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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for TSNE
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DTSTART:20230101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20240606T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20240606T120000
DTSTAMP:20260511T213147
CREATED:20240226T214019Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240226T214019Z
UID:259689-1717664400-1717675200@tsne.org
SUMMARY:Reimagining Governance for Nonprofit Organizations\, Networks\, and Coalitions
DESCRIPTION:There is growing interest and urgent need for reimaging governance and innovative approaches and models which are more responsive and accountable to the communities they serve\, while addressing racial equity and class. As current traditional hierarchal models of governance often lead to dysfunction and disconnection to communities\, new approaches are increasingly being adapted by nonprofits and coalitions across the U.S. This advanced workshop will focus on some of the leading-edge governance frameworks and applications and how you can connect and engage your communities more directly in your governance. These frameworks include: Community Engagement Governance\,™ (an innovative governance framework in which key constituents and key stakeholders share in racially equitable shared/distributed governance decision-making)\, BoardSource’s Purpose-Driven Board Leadership (grounds board decision making in community wisdom and pays attention to the ecosystem)\, Network Governance (governance with multiple organizations)\, and Liberatory Governance (focusing on racial equity and shared power between a governance team and staff).   \nRegister here \nLearning Objectives\nThis highly active virtual workshop will focus on hands-on experiential activities to increase learning and dialogue about these new approaches to governance.  Through this 3hour workshop\, board members and executive directors will:   \n\nIncrease their understanding of the foundational principles for some of the new governance frameworks and strategies to engage your communities more directly in your governance process. \nLearn about the benefits and challenges of these frameworks from case examples of nonprofits and coalitions who are experimenting with some of these new approaches to governance. \nExplore ways to apply some of the guiding principles of these new approaches to the governance of their own organization\, coalition\, or network. \nDevelop a plan to bring back their learning to their board or network/coalitions \n\nTarget Audience\nThis is an advanced level workshop and is limited to board members\, executive directors\, and senior staff that work directly with boards\, coalitions\, networks\, or other governance systems. Board members with their executive director are strongly encouraged to attend together as a team. As this workshop will offer very different ways of thinking about governance\, we encourage participation by those who have an open mind and are interested in experimentation. As the session will be highly participatory\, we are requesting all participants to use their cameras for the full workshop.    \nAbout the Presenters\nThis session will be led by Judy Freiwirth with Nesly Metayer. \nJudy Freiwirth\, Psy.D.\, Principal of Nonprofit Solutions Associates\, has been consulting and training nonprofit organizations for over 30 years\, especially those that focus on social change through movement building and coalitions\, immigrant rights\, and which serve communities of color.  She is nationally known as a thought leader and trainer in new approaches to governance and has been a keynote speaker and trainer at many international\, national\, and regional conferences. She is a certified BoardSource Governance Consultant and Trainer and is the key developer of Community-Engagement Governance™\, an innovative governance approach which uses a racial equity lens and engages constituents and other community stakeholders in shared governance. Her practice also focuses on strategic planning\, racial equity initiatives\, leadership transitions\, organizational restructuring\, program evaluation\, and community-wide change initiatives. She serves an TSNE affiliated consultant and as a consultant with RoadMap Consulting. She also served as the co-coordinator of the Alliance for Nonprofit Management’s New England Racial Equity and Capacity Building Initiative\, which focused on building the racial equity competencies of consultants and other capacity builders. She has published numerous articles for The Nonprofit Quarterly and is a chapter author for the book Nonprofit Governance: Innovative Perspectives and Approaches. She is currently serving as the Chair of Association for Research on Nonprofit Organizations and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA) and on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Nonprofit Education and Leadership. She holds a doctorate in psychology\, specializing in organization development.     \nNesly Metayer has over 20 years of experience in management development with a special interest in POC-led organizations. As an organizational development consultant and now Principal at EquiLead Consulting Group dedicated to advance transformational processes and racial equity\, Nesly partners with organizations to design\, implement\, and evaluate participatory practices of inclusion and deepen organizational culture towards social accountability and equity outcomes through training\, strategic management processes\, community renewal\, executive transition and organizational change. As a practitioner in the field\, Nesly has been the executive director of Youth and Family Enrichment Services (YoFES)\, responding to racial disparities of children in Boston. Before joining YoFES\, Nesly spent six years at Tufts University as senior manager for community engagement\, leading the implementation of an innovative program to respond to the disparity of child obesity in America. Nesly has initiated and implemented various capacity building projects aimed at reinforcing the management capacity of many organizations in Greater Boston. As a practitioner-scholar\, Nesly’s research agenda focuses on the factors associated with the effectiveness of mission-based organizations. Nesly Metayer earned an undergraduate degree in business administration\, a graduate diploma in administration from the National School of Administration (IIAP)\, a master’s in sociology from University of Caen\, France\, and a doctorate in administration from Paris –Sorbonne University. He is currently working on his last paper for the Doctor of Management in Weatherhead School of Management at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland\, Ohio.   \n 
URL:https://tsne.org/event/reimagining-governance-for-nonprofit-organizations-networks-and-coalitions/
LOCATION:Virtual
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Phoenix:20240611T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Phoenix:20240611T153000
DTSTAMP:20260511T213147
CREATED:20240226T214541Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240226T214541Z
UID:259694-1718096400-1718119800@tsne.org
SUMMARY:Effective Supervision: Part 2
DESCRIPTION:Participants must have taken Effective Supervision Part 1 as a prerequisite for this training.  \nSuccessful supervisors start with curiosity and awareness of their own supervisory and communication style\, as well as their particular cultural lens. By expanding their view and skillfully shifting these default approaches\, they can more fully develop staff and maximize performance.  \nRegister here \nLearning Objectives\nThis highly participatory and reflective training takes a deeper look at concepts discussed in TSNE’s Effective Supervision workshop. Participants will:  \n\nReview the four supervisory styles and reflect on ways that adaptive practice has improved and challenged supervisory relationships \n\n\nConsider approaches to decision making as they relate to staff readiness \nDeepen their practice of relationship-building communication skills  \nConsider a model of staff performance management and engage in adaptive feedback and communication to address performance issues at all levels  \n\nCome prepared to actively participate!   \nTarget Audience\nSupervisors who have participated in TSNE’s Effective Supervision Part 1 training\, and wish to deepen their adaptive practice.  \nAbout the Presenters\nJoanne Horgan is a human resources consultant and lead trainer for TSNE. She has worked at TSNE since 1993\, serving many roles in the organization’s human resources practice over the years. Joanne has directed the internal HR function and led the HR team in its delivery of services to over 60 fiscally sponsored clients. She has also been providing HR consulting and training for small to mid-sized grassroots\, social justice\, and other mission-focused nonprofits for over 20 years. Joanne holds a B.A. in organizational psychology and an M.S. in human resources counseling from Northeastern University.   \nLyn Freundlich is the founder and principal consultant at Change for Good Coaching and Consulting. She specializes in leadership development\, human resources\, and change management as a coach\, facilitator\, trainer\, and consultant. She considers employees an organization’s greatest asset and believes that people choose to work in nonprofits not simply to make a living but to make a difference. As a practitioner\, Lyn understands that the human resources function served to protect organizations by ensuring compliance with a host of employment regulations but also to support employees’ effectiveness. She believes that a well-functioning organization walks their talk by treating staff in ways that promote equity and are consistent with their mission and vision.  \nLyn has over 30 years of experience in the nonprofit sector working in a range of settings from large\, international organizations to small\, member-driven\, local groups. Most recently she served as the director of administration and human resources for over fifteen years. In 2005\, Lyn also launched the human resources training and consulting practice at TSNE. In that capacity\, she partnered with hundreds of local and national nonprofits to build human resources systems reflective of each organization’s vision and values\, train and support supervisors and other leaders\, and provide employee relations coaching and consultation.  \nLyn is a seasoned trainer\, coach and consultant serving dozens of clients each year. She has a B.A. from Oberlin College and a master’s in organization and management from Antioch University of New England. Lyn is also a Certified Professional Coach. She is proud to have served on numerous boards\, including with The City School\, a Boston-based nonprofit working with young people across lines of race\, class\, gender\, and neighborhood who are emerging leaders and have a passion for social justice. She also sits on the board of Onward!\, a new organization using innovative solutions that harness the power of technology to bring about systems-level change and build power in our most marginalized communities. 
URL:https://tsne.org/event/effective-supervision-part-2/
LOCATION:Third Sector New England\, Inc.\, 89 South Street Suite 700\, Boston\, 02111\, United States
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