Faire face au roulement de membres qui graduent

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- How to do knowledge-transfer in groups with ever-changing members
- Avoiding situations where the burden of labour is always on oldest members
- Avoiding group breakdown when member turnover happens every semester/year



AP

"I can think more on this too but my initial thought is that this is why apprenticeship and mentorship is really important. 

If you are building leadership and supporting people to learn/grow at every step of the way, then this situation is much easier to navigate. Churches are really good at this so I've read a couple of books about how they grow and this approach to training an apprentice comes from a book called Exponential:
- I do. You watch. We talk.
- I do. You help. We talk.
- You do. I help. We talk.
- You do. I watch. We talk.
- You do. Someone else watches. 

In student groups, you have a natural 3-4 year cycle so you can even map this onto that timeline. If you know that on average people are involved for 1-2 years and that they cap out at 3-4, then make sure you have processes/practices in place to train them and get them to a place where they are training others in under 2 years, etc."



Faire face au roulement de membres

Qu'ils le veuillent ou non, les groupes étudiants sont contraints par les périodes définies par le calendrier académique et la durée des programmes d'études de leur école. Ces périodes de roulement s'échelonnent sur un cycle de 3-4 ans [1]. Celles-ci, bien que constituant un défi dans la création d'un momentum, peuvent pousser les groupes à se doter de processus de formation et de développement du leadership. Ainsi, il peuvent adéquatemment faire face au roulement des membres et pérenniser leur impact.


Les passages surlignés sont des connaissances partagées lors de notre cercle d'apprentissage sur ce sujet.

Types de groupes étudiantss

  L'écosystème d'un campus est principalement composé de 4 groupes.  

Associations étudiantes

Les associations étudiantes œuvrent au niveau du campus, de la faculté et du département, et agissent en tant que « voix démocratique du corps étudiant » au nom de leurs membres. Ces syndicats disposent souvent d'un financement permanent perçu par le biais d'une cotisation qui leur permet de financer des événements, de faire des dons et parfois d'offrir des rôles rémunérés, à la fois en tant que personnes membres exécutives et employées (ex : la permanence).

 

  • Positions exécutives élues (ex. SECMV : rôles non-rémunérés, ASFA: rôles rémunérés)
  • Embauche dans le cadre du programme travail-étude de Concordia (ex: Recherche de campagne, CSU)

Groupes financés par cotisation étudiante

Other campus groups can get funded through fee-levy by gaining the support of the student body. Like Student Associations, these groups have recurring funds. Unlike student associations, they can focus on specific topics or needs, such as campus food security, grants for community projects, etc. 

Campus Clubs and Committees Campus Clubs and Committees are funded by wither the student association of the university. Generally, clubs and committees are small groups of volunteers or participants who are sign-up, are appointed, or apply to participate. They can get their funding through funds allocated each semester by student associations to various projects sur as clubs and committeees, but also grassroots student groups  
Grassroots Student Groups Grassroots Student Groups or Direct Action groups are informal collectives of students organizing within a given campus or a collection of campuses. While some student groups have a long history, many are emergent and exist to give a space for students to organize around a popular issue. These groups apply for funding on a needs basis. 


Grassroots student groups face the highest risk of dissolving as a result of an inability to property turnover the group to the next generation of student organizers. This is because they do not have the permanence of structure that is required of other types of student groups. While being informal gives these groups freedom and flexibility, the absence of a formal structure can lead to challenges when it comes time for one generation to hand the reins over to the next. These challenges can be avoided by working strategically before turnover happens to create systems of support and guidance for new members, as well as developing institutional memory within your group. 

Challenges faced

Those lived experiences were shared by learning circle participants. They portrait some consequences of not being ready for student turnover.


  • Divestment organizers were concerned about groups who won and didn’t know where to go from there
  • Groups have been struggling to navigate online organizing
  • There are ongoing concerns related to general turnover and capacity when students graduate (particularly those who have been members of a group for a while
  • A lack of support from former members leads to more energy and time needed to restart after a high rate of turnover.
  • Anger towards the school administration leads to forgetting about turnover periods, thus the workload for the next semester is larger.

Running effective student groups

Momentum's Structure Report suggests 5 key elements allow for groups to organize effectively:


1. The capacity to coordinate teams

2. The capacity to facilitate group deliberation and decision making processes

3. The ability to distribute work into roles on teams

4. The ability to set up systems and design programs to recruit people from your target constituencies

5. The ability to train and coach other leaders


This is what we should be striving for when developing our student groups that navigate turnover effectively.

Ways to naviguate turnover

Support and Guidance for New Members

The Buddy System

HUB co-director Jacqueline Tam elaborated on this

Many groups navigate turnover by pairing new members with someone who has more experience. This strategy encourages relationship building and offers a point of contact to new members to go to with their questions. Your group can do this in a number of ways:


  • Make being a ‘buddy’ to new members a specific role in your group;
  • Allow new members to choose their buddy;
  • Partner new members with existing members based on their area of interest, for example, if a new member is interested in communications pair them with the communications bottom-liner.  


It’s important that those assigned to be buddies have a strong sense of the group's identity and activities, their role is to make themselves replaceable by training new members and activating potential leaders. 


Older members shadowing new members. Assist until the person feels comfortable doing the task at hand alone with minimal support from the older member. 


In Practice...

In order to have a sustainable student group, veteran members need to take on the responsibility of building leadership and supporting people to learn and grow. 


Project advisor Amara Possian on training/skilling up

If you are building leadership and supporting people to learn/grow at every step of the way, then this situation is much easier to navigate. Churches are really good at this so I've read a couple of books about how they grow and this approach to training an apprentice comes from a book called Exponential:


  • I do. You watch. We talk.
  • I do. You help. We talk.
  • You do. I help. We talk.
  • You do. I watch. We talk.
  • You do. Someone else watches.


As shown in this process, veteran members need to invite new people to do tasks that were taken care of by older members (ex : speak to media). 


Institutional Memory

Having a strong base of institutional memory ensures the sustainability of your group by supporting new members to navigate turnover. A lack of institutional memory can lead to role confusion, lost vision, and copycat actions.

Having an established structure with practices to cultivate institutional memory help make those become natural to members.


Create a Blueprint

Create a document that includes everything someone entering a new role would need to be successful.

Be sure to include:

  • Essential responsibilities
  • Best practices
  • Passwords
  • Contacts (internal and external ; include roles and ressources linked to each contact)
  • Brief how-to explainers  (tasks, school boards, permission to publish on school boards, creating pamphlets, printing posters)
  • General tips
  • For Divest Campaigns : board of directors document with pictures/names/information


Have Strong Onboarding and Outboarding Processes

Onboarding process should include: 

  • An overview of the group's mission, values, and structure
  • Introductions to key group members
  • Opportunities to questions
  • A concrete action of next step for prospective members, ie. ask them to join an action, invite them to the next meeting, or plan a social activity


Offboarding process should include: 

  • Request feedback from outgoing members on ways to improve the group (i.e. a google form, a meeting)


Naviguating turnover is strongly linked to other subjects upon which Learning Circle participants shared knowledge such as...


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