Bill Ashton, Ph.D. & Wayne Kelly, MRDRural Development Institute, Brandon University
Brandon, MB CanadaPh: 204‐571‐8518 | [email protected]
www2.brandonu.ca/rdi
Bill Ashton, Ph.D. & Wayne Kelly, MRDRural Development Institute, Brandon University
Brandon, MB CanadaPh: 204‐571‐8518 | [email protected]
www2.brandonu.ca/rdi
Mar 2011 – Jul 2011Oct 2010 - Mar 2011 Aug 2011 – Mar 2012 Apr 2012 +
CED CHOICE MATRIX: A Path Finding ToolCED CHOICE MATRIX: A Path Finding ToolFinding the right tools and discovering new solutions
Create Research Prototype & Learn
Sustain & Evolve
Mar 2011 – Jul 2011Oct 2010 - Mar 2011 Aug 2011 – Mar 2012 Apr 2012 +
METHODThe Rural Development Institute employed design thinking1 methodology
& EvolveWe are
here
WHAT WE HAVE DONE SO FAR, BY THE NUMBERS: 1) 1000+ CED t l i t i d
WHAT HAVE WE FOUND SO FAR? WHAT ARE WE DOING NOW? Testingto create, research prototype and test
the CED Choice Matrix.
As the research team designed the CED Choice Matrix with stakeholders and practitioners the project team had to solve how to effectively organize CED tools and
INNOVATION
1) 1000+ CED tools inventoried2) 125 CED tools catalogued in the Choice Matrix3) 5 communities (21 participants) participated in the RESEARCH stage4) 71 CED projects inventoried by communities5) 5 CED projects ‘designed’ with communities6) 84 CED Tools suggested by communities7) 50 CED websites regularly used by participants8) 10 more communities will participate in the PROTOTYPE & LEARNING Stage9) 100 CED Tool reviews will be collected from Manitoba's Economic Development Officers
•Test website is under development
Beta Site
•Work with to test the website and give design feedback and direction
Testing •Community feedback and direction guides the website’s continual evolution
Learning
The research team defined a CED Tool as:
how to effectively organize CED tools and to ensure effective access to those tools. In addition, the research team had to design a system that built tool credibility through practitioner review.
OrganizingEvaluating•Community Development
T l f ld l h Fi N i PEOPLE
KEY CONCEPTS: CED DEVELOPMENT CYCLE KEY CONCEPTS: DEVELOPMENT TYPES
Tool Examples Author
CED Tool as: Any guide, worksheet, checklist, manual,
“how-to” or process in text, audio or video formats that is focused on guiding the
user through a CED activity The CED Development Cycle was identified as an important categorization
factor for CED T l
Organizing
PlanningImplementing
Evaluating •Tools for elderly, youth, women, First Nations, etc.PEOPLE
•Environmental Development•Tools for land use planning, environmental impact
assessment, etc.GREEN
•Economic Development•Tools for entreprenuership, cost benefit analysis, etc.GROW
Project Team:Bill AshtonWayne KellyGary McNeelyKaren MarchandAllister Cucksey
Anisa Zehtab‐Martin
BackcastingThe State of Victoria, Australia
Building a win‐win Co‐opBritish Columbia Co‐operatives Association
Community‐led libraries Libraries in Communities
Community RecreationHandbook
Franks, Flo
CED Tools Planning
Analyzing
Implementing p p, y ,
•Holsitic / Sustainable Development•Tools that affect all three of the People, Green and Grow.SUSTAINABLE
FUNDER: Rural and Cooperatives Secretariat STAKEHOLDERS: Canadian Community Economic Development Network, Community Futures Manitoba, Economic Developers Association of Manitoba, Economic Development Council for Manitoba Bilingual Municipalities, Health In Common, Manitoba Agriculture, Food and Rural Initiatives,
1. References available upon request
HandbookMapping community capacity
Kretzmann, John P.;McKnight, John L.
Judy ColemanVP Programs and Services,
North Eastman Health Association
“I like the idea of having any resource that will
make our work efficient and effective”
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