A. Fine Blog

Allison Fine Writes About Social Media and Social Change

Archive for May, 2008

For High School Students: How Would You Fix the World?

Posted by Allison Fine on May 30, 2008

The Goldman Sachs Foundation and the Asia Society have announced its annual student essay contest.  Formerly called the 2008 Goldman Sachs Foundation Prizes for Excellence in International Education, encourage high school students to apply for a $10,000 college scholarship by writing an essay (or submitting a video) that answers the following:

Contest Question – Essay Category
Essay entries must address the following topic in 1,500 words or less:

Identify a social or economic issue that is relevant to both your local community as well as to a community outside of the United States. Develop an essay that includes ALL of the following:

1. The problem or challenge and how it affects both your community and the community outside of the US in similar and/or different ways.

2. An analysis of the different approaches both communities have created to address this challenge.

3. Your own recommendations for what lessons the two communities can learn from each other to solve this problem or challenge. Address how taking a global perspective on these issues can strengthen long-term solutions.

4. A summary of your position and why you think it is important for each community to learn from the other to address these issues.

The deadline is June 12th.

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Chronicle Chat Follow Up

Posted by Allison Fine on May 28, 2008

I had a wonderful time chatting on the Chronicle of Philanthropy website yesterday. There is a transcript of the chat up on their site.

The interest was so high that I wasn’t able to answer all the questions. So, I wanted to get to a few more here so as not to leave folks out!

Q: In my blog socialcitizen.wordpress.com I write a lot about generational differences and how as a Millennial I am working on social entrepreneurship in the nonprofit sector. What can I share with my Millennial readers about connecting with other generations in the workplace? Sometimes I feel like older employees of organizations are almost scared to talk to Millennials or have so much distrust for us, they just ignore us. How, as a Millennial, can I break through that barrier? How can I prove I can do the job? (Tera Wozniak, Johnson Center on Philanthropy)

A: Hi, Tera, I’ve heard this complaint before, and frankly some of it is Millennial related and some of it is just a reflection of being a younger member of a staff. One thing that you can do to break down the distrust is perhaps run a seminar or two for the older staff members on social media tools; what they are and how they can be used in philanthropy and social change efforts. This would bring out your natural strengths, be informative for folks, and provide a common language for you all.

Q: What is your opinion of the value of YouTube, MySpace and Facebook for attracting Millennials to nonprofit causes ? (Chris Smith, American Green Cross.net)

A: There is huge value in both social networking sites like MySpace and Facebook, and using video to share stories about causes. Of course, these aren’t the only sites where these activities are happening, but they are the most trafficked now. But, as I’ve said before, the venue is less important than the content of the conversation. What is it you want to talk about, with whom, and then where and how can we best have that conversation. The old axiom, “Form follows function,” still holds true!

Q: Hi Allison: We are developing a large-scale survey of low-income high school students regarding their experiences and perspectives on how to improve their schools. We want to make the survey engaging and interactive and reach youth in ways they are already comfortable interacting. Any thoughts on how to best use technology to engage this diverse group? (recognizing they may have limited technology access in schools in many cases) Appreciate your perspectives! (Valerie Threfall, nonprofit)

A: This is a tough one, Valerie, as I’ve already mention the disdain that Millennials have for forms and surveys (being overfed on both since birth!) Obviously the survey has to be up online using a tool like Survey Monkey. Then, I would announce it in lots of different places, by email, on Facebook and MySpace, on any other sites where these teens are gathering and interacting (e.g. entertainment sites). The goal is to provide as many different, easy access points as possible. Good luck, let me know how it goes!

I’d be happy to hear back from any of the folks who asked questions, I’m open to a challenge or follow up. And, thanks again for inviting me to participate in the conversation!

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Come and Chat on Tuesday

Posted by Allison Fine on May 22, 2008

I will be e-chatting on the Chronicle of Philanthropy website about the Social Citizens paper next Tuesday, May May 27th from 12-1 pm eastern time. I”d love to hear your thoughts about the paper, maybe even a challenge or two — and a prize for the most unusual (but still relevant!) question — I am the judge and jury on that one! I’ll post the link to the comments section when it goes up this weekend.

