Cultural Competence in Site Visits and Life

May 2, 2013
guglielmoher

Rudy Guglielmo, Jr., of Youthprise and Lue Her of Otto Bremer Foundation

As part its ongoing Effective Grantmaking Series, MCF hosted Effective, Culturally Competent Site Visits.

Site visits are an excellent opportunity for foundations to connect with potential grantees and get a clearer picture of what applicants do and whom they serve. They are also a way to develop relationships, beyond the typical grantmaker/grantee dynamic.

Lissa Jones, MCF’s director of diversity, equity and inclusion, shared “Three Giant Steps to Cultural Competence.”

  1. Build your own awareness. Bias is often transferred unconsciously, so check in with yourself about your cultural biases. What, for example, did your grandfather say about the value of immigrants?  As we become aware of our biases, we can work to make more culturally-informed grantmaking decisions.
  2. Develop a way of knowing. Go to cultural events, read a community paper, check out opportunities in your neighborhood to learn about other cultures. It’s all around if you look for it!
  3. Practice, practice, practice. Develop relationships, engage in the community and realize this is a lifelong endeavor. You’ll never say, “OK, I’m done. I’ve learned it all, and now I’m culturally competent!”

Panelists for the session were program officers Rudy Guglielmo, Jr., Youthprise, and Lue Her, Otto Bremer Foundation.

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Youthprise Site Visits: Guglielmo gave examples of how to look at the sector, organizational capacity and program effectiveness with a cultural lens (put yourself in the applicant’s shoes), rather than a traditional foundation lens (develop a rationale for an investment).

A traditional lens values information veracity, research accuracy, alignment of the grantee with foundation guidelines and may involve less transparent decision-making.

A cultural lens puts cultural identity at the center of the conversation and allows for an asset-based approach with an open-ended conversation between foundation and applicant. Use of a cultural lens is not a substitute for due diligence, but it is a way to learn about an applicant in a community context. It can be an effective way to evaluate requests in areas that are traditionally hard to quantify (leadership, community organizing, youth development) and provide an opportunity to establish an ongoing relationship with a potential grantee.

Guglielmo closed with a list of learning strategies: accompany an experienced funder into the field, commit to regular visits to an organization and use the foundation’s capacity to convene and allow for peer learning. The biggest barrier to culturally competent site visits is the need to build relationships.

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Otto Bremer Foundation Site Visits: Her says site visits are the backbone of the Otto Bremer Foundation and a principle tenant of its work. Each visit is important in establishing or maintaining a relationship, learning about community and doing due diligence.

On Her’s first site visit with Bremer, he accompanied another program officer to “learn the ropes.” During the visit, proposal-related questions were not asked, instead the conversation focused on what was going on in the community. Trust was established and the relationship grew from there.

Culturally competent site visits are not done in isolation; they are one piece of the puzzle. Before a visit, research is done, conversations held and trust established. You have to make time to build relationships, as there is no crash course in culture.

Her ended by saying the road to cultural competence starts with one relationship, and you’re becoming culturally competent when you don’t have to think about it so much.

- Megan Sullivan, MCF operations and publications coordinator


An Introduction to White’s Black Psychology

March 6, 2013
Dr. Joseph White

Dr. Joseph White

Last week I attended a Black History Month Celebration: Renewing Hope in the Promise of Minnesota’s Youth, hosted by MCF member Youthprise and the Cultural Wellness Center. There I was introduced to the work of Dr. Joseph White, Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Psychiatry, University of California, Irvine.

As a Caucasian female who grew up in mainstream circumstances — in a traditional two-parent family in suburban 1970s Wisconsin — I appreciated hearing Dr. White’s experiences of growing up Black, male and in a single-parent household in a 1940s Minneapolis.

Despite being very much a minority in the Minneapolis public schools, White experienced first-hand the benefits of quality out-of-school-time programming through his involvement in Pillsbury Community House programs (now Pillsbury United Communities).

Drawing on that and other experiences as a young Black man during a time of limited opportunity, he focused much of his work on exploring and uncovering practices and strategies that lead to the promotion of better opportunities for minority youth. He is a passionate advocate for creating access to high-quality learning opportunities – within and beyond the classroom for all young people.

White spent most of his career as a teacher, supervising psychologist, mentor and director of ethnic studies and cross-cultural programs. He is a pioneer in the field of Black psychology, has authored several papers and seven books, and wrote a seminal article, “Toward a Black Psychology,” which appeared in Ebony Magazine in 1970.

He says that African Americans have always had psychological strengths, and that they are among the traits that have helped them survive slavery and segregation. His job, he says, was simply to package what was already there. Today, he says the challenge for all of us is to share these values with Black youth to enable them to thrive.

So, here’s a brief introduction to the Seven Strengths of African Americans, a.k.a. White’s Black Psychology.

Improvisation: The ability to be resourceful, imaginative, creative and innovative in meeting life’s challenges, and the personal realization that answers come from within.

Resilience: The capacity to rebound from setbacks and become stronger in the broken places. (White shared the poem Still I Rise, by Maya Angelou.)

