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When SALT is a lifestye practice you seek out opportunity to apply this. Recently during a Savings and Internal Lending Community (SILC) event, I sought for opportunites to apply SALT, ha! It eventually came. What are the qualities of a good Facilitator? I say SALTy: Stimulate - one's capacity to stimulate local response to ensure ownership and responsibility; Appreciate strengths that already exists and encourage building on these strengths; Learn from the communities strengths, how they…
ContinueAdded by Autry Haynes on August 27, 2011 at 12:49pm — 2 Comments
I was so impressed with this man in Myanmar...
We were visiting a temple near Inlay lake, a very touristy area in Myanmar. Everywhere there are people selling…
ContinueAdded by Laurence Gilliot on August 25, 2011 at 11:00am — 2 Comments
At this point I realized that the closest people in my life, the ones I love so dearly were far from something so dear to me, my job, my passion for SALT and at that exact moment I decided not only to explain what I did to the fullest but to have them experience it too.
"Tricia, what exactly do you do?” And that was how it began, on a hot weekday afternoon in February 2011. I visited my eldest sister and my baby nephews, as I always do the day before I leave on one…
ContinueAdded by Tricia Francis on August 24, 2011 at 8:00pm — 2 Comments
Last week I had the pleasure of talking with Judith Madigan, Co-founder and Director of BrandOutLoud, who reached out following my recent post, “Do CBOs have an image problem?”
BrandOutLoud works with aid organizations, local and international, to transform the pity-laden us/them paradigm used in many communications strategies to one that portrays the strengths and…
Added by Jennifer Lentfer on August 23, 2011 at 11:13pm — No Comments
During the team’s SALT visits, we met a native doctor who believes in the existence of HIV/AIDS and also educated the team in is own little way, his interaction with the team was a little bit tough in the sense that this young man told us stories of many people that were sick and went to the hospital for tests, diagnosed HIV positive by the doctor’s result but the native doctor believes that it is a “family attack” which…
Added by ukeme okon on August 22, 2011 at 2:11pm — 1 Comment
This is a new feature I’m introducing on Fridays on how-matters.org, the sharing of poetry related to aid and development work. First off, a treasured poem by Akwasi Aidoo, Executive Director of Trust Africa.
Query
We are a developing…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 20, 2011 at 1:30am — 1 Comment
Added by venty susanty on August 18, 2011 at 12:46am — 2 Comments
Activity: Frontier Process
Location:Uruk Otong Corps (AISW Division)
Date: 13th July-4th August 2011
Objectives:
Added by ukeme okon on August 17, 2011 at 3:00pm — 4 Comments
Thanks to have reading ARH on ning. Even not much additional information ARH Competence has been improving in number of groups. Newly recruited facilitators and me keep promoting this. At Bandung West Java Province at least there are two schools and six universities that adopt ARH Competence. One project will be presented at the ICAAP as poster presentation. The issues also becoming wider. It's now dealing with youth competence (life skill education, English, proposal/abstract writing class,…
ContinueAdded by wiwin winarni on August 17, 2011 at 9:49am — 2 Comments
A very important question was posed in response to how-matters.org's recent guest post, "Participation: Reality or the Promised Land? A View from South Sudan, which is "What can development professionals who believe in and practice participatory processes do to promote it?"
It’s a tough question to answer, especially for people on the “inside” of the system, because this often means…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 17, 2011 at 2:48am — 2 Comments
My experience thus far facilitating S.A.L.T.
Presently I am supporting/stimulating, appreciating, listening, learning and transferring with 29 youths all under 17, the youngest being 12…it is truly amazing to see cold, defensive youths who were severely abused, truly open up when they are asked about their dreams,, hopes, concerns…empathetic listening truly breaks down barriers.
There was this particular beautiful girl child who did not want to speak to me in the…
ContinueAdded by Anderson Figaro on August 16, 2011 at 4:22am — 3 Comments
I’m currently in Santa Fe, New Mexico and last weekend I stopped in at a favorite place of mine here, the Museum of International Folk Art. A current exhibit, “The Arts of Survival: Folk Expression in the Face of Disaster,” had caught my eye and I wanted to check it out.…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 15, 2011 at 7:12pm — No Comments
Added by Marie Chorr on August 14, 2011 at 11:00pm — 8 Comments
In response to an earlier post on how-matters.org, “Sorry but it’s not YOUR project,” a reader offered the following guest post. Andebo Pax Pascal shares his experience as an aid worker in Africa’s newest country.
***
My friend Tom is working for “Aid Agency X”, which has prided itself in working ‘with’ and not ‘for’ the people, a sign that it is ready to involve the community in its development…
Added by Jennifer Lentfer on August 12, 2011 at 11:30pm — No Comments
I want to share an experience on creating a new framework and would like your input on my main question: when is a framework most effective?
Creating a Self Assessment Framework in Surinam
We're applying the CLCP to WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene) in 16 villages in Surinam. During the first week of the project we transfered the process to 30 trainers and facilitators. During this week we also created the…
ContinueAdded by Boris Alberda on August 12, 2011 at 9:22pm — 3 Comments
I realize that ACP has been important for my life. ACP show me that wherever who are, where you are what you have but the most important is that: People have strengths, have something to share and learn from each other. No matter the social statement, but that the community know something and that we have to take advantage. This is what ACP teach me day-by-day.
Added by Inacio T. Paruque on August 11, 2011 at 12:41pm — 2 Comments
Ensuring that high quality condoms are widely available, either free or at an affordable price, is fundamental to a pragmatic and effective AIDS response. In a recently published report, the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) focuses on the increasing use of female condoms and highlights how millions of women around the world are now using this method to protect themselves against HIV.
HIV prevention that women can control
Titled HIV prevention gains momentum:…
ContinueAdded by Tapati Dutta on August 10, 2011 at 6:57am — 2 Comments
In my point of view, we need to move from having project- specific assistance to Developmental and Institutional Projects because this is what makes the changes sustainable.
If a person is diagnosed with HIV, his or her capacity must be built. He or she needs support to develop confidence in him/herself and take charge of his/her own fate as well as the task of convincing other positive people to come out.and this is lacking in our communities.
We must also not forget…
ContinueAdded by Amy Ndinda Mutunga on August 7, 2011 at 3:27pm — 2 Comments
Richard Moore describes himself as “just a guy who wanted to help.”
This is somehow funny coming from a man whom the Dalai Lama refers to as “my hero.”
Well known to the residents of Derry, Ireland, where we met last month, Richard Moore was shot at the age of 10 by a British solider on his way home from school. Taking a rubber bullet on the bridge of his nose, Richard lost…
ContinueAdded by Jennifer Lentfer on August 5, 2011 at 4:27pm — No Comments
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