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I Love “Love Is Respect” (With One Caveat)

Posted by Allison Fine on May 19, 2008

This year’s Webby Award were recently announced and a terrific website, Love Is Respect http://loveisrespect.org/, was the winner in the activist category.  It’s a beautiful website, very easy to use with great information.  Take a look at the first steps, they’re very clearly written:

*  Talk to a friend. If you haven’t already told a friend about what’s happening in your relationship, try it. Ask them to listen without trying to solve the problem for you.
* Try taking a break. If you’re not happy with the way you’re being treated, but you’re not sure what to do, consider taking some time alone to think about it.
* Consider talking to an adult. If you feel your situation is too big to handle alone, it may help to find an adult you trust. If it isn’t a parent – try a teacher, the parent of a friend, or even a counselor.
* If you don’t feel safe, try to not be alone with your boyfriend/girlfriend. Even if you’re not ready to make any major decisions about your relationship, if you feel scared when you’re alone together, try to avoid it. Spend time in groups and in public as much as possible.

My favorite feature is the instant chat that is available from 4 to midnight central time.

But, I have a problem with the site.  Other than the hotline number (1-866-331-9474) and a media person who is listed in the Who We Are, I can’t figure out who they are.  Why isn’t there a staff and board list on the site?  Or if this isn’t a stand along organization, who they are affiliated with?  The site is very respectful of the privacy needs of teens in abuse, or potentially abuse, relationships, but it would be much more comforting to see real people on the site, with their pictures and email addresses.  I just spoke to Lisa Waddell, their media person, and asked her to respond, maybe there is some safety issue here I don’t yet understand.  I hope so because the rest of the site is amazing!

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NARAL’S Insult to Women

Posted by Allison Fine on May 15, 2008

The emails started to fly around yesterday in the late afternoon with the urgent subject line, “NARAL ENDORSES OBAMA!” In pained tones the senders, my circle of Hillary supporters, expressed their shock that one of the preeminent pro-choice organizations, one that they have supported in good times and bad, had double-crossed them in the eleventh hour of the presidential campaign.

I live in Westchester County, NY, this is Hillary country. I am an ardent Hillary supporter but nothing like many of my Hillary friends here who are often fifteen, twenty, thirty or more years older. They built the feminist movement in this country, and they fought for my right to choose, or what’s left of it, today. Hillary’s campaign is as much about them as it is about her, and today NARAL betrayed them as much as they did her.

One of the most frustrating and shocking aspects of the reporting of Hillary’s campaign has been the cynical reporting of what Hillary means to her supporters. How is it possible that she raised so much money from small donors when she asked in March and April? The answer is simple, because they believe in her and in her campaign! In begrudging fairness to the media, Hillary’s own campaign didn’t seem to understand or appreciate the depth of these feelings either until it was too late. But the depth of pride and ownership that women across demographics feel for Hillary are very real. And now, here were my Hillary friends, with tens of their friends copied, surging into my inbox with their messages:

“Disgraceful!” Barbara

I want to crawl up in the fetal position but instead I have to go report as chair of the League of Women Voters Nominating Committee. I just tried calling NARAL and the office is closed.” Alisa

“I will never give another penny or any support or advocacy to or for the organization.” Hannah

In her announcement on Huffington Post yesterday, the president of NARAL, Nancy Keenan, wrote that the decision to announce their endorsement while the primary competition between two pro-choice candidates is ongoing is because, “for the sake of the reproductive-rights movement, we need to put any perceived differences behind us, and get to work putting Sen. Obama in the White House.”
Really, the entire future of the pro-choice movement rests on spitting in the eye of the strongest woman candidate in the history of the country, rather than waiting three more weeks to put whatever organizational muscle it has left after today to work for Obama, that this sliver of times will make the difference between winning and losing in November? It is unimaginable that the NAACP would have pulled the rug out from under it’s own constituency like this if the roles had been reversed. African American supporters of the NAACP have waited a lifetime for a presidential nominee who looks like them – and so have women.

Many last century membership organizations are in a panic as they watch their donor bases age and flail around trying to attract young people with newer causes to support. NARAL may be feeling this heat as well. I would be happy to tell you about far more graceful ways to enter the Connected Age than scorning your core constituency.

I am old enough to know that your fight is important but young enough not to have laid the cornerstone of organizations like yours – but I promise you that just as you’re not there for me today, I won’t be there for you tomorrow. My friends Hannah and Alisa and Barbara, their sisters, girlfriends, mothers, daughters and cousins have volunteered, donated money, made calls, marched, worn buttons, buttonholed their friends and family, fought valiantly against the relentless attacks of the far right, and are the constant stalwarts of every woman’s right to choose, and they deserve so much more respect than this.

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A Digital New Deal?

Posted by Allison Fine on May 14, 2008

There is a terrific post up on Afro-Netizen by guest blogger Helen De Michiel, the national co-director of the National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture (NAMAC), based in San Francisco.

