An Interesting Problem… And a Great Lesson

Since my last post, most of my time at Consider Biking has been spent working on the BikeColumbus Festival. When first planning the festival, we hoped for 200 riders for each event. As the weeks passed, however, registration continued to climb far past 200 per event – in the last week alone it practically doubled! While we were thrilled, it made that week quite hectic. Our biggest challenge, however, was one that might seem amusing now, but was definitely not at the time. Saturday morning, when we got to the park where the event was being held, we realized that the porta-potties we ordered had not been delivered. 500 people were going to bike as many as 120 miles and they had nowhere to go to the bathroom.

Boston’s Pizza, who was next to our venue, was kind enough to allow us to use their bathrooms, but, as the last rider left on their ride, the bathrooms flooded. Again, the 500 riders were going to return from extremely long bike rides and had nowhere to use the bathroom. We could still not get a hold of our porta-potty company, since it was 8am on a Saturday, but we noticed that a neighboring event had porta-potties. We called the emergency contact from their supplier, and they delivered the porta-potties five minutes before the first rider returned. The event, without exaggeration, had been saved.

I can definitely look back on this experience and know that, even if the problem seems devastating, something can usually be done to either alleviate it or fix it entirely. The festival and my entire experience with Consider Biking so far has helped me feel more prepared for what will come after I graduate. Entering my senior year, it has been nerve-racking to think about joining the “working world” and I cannot put into words what a relief it is to have already seen a bit of what it will be like.

With the festival over, I am looking forward to starting my next project, 2 by 2012, which aims to have employees in Columbus bike to work at least twice a month by 2012. We already have a lot of well-known companies and individuals (such as the mayor!) involved and it is exciting to know that I am participating in something that will impact much of Columbus. I am very lucky and thankful that I am able to work with an organization that is both related to my future goals and dedicated to something I fully believe in!

Stacy – Consider Biking

Leave a comment

A Fellow in D.C.

In my last blog I wrote about the various opportunities I have had to engage in community outreach through my fellowship with Planned Parenthood. More recently, I was fortunate enough to continue this work on a national scale when I traveled with our organization to Washington D.C. for a three day Youth Organizing and Policy Conference.

The highlight of the conference was PPFA’s lobby day. I have always found the idea of lobbying to be somewhat intimidating, and perceived it as an act reserved for the “experts.” When I discovered we would be spending an entire day on Capitol Hill lobbying I was admittedly nervous. However, after learning more about what the process really involves and how I could participate meaningfully I was much more confident. Throughout the day we met with various offices and engaged in candid conversations with legislative aides and assistants. The experience was very informative and certainly something I would not have had the chance to do had I not been a summer fellow.

Since the preparation for, attendance of, and follow-up from the Youth Conference have dominated the majority of my office’s attention for the past several weeks time has flown by and I can hardly believe the seventh week of the fellowship is about to conclude. In the remaining three weeks, two other interns and I will be putting our efforts towards various other projects. However, I will certainly be using some of the knowledge and tools I acquired at the conference to inform my future work. I am excited to focus my attention on new endeavors and can only hope that the final three weeks of the fellowship go by more slowly than the past seven!

– Sara M.  Planned Parenthood

Leave a comment

Lots of irons in the fire!

“I’ve got too many irons in the fire,” is an expression I’d often hear my grandma say.  Well, I wouldn’t say it’s “too many,” but the Phoenix Theatre for Children definitely has a lot of irons in the fire right now!  Just this week, there were summer camps going on in six (yes, six!) different locations!  IN addition to the camps held at the Columbus Performing Arts Center, PTC also has camps running at the Riffe Center, BalletMet, Columbus School for Girls, the Lincoln Theatre, and  in Dublin, In addition, they are providing teachers for a workshop at the Franklin Park Conservatory tomorrow. 

