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Blog

Connecting For Change

SHAPE-SHIFTING: Five-Pointed Star

Posted by Lucas on 5.7.2013

This poem was written by poet, Everett Hoagland, for the Marion Institute and Connecting for Change.

 

Through the shape-shifting lens
of sea water we only see the top side
of a starfish, and we are awed
by how it eyelessly seems to see
and glide across the bottom

of the tide pool. As much as anything
else may be, it is the image of the shape-
shifting regenerative five-fingered hand
of What created it, you, me.

Though it does not twinkle
as it dines on, lives on dead fish
and opens, eats mussels, oysters
in the shallows, today we should make a wish
upon it anyway, for it, for all of us,

and our deep, life-giving, ever-surface-changing,
salty, liquid Common Source, our ocean,
by way of something good for our consciousness,
good for our souls: a Connecting For Change

Bioneers Sunday pilgrimage, not just to this venue,
but also in person to the beach at our own nearby scenic bay
to look for, connect with the seemingly shimmering starfish
and other mundane miracles among its shoals.

Everett Hoagland
2012 

VICTORY PARK ORCHARD PLANTING, PARK CLEAN UP, AND BOOK READING

Posted by Brooke on 5.1.2013

VICTORY PARK ORCHARD PLANTING, PARK CLEAN UP, AND BOOK READING
May 5, 2013

 

New Bedford, MA – Connecting for Change: A Bioneers by the Bay Conference (CFC), a program of the Marion Institute, is excited to invite you to get your hands dirty and help us plant an orchard with the orchard donation recipients, the New Bedford Parks Recreation & Beaches, on Sunday, May 5th from 10am-1pm.  This free event will take place at Victory Park, located at 244 Brock Ave. in the South End of New Bedford, MA. 

“The installation of an orchard at Victory Park is fitting given the sites history as the city’s Poor Farm.  The orchard and the Victory Park community gardens will help children to understand how food comes to their tables and helps to address food security in the City of New Bedford.” -  Mary S. Rapoza, Director of New Bedford Parks Recreation & Beaches

In 2012, CFC donated two orchards, sponsored by RainforestMaker. The donation recipients would receive fruit trees, plus a consultation with orchardist and Chelsea Green Publishing author, Michael Phillips, to ensure the longevity of the trees for the community. Jeffrey Glassman of Rainforestmaker remarked that his group was “honored to sponsor the donation of two orchards during the Connecting for Change Conference and now we are very excited to plant those trees.  We love these opportunities and enjoy quality time together with our dedicated volunteers who have fun getting their hands dirty!   We hope that others will embrace this moment and come out on Sunday to experience the joy for themselves.”

We are proud to announce that one orchard recipient is the New Bedford Parks Recreation & Beaches! We invite you to be a part of this celebration by participating in the tree planting and listen to a reading of the children’s book, The Giving Tree, by JoAnn Tschaen of Trips for Kids. During this event, participants will learn how to plant fruit trees, as well as, discover more about the park and garden’s history, and connect with several community groups. The fruit tree planting will be held from 10:00am-12:00pm and the book reading will shortly follow the planting at 12:15pm. Please email Brooke Syvertsen at brooke@marioninstitute.org or call 508.748.0816 for more information about the planting. For more detailed information, please click here.

 

“This is a perfect partnership and opportunity for the Marion Institute to further our mission, supporting root cause solutions, by planting trees with deep roots and baring fruit for generations to come,” says Desa Van Laarhoven, Executive Director of the Marion Institute.

Continuing to Connect for Change

Posted by Lucas on 7.20.2012

Three days of inspiration: keynote speakers, educational and skill building workshops, farmers’ and local artisan markets, music, art and urban camping. Sant Bani continues to join with hundreds of others at the Connecting for Change Conference presented by the Marion Institute in New Bedford, Massachusetts. The conference brings the Marion Institute tenets to life and the students bring them into daily life when they return to their New Hampshire hillside. These foundational principles emphasize that mimicking the diversity of nature is a key to success, identifying the root cause of issues creates positive change, and increasing accessibility and opportunity will create a more just world.

The range of workshops and guest speakers seemed vast to the thirty high schoolers and many staff members who made the trek south for the seventh annual conference. Whether it was teambuilding, composting, food forests, kale culture, recycled art, storytelling for social change, greenhouses or intergenerational dialogue, there was much to engage. The keynote speakers, music and dance that brought us all together at the Zeiterion Theatre were exciting and thought provoking. The food was superb—enhanced by the 20 pounds of garlic grown at Sant Bani and donated as our contribution to the conference kitchen. The accommodations on the gymnasium floor of the Boys and Girls Club of New Bedford were fun and welcome.