Connectedness: To family, extended family, peers, community, etc. The necessity of looking out for each other and how that teaches one to build successful mutual relationships.

Spirituality: A spiritual and life-affirming force which runs through the Black experience and is responsible for strength in the face of adversity and hope for a brighter tomorrow.

Emotional vitality: A zest for life, high energy, exuberance and a style that fully embraces life.

Gallows humor: The ability to cry when experiencing tragedy paired with the ability to see humor in the midst of human dilemma. (As an example, White recommends Langston Hughes’ popular writings as fictional character Jesse B. Semple.)

Healthy suspicion: Not paranoia, but a healthy suspicion of “you know who” — a group who has made and broken promises since 1619.

- Susan Stehling, MCF communications associate


Philanthropy: Defined by Youth

February 14, 2013

youthpriseYouthprise believes it must engage its constituents — underserved and under-engaged youth — in its processes in order to achieve strong outcomes relevant to youth and their diverse communities.

In addition, it says that any progress it achieves will not be sustainable unless youth are genuinely engaged in the change efforts.

Youthprise is walking its talk — ensuring the make up of its board and staff reflect the diversity of the communities they target, working with and funding organizations that share its philosophy, sponsoring listening sessions with members of culturally-specific communities and employing youth on staff and in designated board positions.

Read much more about Youthprise and others that are working to diversify philanthropy in the winter issue of Giving Forum, online now!

-Susan Stehling, MCF communications associate


Mobilize the Power of Youth With Youthprise

September 27, 2012

If you work for or support a nonprofit that does a great job engaging and empowering young people, here’s a new video contest right up your alley.

MCF member Youthprise is partnering with GiveMN.org for the Mobilize The Power of Youth Video Contest, with prizes of up to $5,000 for the winners.

Interested in participating? The directions are simple:

  • Create a video that showcases your nonprofit mobilizing young people. The video can be recorded live or created from a slideshow of photos, but should be no longer than three minutes.
  • Get signed release forms from participants, and permission from the parents or guardians of all children under 18.
  • Upload the video online and feature it on a GiveMN.org fundraiser page.
  • Email your link and release forms to info@givemn.org by the entry deadline of November 1.

Special consideration will be given to videos that:

  • Are created and submitted in partnership with your organization and youth.
  • Feature youth that participate in the organization’s programs and services.
  • Demonstrate innovative ways to engage and empower young people to make positive community change.

The contest will be judged by a panel of youth from Youthprise, with results announced November 15 on Give to the Max Day from the Mall of America.

Visit the Youthprise website for all the details. To all the participants, good luck and have fun!


A Morning Filled with Song, Humor and Inspiration!

February 23, 2012

Dr. Dorothy Cotton

On February 22, MCF member Youthprise hosted a philanthropy breakfast featuring Dr. Dorothy Cotton, who worked closely with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. as education director of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The breakfast was part of a series of events celebrating Black History Month.

Tomorrow’s Leaders
The morning began by showcasing the talents of young African-American women. Jamela Pettiford helped set the mood with a stirring rendition of “Change Gonna Come.”  Her powerful voice filled the room, “A change gonna come! It’s been a long time coming but I know a change gonna come!” Spoken-word artist Brittany Delaney and violinist Shayla Farrar also performed a moving tribute to young African-American boys and girls, “Boy and Girl Fire.”

Today’s Leaders
Karen Kelley-Ariwoola, vice president of community philanthropy at The Minneapolis Foundation, told us about the work of the African-American Leadership Forum/Education and Life-Long Learning Work Group, whose mission is to close the achievement gap between African-American and all children from birth through 12th grade in the Twin Cities. They believe a cross-sector approach to leadership is needed and it is time for all of us to come together to eliminate this gap. The economic vitality of Minnesota depends on it.

A Civil Rights Leader
Dr. Dorothy Cotton is a story-teller who infused song and humor while recounting memories from her childhood and the Civil Rights movement.  Through poetry, she began her presentation by acknowledging music played an important role in her life. “I am Music! I am a luxury for all!” Dr. Cotton joked that her biography states she is a performer. “I’m not a performer. We sang because we had to sing!”

Dr. Cotton reflected on the importance of song during the Civil Rights movement. “We don’t know what we would have done if couldn’t sing together.” She said a week-long educational program to train and empower disenfranchised citizens had started with songs of sorrow, but that changed by mid-week. “I’m gonna do what the spirit says do! I’m gonna vote ‘cause the spirit says vote!

Dr. Cotton invited the audience to envision the world in which they want to live. “Soar like a bird,” she summoned. “Imagine fifty years from now, looking around and seeing everything working beautifully together. And ask yourself, ‘What did I do to contribute to this place to be such a beautiful place?’” She then quoted Dr. Martin Luther King, “We will either learn to live together on this planet or we will perish as fools.”

Through song and story telling, Dr. Cotton reminded us how far we’ve come since the Civil Rights movement, but that there is more work to be done. As Brittany Delaney proclaimed, “Torches are meant to be passed. I know a whole lot of boys and girls who look like tomorrow’s fire.”

-Maria Salas, MCF member services manager


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