I think the coolest thing about PTC being present in so many areas is how they are able to broaden their impact this way.  Part of PTC’s mission is “to provide young people and their families with theatrical experiences that encourage and enhance an awareness of self and the world in which we live.”  By having camps in multiple locations, PTC is able to expand this mission to areas of the community outside of its physical boundaries.

I spend most of my time at the Columbus Performing Arts Center, and this week I spent all of my time there.  This week was World Theatre camp.  We decided to take a familiar story, Cinderella, and find different versions of the story from around the world.  Last week as I was collecting materials for the camp, I learned that there is an Irish Cinderella, an Egyptian Cinderella, a Cajun Cinderella, an Appalachian Cinderella, a Korean Cinderella, and a Mexican Cinderella.  (I’ll bet you didn’t know that!)  It was fun to watch the campers learn about international forms of theatre, including Commedia del arte and Kabuki.  One of the highlights for the campers was getting to wear Kabuki costumes.

I’ve also been able to witness some of the other camps and programs going on.  Today, I went over to BalletMet to watch some of the dancers perform the monologues that they’ve been working on.  Tomorrow, I’m helping with the puppet workshop which is part of the Savage Gardens program/exhibit at the Franklin Park Conservatory.  And, next Wednesday I’ll be chaperoning a trip to the opening night of Wicked for the campers at the Riffe Center.

I admire PTC for taking on so many opportunities for education and outreach and I’m glad that I get to bear witness to some of the amazing programs they have in place.

 Julia Rice- CATCO-Phoenix

Leave a comment

Week Six at CHP

Fact: You learn something new every day.

As I was growing up, my parents liked to remind me of this old adage, and my time as a fellow at Columbus Housing Partnership has certainly proved it to be true. Sometimes it’s hard to believe how much I’ve learned in six weeks; I can now confidently discuss tax credits and unemployment statistics, and I’ve gained invaluable insights into professional office life, the housing industry in Columbus, and the many inequities that pose problems for homeowners and job seekers. I have even found myself discussing mortgage loans at the dinner table!

During our last learning session, we talked about the role of individuals as it relates to funding, but my fellowship has proved that personal relationships are essential in all areas of non-profit work. For example, take North of Broad (lovingly nicknamed NoBo), a community in the King Lincoln district, just east of Downtown. CHP has been reaching out to residents in the area and building and renovating homes in an effort to revitalize the neighborhood. In addition to these homes (one of which has platinum LEED certification!), CHP staff members have helped create a neighborhood association and a thriving community garden. By ensuring that residents of the area are involved in their neighborhood, CHP has created a more organic and ultimately more successful revitalization effort. The success of NoBo has depended on the cultivation of personal relationships with residents of the area, as well as with members of city government, donors, and other organizations, and it’s a lesson I’ll remember long after I finish my fellowship. (Shameless plug: If you want to read more about NoBo, check out the website here!)

Six weeks into my fellowship (where has the time gone?!), I’m still impressed every day by the dedication, innovation, and passion of the CHP staff. I love the creativity of non-profits, as well as the opportunity to see the difference you are making in someone’s life. I’m having a great experience at CHP, and I’m learning more every day! I can’t wait to see what the next few weeks bring!

Christina – Columbus Housing Partnership

3 Comments

Me, Myself, and ADD

For twenty years, I’ve lived a little over a mile from a state institution for people with developmental disabilities. I’ve driven past it hundreds of times and never known what it was.

Worse than that, I never thought to ask.

This is not the facility where I work: rather, I have the pleasure of spending my fellowship at the Association for the Developmental Disabled, or ADD. As a service provider for people with developmental disabilities living in the community, ADD functions in some similar, many dissimilar, ways to this government-run institution. I bring it up because this little gap in my knowledge actually signals a chasm.

