[acb-hsp] ACB-HSP President Message
Darian Slayton Fleming
darehart56 at hotmail.com
Mon Oct 1 18:03:07 EDT 2012
Hi List,
Did I miss a recent message.
I can tell you a little about publicity of the affiliate. At conference/convention, our activities are in the Convention Scope, the program and in the Conference Student Newspaper. As far as the newspaper goes, even though we have paid funds, provided receipts and turned our articles in on time for when we have wanted our articles in the paper, several years in a row, our articles were not in on the first day, and even in one case two days requested. As far as publicizing in “the Braille Forum”, when we have turned in articles by deadlines, it has taken months for them to actually get published, therefore, sometimes causing our events to be missed because people didn’t get to read them in time. I have publicized our events from time to time on the Leadership List, but that effort didn’t often realize results like people attending our conference calls. We tried strategic planning and goal setting and had a schedule for a calendar year. However, the publicity derailed us. This makes it difficult to advertise our events when we don’t get cooperation. And we compete with so many other groups and articles. I can put things in the Affiliate News or “Here and There and see how that goes. We need to have something to publicize.
Jessie has a lot of good points, and Andy has legitimate concerns. Only a few cannot do everything.
What do we want to do?
Thanks,
Darian
From: J.Rayl
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2012 12:25 PM
To: Discussion list for ACB human service professionals
Subject: Re: [acb-hsp] ACB-HSP President Message
Hi. Well first, Jessie did not decide to widen the scope: Jessie and the members of ACB-HSP made that decision to do so.
And, in my last year of President, we were, in fact, planning or discussing the creation of a mission statement which would have placed the focus of the organization on some focus, not just one of existance. I also believe that is what Darian has been attempting to do.
As you well know, Andy, the President or even four officers cannot do all the work of an organization.
As for your point of being forced quickly into leadership? I agree that in theory, no one should ever be forced into that position. However, I hardly think it is fair or realistic to blame others or the organization for that. Part of that is one's own responsibility for accepting the position, and part is the reality that when there are only a handful of members, if the organization is going to happen, then someone will have to step up to the plate ...otherwise, the organization is not happening.
I agree, ACB-HSP has provided some excellent and exceptional presentations--both in the conference calls and the conferences themselves, and it is extremely unfortunate that all have been so poorly attended and so poorly recognized, because most--probably all--have been darn good; well, well worth both attendance and recognition.
However, again, ACB-HSP and its presentations are one of ACB's best-kept secrets. It is rarely ever publicized. I have rarely seen any of the presentations or conference notices posted anywhere--like on Leadership, or ACB-L or in the braille Forum or on GDUI lists. I'd venture to say they are not on other lists, either. Does anyone know that they even are held? Does anyone even know the affiliate exists? Do people know how they'd go about joining even if they did know of the affiliate?
You know, GDUI did not get the size they are by being quiet, staying in the background and not getting out there. It may have been somewhat easier: they had something pretty obvious in common--guide dogs and the cause, but believe me, they've had a lot of growing pangs and now really do, as well. I doubt, however, they'll let it stop them.
I agree, we need to become goal-directed, develop the mission statement, follow it and get the word out--and keep it going out. And then, regardless of whether there are five people there or 500, do the presentation and do it well, because the next one will be distributed with a word about how well-done the previous one went too, and so on and so on. That's how we grow.
Jessie Rayl
thedogmom63 at frontier.com
www.facebook.com/Eaglewings10
www.pathtogrowth.org
----- Original Message -----
From: Baracco, Andrew W
To: Carmella D Broome ; Discussion list for ACB human service professionals
Sent: Monday, October 01, 2012 2:15 PM
Subject: Re: [acb-hsp] ACB-HSP President Message
hi Carmella,
I echo many of your sentiments. From my historical recall, and a mention in the book "People of Vision" which is the written history of ACB, this group started out as a networking group for social workers. The group kind of fizzled out, and was restarted by Jessie Rayl, who is an LPC, and decided to widen the scope to cover all human service professionals. The up side of doing this is hopefully to increase membership, as focusing on one group like social workers limits possible participation. The down side of doing this is that by trying to appeal to many, you end up not really appealing to anyone. A similar thing happened when the Federal employees affiliate expanded to cover employees of all levels of government. It didn't work for them, and it doesn't appear to be working for HSP. At present, many of the members of HSP seem to be therapists in private practice. I am a vocational rehab counselor who works for the Government. Often I find that there is little in this group that I can identify with, and once when I gave a presentation on what I do, a well thought out presentation, by the way, it seemed to go over like a lead balloon.
I also identify with the resentment and frustration that comes with joining a group, and almost immediately being thrust into a leadership role. I am not a leader by any stretch of the imagination, but I am a target for feelings of guilt, both from within and without, and guilt is no reason to assume a leadership position.
The activities that you mentioned are all things that we have discussed and said that we wanted to work on. But what we discovered is that it takes people who are willing to work to make these things happen, and we have gotten caught up in just trying to exist. The one thing that this group has done well is to put together interesting and informative presentation at our national ACB conventions. In fact, some of them have been the most interesting and educational presentations that I have witnessed anywhere. We have also had some fun social events as well. But what I have often wondered is that with all of the blind persons in and out of ACB who work in human services, why we have such a hard time building membership. We should be the size of GDUI. One thing that GDUI has going for it is that it focuses on one thing, namely, the guide dog. Perhaps one thing that we can look at is a way to focus on a few things that are interesting to those in these professions, and target our efforts in that direction. Many organizations are goal directed at the beginning, and as time goes on, they focus more and more on just trying to exist, and lose sight of the goals that they had in the beginning, and the reasons why they formed in the first place.
