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In 2012-2013

In 2012-2013 · 19 campus cohorts will host nearly 38 campus-wide events to promote civil dialogue and richer conversation, which will reach thousands of students, faculty, and administrators.

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In 2012-2013

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  1. In 2012-2013 ·19 campus cohorts will host nearly 38campus-wide events to promote civil dialogue and richer conversation, which will reach thousands of students, faculty, and administrators. · 94 fellows from diverse cultural and religious backgrounds will host 470 conversations that will touch the lives of nearly 3,000 diverse students across the country. Sign up for the list serve at www.askbigquestions.org Welcome to the Ask Big Questions Team!

  2. In this presentation • About Ask Big Questions Fellowship: Slides 3-6 • Recruiting Fellows: Slides 7-15

  3. What are the fellows doing? • Hosting 5 small group Ask Big Questions conversations with diverse peers. • We will teach you and students what an Ask Big Questions conversation is. Here are some basics: • Starts with a Big Question- that all students can answer. • Leads to conversation, not debate. • Encourages story sharing. • Takes place with diverse peers. • Students can create their own Big Questions and conversation guides or they can use the ones provided. • Working as a cohort to create at least two campus-wide events to promote positive conversations and deepened relationships. • Examples from this past year include: • University of Toronto: What If? Campaign (a radio program) • Michigan State’s Laugh in Peace Comedy Tour • Baruch’s “What is Business?” essay contest • Florida Atlantic University’s “What would you do to save a life?” Bone Marrow Registration Drive • And more…

  4. Depth and Breadth BenchmarksRelationships • Interactions • Initiatives • Ask Big Questions • 57 total relationships in REACH • Inner = 10 • Middle = 15 • Outer = 30 • Faculty/Staff- 2 • At least 2 campaigns to engage university per cohort • Fellows should host at least 5 small group conversations Please note: Only 30 relationships are required according to your grant agreement. This past year fellows surpassed that goal rather quickly, so we’d like to start by giving students a higher target. Only 30 are required for fulfillment of grant agreement.

  5. Fellow Training at Institute Did you know? At Institute we are partnering with the Center for Civic Reflection to design and help facilitate training for the Ask Big Questions fellows. The training will be high level and highly interactive.

  6. Support from Sheila & Josh

  7. RECRUITING FELLOWS

  8. Who are the right Fellow Candidates?

  9. You can do the first four steps prior to hearing about funding. Please do not hire fellows until we have confirmed your grant agreement.

  10. Links • Behavioral Interview Form • Ask Big Questions Job Description and Application 2012 • Ask Big Questions Agreement Letter • What is an Ask Big Questions Campaign?

  11. Interview Recommendations:

  12. Wrong Candidates Red Flags • Don’t take the application process seriously • Are overcommitted • Are uninvolved on campus Next Steps • Tell them to keep in touch, and be in touch with them too • Be firm, this project is selective

  13. Student Expectations

  14. Next Steps

  15. Thank you! We are looking forward to the year together. Sheila Katz, skatz@hillel.org Josh Feigelson, jfeigelson@hillel.org

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