My task at ADD is to lay the groundwork for the production of a video about the rights of individuals with developmental disabilities, but I realized that before coming to ADD, this was a whole group of people that I had never thought much about. Sure, I knew they existed, but—out of sight, out of mind—they’d all but disappeared. If you’d have asked me about the prevalent issues of individuals with developmental disabilities, I’d have furrowed my eyebrows and cleared my throat. If you’d have asked me what “human rights” really meant—and that’s really what we’re talking about when I say a “rights” video—I would have gone a little big eyed and mumbled something about children in Sudan.

Eye-opening, illuminating, enlightening—call it what you want. The point is that five weeks ago I didn’t think about this stuff. Now I can begin to have a conversation with you. Now I can graft your insights onto my experiences over the last five weeks of observing and interacting with individuals who have developmental disabilities as well as some of the people and groups that surround them.

But it’s not just that I’ve learned things specific to this field—and trust me, I’ve been trying to fill my brain with names and facts and assumptions, with acronyms and organizations and attitudes. I’ve also learned a lot about how I work and how an organization can work.

I’ve learned that I’m a more visual learner than I’d known. (I bought a whiteboard, I cut things up into little pieces and tape them onto construction paper, I draw pictures, I long for colored pens: all of these ridiculous things help me think.) I’ve learned that when I do research, I constantly, sometimes to my own detriment, search for reference points and stack questions upon questions until the foundations quiver. I’ve learned I need to make lists in the morning and I need to pay more attention to Outlook.

But outside my little office, the work processes get more interesting, more complicated. I get to see from the point of view of an outsider—or really, a recently initiated insider—how a mission on paper plays out in the conference room, how the different parts of an organization interact and affect each other, how managers address their employees, how decisions get made, how shifts and changes in an organization happen.

At the risk of irreverence, let me just say that it’s pretty sweet.

Now that I understand—if only a little better—the field into which I’ve stepped, I look forward to continued progress on this video and to all of the things I know I’ll learn in the coming weeks, all of the new awareness that such an experience adds.

Anne – the Association for the Developmentally Disabled

Leave a comment

Rediscovering History

There are plenty of people out there who find history uninteresting and boring… I am definitely not one of them. I was thrilled when I found out I would be spending the summer at the Ohio Historical Society. I grew up watching just as much History Channel as Cartoon Network or Nickelodeon, and I have enjoyed the opportunity to rediscover my passion for history, in addition to making a contribution to a worthy (and shorthanded) organization.

As I have mentioned at our meetings, I really enjoy the diversity of my tasks. In the morning, I get to do creative work, while I do analytical and detail oriented projects in the afternoon.

When I arrive to the Ohio Historical Center in the morning, I spend my first four hours of the day attaching metadata to photos on the Ohio Memory website, which his run by Ohio Historical Society. (Metadata roughly is “information about information.” In this situation, it is the information about the Ohio Guide photos which make them able to be accessed by text searches.) The WPA had each state produce a book about the state. The book was part history and part tourism guide. The WPA employed many photographers from all over Ohio to take photos for the Ohio Guide. Although many photos were included in the Guide, there were many more that were not used. The Ohio Guide photos sat in boxes since they were taken (beginning in 1936) until recent years.

After lunch, I help the Information Services department. My typical work ranges proofreading simple HTML code to making suggestions about how to organize content on the Ohio Historical Society website. I have always had an interest in technology and computers, so I am grateful to be able to spend time learning about how to run a large and complex website.

I am grateful for the opportunity to be able to contribute to such a worthwhile and shorthanded organization, while getting to learn so much.

Nick — Ohio Historical Society


In addition to hearing what I have been up to at the Historical Society, I thought people would also like to hear more about the unique building that houses the Historical Society. The Columbus Dispatch ran an interesting article on the Ohio Historical Center in yesterday’s paper. If you’re interested learning about the Ohio Historical Center, you should check out the article!

Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

A World of Many Hats

As I start week number four, I can’t help but look back and wonder where all the time has gone! I already feel so integrated into the office, that it seems like I’ve been here for at least a few months. Before the summer started I was worried that with only ten weeks to get integrated into the office, I would not be able to accomplish much, let alone feel like part of the team. But, after a few short days here, I realized that I was completely mistaken. Everyone at YFC has been so welcoming, friendly, and helpful that it’s taken no time to feel adjusted to my new job. Already I have attended a board meeting, took part in an all staff training session, and been invited to participate in a three-day retreat hosted by the national YFC office! Needless to say, my coworkers have made me feel right at home.

So far, one thing that stands out to me is the variety of “hats” every member of a nonprofit must wear. Though everyone has a specific job title, the lines of responsibility must be blurred at times to make things work more smoothly. For example, I work mainly with the development department in seeking in-kind donations for a specific program that YFC runs for at-risk youth. However, without input from people outside the department we would miss out on many opportunities to make relationships with potential donors. As with many things in life, development is all about who you know. If someone outside our department knows a friend of a friend who would love to donate something our program desperately needs, that knowledge helps save us time and energy and meets a need of our program.

From a young age we are all taught that working well in groups is an important skill to have, but it is not until you see this teamwork in action that you realize how integral it really is to success. What makes this teamwork so easy at YFC is the shared passion surrounding the mission of the organization. There may be things that people don’t want to do, but when they see how it relates to the mission, they are fueled by their passion and contribute in ways they would never have expected! As I look to my future in the nonprofit sector, I hope that I always hold onto my passion. The overarching passion and dedication that each staff member has for YFC keeps them grounded when the stress of wearing so many “hats” gets to be too much. Without passion it would be very easy to become burnt out and discouraged. However, there is never a feeling of negativity or pessimism in the office. I hope to carry this lesson with me as I continue in the nonprofit sector. There will be times when work will be hard and stressful, but if I can remember why I’ve chosen the nonprofit sector and tap into my passion, the stress will be worth it. 

Needless to say, my experience as a fellow has given me new insights into the nonprofit world and I can’t wait to see what the next few weeks bring!

Sarah—Central Ohio Youth for Christ

Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My First Four Weeks at the ALS Association

The Columbus Foundation Summer Fellowship program has been a great experience from day one!  This summer I am working at the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS) Association Central & Southern Ohio Chapter where the staff and volunteers have welcomed me with open arms, even before I had my first day on the job.  The day before I started working at the office, I was invited to attend the ALS Awareness Day with the Cincinnati Reds.  The ALS Association rented out the party deck for over 100 people including patients and their friends and families and staff and the Reds recognized a patient and his family on the field before the game.  It was a great opportunity for me to meet some of the staff I will be working with, interact with patients and learn more about ALS – but in the fun casual setting of Great American Ball Park.  The game was a great start to the summer because I was really able to see how important the work that the ALS Association is to people living with ALS (PALS).

After my unofficial first day at the Reds Game, I was excited to get started with my internship.  My main project here at the ALS Association is to plan an educational symposium for PALS and their caregivers, along with healthcare professionals.  I will be involved in the entire process, from coordinating general event logistics to planning the specific content of the conference to marketing the event to both attendees and potential sponsors.  The great thing about this project is that I have the chance to work with not only the staff in the patient service department (the department I’m in), but all of the other functions in the organization, as well as people outside of the ALS Association, such as vendors, speakers, PALS and healthcare providers.

Before I started, the staff at ALSA had begun some preliminary planning, but once I got there the entire project was handed off to me.  So far I’ve kept myself busy communicating with speakers, determining an agenda for the conference, creating the event brochure, and mailing out letters to companies and businesses seeking sponsorships.  I’ve visited the McConnell Heart Health Center where the event will be held, met with the communications coordinator at ALSA to discuss marketing the event, and even secured my first vendor!

Since I’ve been here I’ve not only learned a lot about event planning (who knew so much work went into an event like this?!), but I’ve also learned a lot about ALS and the programs that the ALS Association offers.  These first four weeks have definitely been a learning experience and I’m excited to see what the rest of the summer has in store for me!