And it didn’t end when the last sleeping bag was packed into the school van; students returned to school energized and ready to make a difference. Little notes advising us to “Be bright, turn off the lights” appeared on switches in the hallways. Wastebaskets seemed a bit more empty. Earth Support Committee meetings occupied lunch break time. Planning has begun for Earth Day when the students will continue to connect for change in their school, their community and beyond.

Leadership SouthCoast Team Projects Promote Positive Change For Region

Posted by on 6.1.2012

By ROBERT BARBOZA, Editor
May 30, 2012
http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20120530/PUB02/205300369/-1/ARCHIVE

DARTMOUTH — Since 2005, Leadership SouthCoast (LSC) has been on a mission to provide the region with an ongoing source of diverse leaders from all walks of life who are committed to serving as catalysts for positive changes in the quality of life for the SouthCoast.

Each year, the non-profit guides a group of up to 30 acknowledged and aspiring leaders through a thought-provoking, nine-month community leadership program consisting of a one-day retreat and eight monthly full-day sessions. Class members are also asked to form teams and complete a group project during the program year that would benefit individual communities or the region as a whole.

This year, rather than selecting projects from a list of identified long-standing regional social, health, or economic issues, the LSC's Class of 2012 was asked to sign up for a team project that would address one of the topics on a list of ideas solicited from the communities they represent.

"For the first time, we solicited Requests for Proposals (RFPs) from community organizations, seeking suggestions for projects they needed help with," LSC Director Michael Metzler said at the May 24 presentation session for group projects by this year's class.

"We got an overwhelming response," he told the LSC directors, alumni, and a few potential recruits for next year's class on hand to hear the presentations at the Advanced Technology & Manufacturing Center in Fall River.

"It was great that we got 14 proposals; while we couldn't do all of them, we picked five worthy projects for this year's class to work on," Metzler explained.

Those RFPs not chosen for student projects were distributed to LSC's list of almost 150 alumni, seeking volunteers to help petitioning organizations with their needs; a number of graduates stepped up to assist those groups in some way.

The first project undertaken by this year's class focused on taking community involvement from theory to practice in New Bedford's under-performing public schools, which have often been in local newspaper headlines in the past year.

Initiated by the Inter-Faith Council of Greater New Bedford to help it promote more community support for troubled schools, the project sought to identify "best practices" for using volunteers in schools that could be applied city-wide, said team member Lisa Aldrich, a local Certified Public Accountant.

Her team studied the volunteer model employed by the Falmouth school system, which has a staffer coordinating the efforts of over 100 volunteers and an annual budget of $150,000 coming from the school department and private fund-raising. The team also visited seven city schools, interviewing principals to determine how volunteers are currently used to support academics and extracurricular activities.

The team found some city schools actively encourage volunteers — ranging from older students tutoring younger ones, to parents and senior citizens — while others have no active volunteers at all. They also found "little coordination" between schools for sharing best practices, Aldrich said.

LSC Chairman Rev. David Lima has met with Mayor Jon Mitchell to talk about using the Falmouth model and the team's findings to help develop a city-wide school volunteer program, and obtained a commitment from the mayor to try to provide some municipal funding for such a program, Aldrich indicated.

She was assisted in the group's presentation by team member Gregory Barnes, budget & finance director for the Town of Dartmouth, who noted the interviews of principals showed "some are more open to change than others," and a formal system-wide volunteer program could help promote greater use of volunteers and more community involvement.

LSC class member Suzanne Cardello, owner of Somerset AutoCenter, presented the results of a project called "Investing in Human Capital" which sought to identify the "life skills" needed to help out-of-work South Coast residents more employable in a tough job market.

Her team developed a program for a seminar on resume preparation, interviewing skills, making a good impression during interviews, and the importance of knowing what's in the personal credit report which many prospective employers now check to learn more about job applicants.

The seminar was recently presented at the Fall River Career Center, and proved to be very successful for attendees, Cardello noted. The Career Center has invited the group to return for another session, she said.

The positive response from both job seekers and officials at the Career Center was very rewarding for team members, and reinforced the goals of LSC class members, Cardello suggested. "We all want the best for the region... that's why we're here," she noted.

BankFive business banking officer Joseph Borges, Downtown New Bedford executive director Diane Arsenault, and People, Inc. communications director Pam O'Neill presented the findings of the LSC team that worked on the Schwartz Center's "inclusionary project" — a plan to encourage community organizations to be more welcoming to children with disabilities.

