This week I read a five-part story about the demise of Local School Councils (LSC) in Chicago, written by Marcus Flenaugh who was defeated in this week's LSC election when only 30 people out of a school service area of about 27,000 residents took the time to vote. In the 5th article he concluded by urging people to mobilize and offered many specific suggestions.
That prompted me to look at a couple of visual essays that show a strategy that involves young people in community-organizing efforts.
The first outlines a strategy that follows highly visible media stories with student generated stories. click here
The second shows an application of this strategy, focusing on the North Lawndale area of Chicago. click here
Below is the first part of an article I wrote in 2024, which points to similar articles from 2019 and 2012.
---- start 2024 -----
In October 1992, this was the front page of the
Chicago SunTimes.
The headline said "7-Year-Old's Death at Cabrini Requires Action".
I had led a volunteer-based tutor/mentor program serving Cabrini-Green 2nd to 6th grade kids since 1975, so this hit hard. I was in the process of creating a new program to help kids who aged out of the first program after 6th grade have similar support to help them from 7th grade through high school. We called that program Cabrini Connections and launched it in January 1993. I led it until mid 2011.
However, this shooting was the catalyst for our creating a second program as we launched our site-based program. That was the Tutor/Mentor Connection (T/MC). It's goal was to help on-going, volunteer-based tutor, mentor and learning programs reach K-12 youth in every high poverty area of the Chicago region.
As I write today's article (
remember, this was prior to the Nov. 2024 election), most attention is focused on the coming election and a variety of natural and man-made disasters taking place in the USA and the world.
So how do we get a share of that attention focused on this issue?
---------end 2024 article ------
These articles focus on building on-going attention for specific areas of Chicago, or any other city, and in drawing needed resources to organizations and schools in the focus area. Since adults have their hands full, why not enlist youth from local schools and colleges?
Above is one view created using the
Chicago Tutor/Mentor Program Locator, which was created in 2008. While the Program Locator no longer is active, it remains a model of "what is needed". View
this PDF essay to see some of the features that were included.
Since 2011 I've been using the MappingForJustice blog, created by Mike Traken in 2008, to show ways to use maps to draw more consistent attention to volunteer-based tutor/mentor programs in high poverty areas of Chicago. The strategy can be used to draw attention to local schools and their surrounding community, too.
In
this article I included a concept map showing layers of information that need to be included on maps now being built by others.
I also included the concept map in
this article.
Since I began trying to harness map-making technology in 1993 the means of creating data maps have simplified dramatically. However, while I find many maps that show boundaries and indicators (poverty, violence, health disparities, etc.) I don't find many showing existing service providers and I find even fewer adding assets (people who can help) to the map layers. Or using their maps in on-going stories intended to draw more attention and resources into the map area.
Thus, my "Rest of the Story" essays can still provide some ideas that others can apply. I hope that happens.
I close many of my articles with this photo of me standing in front of a map of Chicago, and a
Chicago Tribune article with a headline of "
City Kids at Risk".
I'd love to find blog articles and newspaper stories with similar photos, showing political leaders, business leaders, sports and entertainment figures, and others in my place.
This could be a photo of a 5th grade boy or girl from a South Chicago neighborhood!
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