Andy
From: acb-hsp-bounces at acb.org [mailto:acb-hsp-bounces at acb.org] On Behalf Of Carmella D Broome
Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2012 12:57 PM
To: Discussion list for ACB human service professionals
Subject: Re: [acb-hsp] ACB-HSP President Message
I'm rather enjoying observing the group process around all this. The dialogue is, shall we say, quite animated. Since I'm not involved or invested, I can observe it with detached curiosity and consider what each person is saying and analyze the situation and so on. Not all of you have that luxury. Others may not have the interest.
Obviously, there are strong feelings and wounded feelings and frustration. I appreciate everyone's I messages and clearly there are issues that need to be hashed out. Validation done. I have done my due dilligence as a counselor. All of your thoughts and feelings are important. You all come to the discussion with unique perspectives,life experiences, and strengths, and have chosen to take the time to share your feedback. Good job to each of you. Good job to me for being affirming and all that stuff.
My question becomes, why does ACB HSP need to exist? what can an org specifically for blind people involved in a very wide range of professions that are human services
related do for me as a member? Why should I pay money to join that organization? So what that we all happen to be blind? I can get what I need from my colleagues who are blind on this list or others for free without having to invest more than a minimum of time or other resources. What's the point other than that we all are blind and work in vaguely similar professions? If I put time and energy into such an organization, why would I be doing that? Do I really want to travel to different places to hang out with people who happen to also be blind and do some work that is vaguely similar to mine? Not really.
What's the vision? What are the specific goals? If I got involved, what would I be trying to help the organization accomplish? I'm not talking about broad mission statements. I'm talking specifics. How is it relevant to me personally? Why is there a need for such an organization? Is it for support, for advocacy, for professional development, or what? Is it really needed? Does it do something unique enough to justify its existence?
Are we going to advocate for more accessibility to journals and other publications put out by sighted orgs for those in human services professions so that people who are blind and in whichever profession can have greater access? Are we going to put efforts towards making sure licensure exam preparation materials and exams themselves are available in accessible formats and administered fairly? Are we going to be a presence at national conferences put on by the national orgs for various HS professionals to offer workshops on how to be more culturally sensitive around blindness related issues or to help them understand that there are blind people working successfully in their fields? Are we going to offer CEUs for members and non members? What are we offering? Why should I want to be involved?
If its just that we are all blind and interested in similar work, that's just not enough incentive for me. I've got plenty of other personal and professional concerns to take up my time with. I'm challenging those of you who really do want this and see the need to give me your pitch in specifics to bring what appears to be much needed clarity here.
I'm not a member of any blindness organizations at this time. I've never found those memberships to be of particular interest or help to me. Sometimes, as in previously in my life at various points, I've joined one out of some hope that it would be more productive or out of some sense of "should," but I don't wind up sticking with it because I just can't drum up enough enthusiasm to last very long. I've been asked to be on Boards or to take positions of leadership, and have agreed, but then resented feeling obligated to do something I really am not that interested in and don't really have time for.
I only have so much time and only so much money (not much of either) and have to choose how to best invest my resources. This is true for everyone else. I believe God asks me to be a good steward of what I'm given. If I take on volunteer work, it is something I can absolutely do on my own time when I have the time and the energy to devote to it. I proof books for BookShare when I have time now, because there are no meetings, no group projects, and no time constraints. That's why I chose to do that.
Far as money and time. There are so many orgs I could join, and I find it more helpful to me to join organizations more in line with my professional interests, such as the American Mental Health Counselors or the American Association for Marriage and Family Therapists and their state affiliates. These allow for networking, information, trainings, and other benefits that are relevant to me personally and professionally.
I appreciate the sharing of resources and dialogue that go on thanks to lists like this one. Technology allows people with particular interests to come together virtually in ways they could never do in person and I find that very rewarding. I've gotten to know a few people personally through this list and similar ones. We get to know each other because we click a certain way or have other things in common. Those closer relationships are important to me. Having access to a larger group personally is a great thing. To me, its practical and supportive, so the bases are covered. Its nice to know other people are out there trying to do what I'm doing every day, which is to work and live productively and to work around blindness and pursue interests and ambitions. I appreciate the similarities such as higher education and intelligence. What else do I need? For me, personally, there might not be anything else, other than a virtual community. That's enough for me at this point unless someone can explain to me what else I need that I don't realize I need or why I should want to get involved.
I'm putting this out there for those of you who say you want this affiliate. Clarify your vision and nail down some goals so people see what you have to offer that is truly of value and relevance to them. That's what makes people want to be a part of something.
Carmella Broome EdS LPC LMFT
Crossroads Counseling Center, Lexington SC
http://CounselorCarmella.WordPress.com
Author of Carmella's Quest: Taking On College Sight Unseen (Red Letter Press 2009)
http://CarmellasQuest.LiveJournal.com
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