Helen calls for a digital-era Works Project Administration (the old WPA from the New Deal started in the 1930s to, so that, as she puts it, “Our next president can help reconstruct America’s fragmented and relatively weak public communications infrastructure by using the most effective tool our youth wield – the power and depth of their digital fluency.”

Let’s build out a networked pubic commons as an opportunity for employment-starved, debt ridden Millennials to work in teams, develop community based projects, hone skills that will rebuild our competitiveness with countries overseas.  My favorite part is the suggestion that these Millennials can teach older Americans how to use the tools as well!

And just as I was beginning to question the need for government intervention in an effort like this, Helen finishes her post with this sentence, “How this investment in our future would be implemented- including public and private partnerships – is a debate well worth having.”

At its core, the idea reminded of the effort that Lance Bennett is spearheading in Seattle called Engaged Youth: Civic Learning Online. But, of course, the difference is one of scale.  It is more likely in this century that large foundations will invest in a nationwide initiative like this rather than the federal government, but Helen’s question is a good one: is that the right order of things?

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Donations for Victims of Chinese Earthquake

Posted by Allison Fine on May 13, 2008

I just received this email from my friend Nancy Schwartz, nonprofit activist and blogger:

Of course we have a special place in our heart for China, where we adopted our daughter Charlotte. And it’s so dismaying to think of so many families ravaged by the earthquake.

What’s great is that the Chinese govt is doing whatever they can to aid the region (vs. the junta in Myanmar).

What’s tragic is that many folks have given to the Myanmar cyclone relief effort (which is great), and may feel tapped out so aren’t as likely to support this relief effort.

I urge you to donate as much as you can today (immediate aid has the greatest impact).

Few nonprofits are on the ground providing aid yet but Mercy Corps – an unbelievably reliable organization that works through local orgs who have the relationships and understanding to make the relief effort work most effectively – is already hard at work with its local partner in the region:

Give now to save lives of those who CAN make it:
http://www.mercycorps.org/countries/china/2155

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Sichuan Earthquake Reported in Real Time

Posted by Allison Fine on May 12, 2008

Earlier this morning, a major earthquake rocked a large part of China. Immediate reports began to appear via Twitter and video postings. Global Voices has an outstanding post here on the variety of ways that news from China has come in over the Net.

The earthquake is already up on wikipedia, here.

And this is just one of many videos online capturing the quake in real time:

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Life Saving Use of Twitter

Posted by Allison Fine on May 9, 2008

Sometimes social media tools can be easily trivialized by observers as gidgets and widgets used by kids to pass the time secretly during class. Here’s a story from Egypt of how Twitter helped save a jailed journalist sent to me by the always useful folks at Politics Online via the Washington Post:

“Twitter Post Rescues Jailed Journalist in Egypt

James Karl Buck was bailed out of jail by a ‘tweet’ post on Twitter, a social networking site. The message “arr ested” was seen by Buck’s friends and bloggers in Egypt and the United States via the Internet.

Buck, a journalism graduate student at the University of California at Berkeley, was in Egypt for a school research project, ironically focused on bloggers and journalists who use tools like Twitter to keep in step with news, when Egyptian authorities arrested him. The authorities claimed that Buck may have been inciting a riot; although, Buck was merely photographing a labor rally near a textile mill in Mahalla, Egypt.

Buck reached Twitter through his cell phone, allowing him to make the post without being detected by authorities. Twitter allows its users to post 140 character or less messages, providing a place on the Web for people to be constantly updated in brief, to- the-point blogposts.

Thanks to the ‘tweet’ relaying his arrest, Buck was able to reach his friends via the Web, who contacted the U.S. Embassy and UC Berkeley, eventually sending a lawyer to bail him out of jail.

Buck says keeping in contact with the rest of the world via the Web and his Twitter posts kept him sane, curbed the fear that he would, “fall into a black whole” and potentially saved his life. Buck said that he “came to realize how important a tool like Twitter is.”

If you couldn’t find a place for another social networking site in your connection overloaded life, this story is a great example of how Twitter is a valuable resource. Tweet posts come in pretty handy in emergency situations, from connecting people online after minor earthquakes in the California to proving its worth internationally by rescuing Buck.”

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Free Forrester 2.0 Webinar

Posted by Allison Fine on May 7, 2008

This great opportunity just in from my friend, Margaret Egan:

Dear colleagues,

Forrester folks Charlene Li and Josh Bernoff are offering a free webinar  — their new book is a useful and important resource in demystifying social networking and Web 2.0

“Groundswell: A Framework For Using Web 2.0 For Business Advantage”

WHEN:          Friday, May 9th at 8am PT / 11am ET / 5pm CET.

REGISTER:    http://blogs.forrester.com/charleneli/

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