Civic Experiment & Wiki Challenge

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Objectives

1.      Adopt a domain (social cause, community asset or locality) and populate it from 1 Feb to July 2020

2.      Recruit others to do it together with you

3.      Consult and engage experts to give you insights if you like

4.      Make sense and present the collective knowledge base to policymakers, NGOs & academics at Roundtables or Forum

Concept

‘Multi-level civic engagement’ – Your team will populate your adopted page (and sub-pages) with information, but also recruit 2-3 others to help populate the pages. Similar to a benign kind of ‘multi-level marketing’, those you recruit will in turn be able to recruit 2-3 others to do the same, and so on.

Process

1.      Find one friend to form a pair so that you can start (Feb 2020)

2.      Agree on a social cause, community asset or locality (e.g. youth-at-risk; community artists; Whampoa)

3.      You are encouraged to populate at least 1 item a week (and keep a record of your contributions).

a.      While you might start with a hub page (e.g. Disability), you can create as many sub-pages, where you think it makes sense (e.g. Autism, Visual Impairment, Arts & Disability)

4.      Recruit up to a maximum of 3 other people to help populate information

5.      Check in weekly with your recruits

a.      Document what you and your immediate recruits have contributed - just cut & paste to in a Google doc

b.      Ask for feedback and highlight any challenges faced – also cut & paste this to Google doc

c.      Forward issues or any requests for IPS to troubleshoot. We can provide technical assistance or research suggestions, e.g. search strategy or how to integrate bits of info if you are not sure where or how it fits (email: justin.lee@nus.edu.sg).

6.      Optional: Arrange to consult or interview experts (e.g. client, caregiver, NGOs, policymakers, researcher etc) and use integrate inputs to the pages.

7.      At the end of the 6 months, end of July 2020, take stock of the whole knowledge base you have consolidated (with whoever is interested to in your network), and present key findings to IPS

8.      Teams will present at specific Roundtables for their respective sector and best ones (assessed for quantity and quality of knowledge) will also present at larger Community Forum in Oct 2020.

Significance

·        Learn how to conduct needs assessments and asset mapping; gain experience engaging with policymakers and NGOs.

·        Contribute to policy or practice. Presentation to policymakers, NGOs and academics helps inform the work they do, and also gives useful exposure and contributes to participant’s own CV

·        Democratisation of research - allows those without a voice to meaningfully contribute to a collective knowledge base instead of rely on others to define the issues for them