Community Meetings

From Map Kibera

Jump to: navigation, search

Provide access to community and networks appropriate to each theme, to express themselves on the map, video, sms.

Contents

Flyers

General Considerations

Logistics

  • Tables + Chairs
  • Electricity
  • Soda/Biscuits
  • Projector, if presenting VoK
  • Need airtime, both safaricom and zain (cultural precedent to participate in civil society in kibera, but try to avoid cash)
  • Print Maps
  • Markers, masking tape, tracing paper (available at Westgate Centre stationary store)
  • Print this, and questions, all out

Invitees

  • Have group personally identify 3-4 individuals on their side of Kibera
  • More ideally, mobilize through an existing network, or bring activity to their meeting, so expectations and context are set.
  • Need confirmation

Media

Prepare video team, audio recording

Maps

Preparing and processing drawn maps

Program

  • Brief Welcome
  • Introductions -- Matchsticks
  • Quick Ground Rules
    • get video consent
    • (start collecting names, phones, emails)
  • Introduce the project
    • paper maps. projected maps. GPS gear
  • Map Tracing exercise -- questions
    • choose a scribe
    • (Groups of Five or so, 1 coordinator per group + 2 mappers). do a count off
  • Report Backs with Maps
  • SMS Introduction
    • (Announce airtime)
    • Ushahidi Demo & Discussion
  • retain sign up sheets for follow up on what's next
  • distribute copy of maps, if available.

Closing ... and explaining what's next.

Health Meetings

  • Wednesday, April 21, Westside, organized by Regynnah
  • Thursday, April 22, Eastside, organized by Douglas

organizers arrive at 9 to set up. meetings goes from 10am - 1pm (expect 11am start)


File:KiberaHealth.pdf

Map Questions

File:MAP QUESTIONS HEALTH.doc

For discussion prompt.

(Group questions ... can be used to prompt discussion)


1. INTRO


It is important that people get familiar with the map and how to orientate on it!

  • Show the map! Talk about it (the legend, villages, present the railway, Kibera Drive, etc)!
  • Make a mark where you live! (Very important!) - MAKE A MARK (BLACK)


QUESTIONS: Individuals should focus first on the village where they live – than broader!

  • What do you think about the map?
  • Is it representative?
  • What is missing – MAKE A MARK (RED)?
  • Which facilities work and which don’t – MAKE A MARK (RED)?
  • Which are the most reliable/trustworthy – MAKE A MARK (GREEN)?


2. WHICH SERVICES ARE USED (BLACK)


A)Start with where people live!


QUESTIONS:

  • Where do you go for services? (Very important!) - MAKE A MARK (BLACK)
  • Why? (Very important!) – write beside the service why people use it!
  • Do you use health services outside of Kibera and which?


This question might present a problem, because people go to visit different services based on the problem they are facing – so if needed try to build your questions around these: a)GENERAL PRACTICIONER b)DENTAL c)CHEMIST d)BIRTH/MATERNITY CENTRE/MIDWIFE/PEDIATRICIAN e)LABORATORY/HIV f)MENTAL/PSYHIATRIC COUNSELING g)EYE h)X-RAY i)...


B)Make a mark in the middle of the villages which present the whole community and ask the same questions:


  • Where do your relatives and friends and community in general go for services? (Very important!) - MAKE A MARK (BLACK)
  • Why? (Very important!) – write beside the service why people use it!
  • Do they use health services outside of Kibera and which?


3. THINGS TO IMPROVE (BLUE)


  • What’s the biggest need/health problem?
  • What services are unavailable in Kibera?
  • Where would you put the health service and which kind? - MAKE A MARK
  • Any 24 hours services? - MAKE A MARK
  • Any redundancy?
  • Who are the important people that aren’t mapped here responsible for health provision?

And

  • What would you want health service provider to know about Kibera?
  • If you were talking to health official about this map and health, what would you tell?


You can ask the same questions to verify!

  • Best & Worst services? - MAKE A MARK


4. PERSONAL STORIES (YELLOW)


  • Any personal stories of when you had trouble accessing services and where did it happen?

SMS Questions

  • how do you use sms for health? do they contact you by SMS? what do you say?
  • what have you seen in the last week would you have reported?
  • send in some reports. demonstrate with keywords "kibera, health" and some rough location
  • would you spend money reporting on that experience?
  • what kind of model would this be? broadcast on kibera website? report reviews, feedback?
  • what kind of response would you want to receive? who should be responding?
  • we need to communicate that somethings may go public, private, or not used at all?
  • is there a systematic way SMS is used already?
  • how could SMS help you do your job better?

examples ... this clinic is out of medicine. show technology ... what is this good for?