Kim – The ALS Association Central & Southern Ohio Chapter

Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

A Change Will Do You Good

The life of a graduate student can be described as follows: drink coffee, read absurdly long book, drink more coffee, attend class, sleep when possible; lather, rinse, repeat. Confined to quiet corners of the library and coffee houses for the past year I was in need of a change of pace to prevent inevitable burnout. The shift in seasons and the start of the summer fellowship has brought welcome opportunities to do precisely that.

Although grad school provides an ideal environment to learn and grow, it can easily result in what I like to call “bubble syndrome.” Put simply, academic tunnel vision takes over and it can be difficult to stay up to date with current news and events, locally and nationally. Although I make my best efforts to catch ten minutes of NPR on the radio while driving to class or browse CNN online over lunch I’ll admit I am rarely as “up to date” as I would like to be. As part of my fellowship this summer, I provide weekly media reports to my supervisor, meaning reading newspapers and online news sources is part of my job…I have no excuses now! Each week I track national, state and local news, paying keen attention to public policies that affect women. In fact, in a week I will be traveling to a Youth and Policy Organizing Summit in Washington D.C. to further expand my horizons. (Blog post to follow that trip for certain!) In general, I feel more connected to the people, places, and issues that impact both my personal and professional life. As a result of building my knowledge, I have developed an increased confidence in my ability to communicate and synthesize ideas. An added benefit of this assignment is that I often come across community events where outreach can be done.

Balancing research and office work with hands-on community work has proven invaluable to achieving many of our organization’s educational and support-generating goals as well as incredibly fun. In the past month I have marched in the Columbus Pride Parade, worked at a table at Comfest and just this past weekend participated in the fabulously frivolous Doo-Dah parade. Needless to say, these activities have hardly felt like work, although they undoubtedly help establish new and varied relationships and a strong presence in the community. In sum, I would describe the life of a Columbus Foundation Summer Fellow as such: embrace new opportunities, exit comfort zone, immerse self in community; lather, rinse, repeat. The occasional cup of coffee doesn’t hurt either…

Sara M.  -Planned Parenthood of Central Ohio

Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ordered Chaos

“Chaorder” is the buzzword around the Vineyard Community Center’s Summer Zone Program, and three weeks into my fellowship, I can certainly vouch for its appropriateness. Running a summer program 40 hours a week for nearly 500 children in kindergarten through eighth grade is no small feat and necessitates no small amount of time, effort, and energy. Fortunately, however, for those in the midst of this ordered chaos, or “chaorder” for those too busy too waste time using two words, the work is incredibly rewarding.

In my first few weeks, I have, to put it quite simply, seen everything. I spent two days in a fourth grade classroom developing relationships with the students and learning to appreciate the hard work of the teachers, and I assist daily with our food program to ensure we are serving each child a lunch and snack in accordance with state requirements.

I have learned what it is like to attempt to single-handedly manage 250 children on a rollerskating field trip and I have helped children to discover the process of printmaking and other crafts. I have read books to second graders and gone to the park with first graders. I have diagnosed invisible injuries and scary-looking head wounds. I have taken a Strength-Finder test to identify my own abilities and administered a pre-test to students to measure their experiences. I have played more silly games than I care to admit and I have been the unsuspecting victim of a fifth grader with a hose on Splash Day. But finally and most importantly, I have been absolutely awed and inspired by the people I interact with every day.

I am in the unique position of being an observer of many classrooms, and of the program as a whole, and I have seen repeatedly compassion and love juxtaposed with diligence and hard work in a manner I have never seen before. Despite the fact that each of the fourteen classrooms is overflowing with children, the Lead and Assistant teacher in each room fill every day with meaningful activities. Beginning next week, I am going to begin delving deeper into the “bigger picture” in that I will work on planning activities for the next few weeks and continue to research a potential literacy program.

Katie Stucko–Vineyard Community Center

Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment