Wednesday, January 25th
Facilitator: Sara Narva
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

A lab within a lab! Sara Narva will facilitate an interactive process for collaborative curriculum design around the topic of socio-economic class and classism to generate creative ideas for teaching this subject. Participants will simultaneously learn about collaborative design as well as offer suggestions for Sara's curriculum. Sara will provide goals, parameters and guiding questions. In small groups, participants will design interactive, creative lessons for young people to explore issues of growing up with different amounts of resource and privilege. Through this experience, you will discover ways to do this kind of collaborative design for yourself on other topics.

Designing and Evaluating Effective Trainings
Wednesday, February 22nd
Facilitator: Jill Feldstein
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

Building off of our January gathering on collaborative curriculum design, in February we will explore three phases of developing trainings and workshops: planning, executing and evaluating. In February's gathering we will pick apart these pieces, playing with interactive activities to explore ways to:

1). Help you get clear on what you want your trainings to achieve;
2). Creatively design trainings that help you meet your goals; and
3). Evaluate if/how you achieved your goals, utilizing feedback from training participants and the planning team.

Stories for Change
Wednesday, March 28th
Facilitator: Mark Lyons
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

Mark Lyons will lead a workshop on using stories to organize for social change. Sharing stories within a community helps people begin to trust each other, to reflect on their common experiences and honor their dreams and risks they have taken. When a community takes their stories to the streets or City Hall or the media, they have a voice; their stories give them power. We will learn how to frame a story about a specific issue, how to ask questions and do active listening that encourage people to tell vivid stories about their experience, and discuss the possibilities of doing storytelling in our own work. We will also review some basic tools for creating audio stories.

Thursday, March 17, 2011

March PTC Gathering

Cultivating Talent: Tools to Develop and Strengthen Individual Leadership
Wednesday, March 23
Time: 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Facilitators: Jill Feldstein and Cecilia Denning
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor meeting room 3 (AFSCME DC 33 building) **Please note change of location.

Do you want your constituents, students, or staff members to step up and use more of their own talents and abilities? Do you want to inspire those around you into confidence and action? Through interactive activities, role plays, discussion and reflection, participants will explore how to:
  • create the optimal "growth environment" for different kinds of people
  • give clear feedback that acknowledges strengths and identifies specific areas of growth; and
  • create opportunities for individuals to learn and expand their skills.
To RSVP, please click here: http://tinyurl.com/PTCMar23

Facilitators:
Jill Feldstein is the Organizing Coordinator at the Women's Community Revitalization Project, where she runs affordable housing campaigns and supports others in developing skills to help lead those efforts. She likes to think and talk about how to make organizations - and the people that fuel them - better, stronger, and faster.

Cecilia Denning is a feminist activist; she is committed to the process of analyzing experiences and looking at them within the larger social context. Through her work with individuals, she encourages growth and understanding that results in a stronger sense of self and the ability to act in accordance with it.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

January 2011 Gathering

Our first gathering of the new year is coming up on Jan. 26:

Developing Your Capacity to Co-Facilitate Diversity Dialogues
Wednesday, January 26
Facilitators: Tchet Dorman and Dr. Fatima Hafiz
Location: Temple University, Conwell Hall, 3rd Floor, Conference Room 3B, 1801 N. Broad Street

To RSVP, please follow this link: http://tinyurl.com/PTCJan26

Co-facilitating workshops, trainings or meetings can be quite challenging, especially if the program revolves around important social issues such as race, gender, sexual orientation, religion, class or ability. Given the often contentious nature of social justice education programs, co-facilitation based on intergroup dialogue methodology can provide an innovative and effective approach to teaching, learning and facilitator development. Workshop participants will explore their co-facilitation assets and barriers through interactive exercises and dialogue.

Facilitators:
Tchet Dorman and Dr. Fatima Hafiz facilitate intergroup dialogues and training through Temple University’s Center for Social Justice and Multicultural Education in the Office of Institutional Diversity, Equity, Advocacy and Leadership. Tchet serves as the Center’s Director and formerly directed the Office of Multicultural Affairs at Lebanon Valley College and Albright College. Fatima manages the training for the Center’s Intergroup Dialogue Facilitator Training Institute. She also serves as an assistant adjunct professor in teacher education at Temple University.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

PTC October Gathering - 10/27

Strategies for Engaging the Whole Learner

Learn how to accommodate multiple learning styles in your trainings. Participants will leave with the theory & skills needed to ensure that their trainings are dynamic, engaging and will help all participants learn effectively. If you aspire to reach a larger diversity of learners, and to reach those learners' whole selves, join us!


Date: Wednesday, Oct. 27
Time: 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Location: PhilaPosh, 3001 Walnut St., 5th Floor (AFSCME DC 33 building)

Facilitators:


Sara Narva teaches at The Crefeld School in Philadelphia. She specializes in using the model of embodied education, which invites participants to bring their physical, emotional, personal and intellectual selves into the learning space, no matter what the content area.

Susanna Gilbertson has created and facilitated interactive workshops for a diverse group of participants including students, social service workers, and people living in homeless shelters/residential treatment programs on topics ranging from race to intimate partner violence. She has a passion for ensuring that participants' bodies, brains, and hearts are engaged during her trainings.

If you plan to join us, please RSVP by clicking the link below:

http://tinyurl.com/PTCoct27

Monthly gatherings are open to the public. Light refreshments are provided.
Cost (for non-members): $5-10 sliding scale. No one will be turned away for inability to pay.

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

September 22 Gathering

Talking About Taboos

When the 'things we just don't talk about in public' come up in your workshop or classroom, how do you respond? Through interactive activities, participants will explore how to overcome the challenges of talking about taboos using simple strategies that can be implemented in any setting. We will discuss ways to talk about taboos without incorporating our own bias, how to answer difficult and value-based questions, and how to deal with challenging students.

Date: Wednesday, Sep. 22
Time: 6:30-8:30 p.m.
Location: Bread & Roses Community Fund, 1500 Walnut St., 2nd floor

Facilitator: Justine Shuey
Justine is a Sexuality Educator with a Masters in Human Sexuality Education, currently pursuing a Masters of Public Health and Ph.D. in Human Sexuality. An Adjunct Professor at Middlesex County College, Justine has extensive experience in talking to varied audiences about taboo subjects through teaching and presenting workshops related to the often taboo topics of sex and sexuality.

If you plan to join us, please RSVP by clicking the link below:

http://tinyurl.com/PTCsep22

Monthly gatherings are open to the public. Light refreshments are provided.
Cost (for non-members): $5-10 sliding scale. No one will be turned away for inability to pay.

For more information on the Philly Trainers' Collaborative, email us at: phillycollaborative@gmail.com

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