The team meet with the staff of the Dartmouth school, gauged parent interest in various activities ranging from sport and recreational opportunities to scouting, and developed a list of community groups that might be interested in providing inclusionary opportunities for children with disabilities in their programs, Borges explained.

Informational brochures were developed to explain how the center would help "community partners" accommodate handicapped children, adopt suitable inclusionary activities, and train their staffs to deal with potential problems, Arsenault said.

"There's a lot of groundwork to be done before this program can be undertaken," but the center has hired a part-time person to help coordinate with community partners, an important "first step" in implementing the team's project, she noted.

Glenn Oliveira, director of the Marion Institute's annual Connecting for Change Conference, described how his team will be helping the institute promote wider participation for this year's event, and encourage more SouthCoast residents, neighborhood groups, and businesses to get actively involved in learning how to create "deep and positive change" in the region.

The team developed ideas for organizing community events to promote more involvement in the environmental, health and social issues addressed at the conference; to help nurses get continuing education credits for attending seminars and focus sessions; and trying to get related materials approved to help participating educators earn professional development points (PDPs).

The Old Rochester Regional school district has expressed an interest in helping develop a model for involving their science and health education staff in conference programs and events qualifying for PDPs, another team member noted. That model could then be provided to other school systems in the region.

The final team giving a project report included presenters Lara Stone, a consultant and Dartmouth Select Board member; Coastal Commercial Real Estate sales director Chad Brubaker; and Jamie Jaquart, assistant director of the UMass Dartmouth Office of Campus & Community Sustainability. Their team's mission was to help Leadership SouthCoast assess what impact its alumni are having on the region, and how the organization's marketing, recruitment and curriculum improvement goals could be best addressed in the future.

The team also included Dartmouth resident Stephen Mitchell, a business development specialist for The Sylvia Group; recent Bishop Stang graduate Jeff Pelletier, a program manager for Executives Without Borders; and Mechanics Cooperative Bank branch manager Maria Rego. They worked closely with LSC board member Dr. Michael Goodman and his UMass Dartmouth graduate level social policy class on a comprehensive survey of LSC alumni and their level of community involvement before and after taking part in the leadership program.

The effort also included researching the best practices employed by other leadership development organizations across the country, and how the successes of those more established organizations could be adopted by the growing LSC, Stone said.

Brubaker outlined how improvements to the LSC web site could be used to allow affiliated SouthCoast groups to reach out to LSC graduates for job recruitment, volunteer opportunities, and service on boards of directors.

Better marketing of the benefits of the LSC program to participants and community organizations is a key goal for the future, the team indicated.

"We have leaders who participate (in the program) and go on to do incredible things in their communities; we have to market that," Stone suggested.

(Editor's note: Mr. Barboza is a member of the Leadership South Coast Board of Directors, and a graduate of the Class of 2008.)

'Biggest Year Yet' for Bioneers Conference

Posted by on 7.27.2011

By DON CUDDY
doncuddy@s-t.com
October 22, 2010 12:00 AM

NEW BEDFORD — The annual Bioneers by the Bay conference, sponsored by the Marion Institute, comes to downtown New Bedford starting today, and organizers have been working around the clock to ensure everything is in place.

"This is a lot for a small team to put on, and this is our biggest year yet, so I'm kind of holding my breath," said Marion Institute Executive Director Desa Van Laarhoven, who works year-round to plan the conference. "But it's exciting to be a part of this and be able to affect people in a positive way."

The Bioneers' stated mission is to develop innovative solutions to environmental problems, as well as working to promote social justice. This is the sixth year the conference has been held in SouthCoast and its third year downtown.

READ MORE: http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101022/NEWS/10220324&cid=sitesearch

Bioneers Conference Closes with Message on Importance of Global Education

Posted by on 7.27.2011

By Curt Brown
cbrown@s-t.com
October 25, 2010 12:00 AM

NEW BEDFORD — Humanitarian Greg Mortenson wrapped up the Marion Institute's sixth Bioneers by the Bay conference Sunday with an inspiring message about the need to increase educational opportunities globally.

The 53-year-old Mortenson, co-author of The New York Times' bestseller "Three Cups of Tea" and co-founder and executive director of the nonprofit Central Asia Institute, which has established 131 schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan, brought his positive message of hope and sustainability to about 250 people at the Zeiteron Theater.

"There's no problem we can't solve," he said, adding that the hope for sustainability and change lies with children.

Through his Pennies For Peace program, which collects pennies from schoolchildren, the Central Asia Institute has built schools for 58,000 children, including 44,000 girls, in Pakistan and Afghanistan.

READ MORE HERE: http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20101025/NEWS/10250319&cid=sitesearch

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