Safety + Vulnerability Meetings

When security map is printed (week of 5/3) host 2 meetings with GBV service providers (the exact groups listed in your doc) and 2 meeting with young girl groups (Binti, another good one)? At the meetings we use tracing paper and pens to ask questions about where people feel safe and vulnerable, that we will incorporate back into the online map.

Maps for Data Program- we collect all data/surveys/ect that people in the network are willing to share. We will compile this data and make it available to everyone in the group. We can also use the shortcode for sharing information, and as a network to update interested parties when there are new elements to the map.

Questions

For young people

We are avoiding questions that directly address personal traumatic experience, but aim at identifying general community knowledge of safe and dangerous areas

  • Where do you feel safe?
  • Which areas do you avoid? Why?
  • Where do your parents tell you not to go?
  • Are there places where you friends have experienced violence?
  • Are there places where people get injured frequently?
  • If your friends experience violence, where do they usually go? Where do you tell them to go?
  • Where do you go if you feel threatened?
  • Where do people say - casual sex, drug use, predatory old men -- is taking place?

For decision makers

  • What are you doing to make sure there's security?
  • Where are problems you are handling taking place?
  • Where do you send people who have problems?
  • How do you conduct your work? Where do you work? Schedule of their work?
  • What problems do they handle?
  • Where do they find you?
  • What kind of, is the biggest challenges do you face in handling problems?
  • Where have you had the most success in the community?
  • What motivates them to do security? What is their objective?
  • Which areas have problems been moving over the last year?

Older Notes

  • build from kcoda's networks ... committees, monitors, paralegals, in each ward. "Change Agents"

Questions for printed map sessions

From http://rising.globalvoicesonline.org/kolkata/2008/09/

Here's one I found (replace "para" with...village) that could be really interesting addition to paper map exercise.

I would also replace a lot of the "who" with "where" so they can draw it. But liking some questions like...when you need x where do you go?

If we could get someone else to facilitate this with maybe the girls groups...would be really cool. even one mapper could do it, or jane.

Activity Two: Para Map Making: Personal Map of Bow Bazaar and You

Each participant will create their personal map of Bow Bazaar and them. This is very different from a regular map with street names, lines, and official landmarks. Rather, this map should represent what Bow Bazaar intimately looks like to the participant. It is a map in which each participant notes, identifies places/spaces/people/animals that carry intimate significance to them personally.

On an A4 size piece of paper create a personal map of Bow Bazaar — mapping what is important to you. Be creative. Use words, colors, art, images, etc.

Prompt Questions:

  • When you are feeling sad, where do you go in your neighborhood?
  • Places where you fell in love?
  • Where do you enjoy having an adda?
  • What places do you go to in your para where you feel the need to dress up?
  • Do you have any favorite pets in your para?
  • Who are important people in your para?
  • In crises, who do you go to?
  • Who do you go to for advice?
  • If you need to get things done, who do you go to
  • Who are your enemies?
  • Who are closest to your heart?
  • Who are you afraid of?
  • Somebody you are intrigued by?
  • Places in the para which make you Happy? And Make you Sad?
  • Your favorite tree in the para?
  • Favorite eating place?
  • If you have visitor, what parts of the para do you take them around to?
  • Are there some special games that you play in the para?
  • What are you favorite festivals in your para? Where do they happen?
  • What are your favorite sounds inside the para? Specific sounds at night? Specific sounds during Morning? Or afternoon?
  • One thing in your Para that you want to change? One thing in your para that you don’t want to change?


  • where do you parents tell you not to go?

Comments on Questions

One area that might need more thought and consultation is the questions. This is a good start and included some relevant and innovative subjects. But given that you observed more latent knowledge about vulnerability and health (and AIDS?) than had been apparent, it would be great to work with the local people to figure out what questions would bring that out. A few of the Kolkata questions might do so, but my guess is that if used as they now stand, they would more likely produce some interesting replies but not much actionable information about prevention messages and focus of community action and follow up. I have no special expertise in this field, but I would imagine that the questions should included a combination of more pointed questions about "where do you feel scared?" and "where do people say this or that activity - casual sex, drug use, predatory old men -- is taking place? "(maybe leaving unasked whether the respondent has first hand knowledge). It might be a good technique to ask "where do you feel good" questions to establish safe spaces and give some context to the negative, but I don't think we'll get the vulnerability picture without asking vulnerability questions more directly.

Education Meetings

File:EducationDraftSmall.pdf

Questions

File:EDUCATION - LEADERS.doc File:EDUCATION-PARENTS.doc

WatSan Meetings

Prints

Questions

File:WATSAN-QUESTIONS.doc

Meeting 1

  • Taka ni pato
  • Soweto Youth Group (Douglas)
  • Up with Hope (Jane)
  • Umande Trust
  • PeePoople
Personal tools