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Community Asset Mapping: Identifying & Organizing Resources for Health & Development, Slides of Business Informatics

Asset-Based Community DevelopmentCommunity HealthHealth PromotionCommunity Development

The process of community asset mapping, a method used to identify and inventory the strengths and resources of a community. Asset mapping can help uncover solutions to community needs and improve health by promoting community involvement, ownership, and empowerment. steps for defining community boundaries, identifying and involving partners, determining what types of assets to include, listing assets of groups and individuals, and organizing assets on a map.

What you will learn

  • What types of assets should be included in a community asset map?
  • How can community asset mapping promote community involvement and empowerment?
  • What are the steps involved in community asset mapping?

Typology: Slides

2021/2022

Uploaded on 08/01/2022

hal_s95
hal_s95 🇵🇭

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Download Community Asset Mapping: Identifying & Organizing Resources for Health & Development and more Slides Business Informatics in PDF only on Docsity! UCLA CENTER FOR HEALTH POLICY RESEARCH Section 1: Asset Mapping Purpose Asset mapping provides information about the strengths and resources of a community and can help uncover solutions. Once community strengths and resources are inventoried and depicted in a map, you can more easily think about how to build on these assets to address community needs and improve health. Finally, asset mapping promotes community involvement, ownership, and empowerment. What is a community asset? A community asset or resource is anything that improves the quality of community life. Assets include: • The capacities and abilities of community members. • A physical structure or place. For example, a school, hospital, or church. Maybe a library, recreation center, or social club. • A business that provides jobs and supports the local economy. • Associations of citizens. For example, a Neighborhood Watch or a Parent Teacher Association. • Local private, public, and nonprofit institutions or organizations. When to use Asset Mapping • You want to start a new local program and need information about available resources. For example, you are interested in teen mothers finishing their education. You could draw a community asset map that identifies school drop-out prevention, tutoring, and education counseling programs for young teen mothers. This helps you see what already exists, or if support services are lacking. You may find it is necessary to develop a program to help young mothers finish their education. • You are making program decisions. An asset map can help you identify community assets and concerns. The map results help determine new directions for your program or identify new programs that need to be developed. For example, an asset map of food banks and nutrition resources for low-income families in your neighborhood may reveal that there is a lack of programs, or that existing programs are located in areas that are not accessible to families in your service area. UCLA Center for Health Policy Research Health DATA Program – Data, Advocacy and Technical Assistance • You want to mobilize and empower the community. If you involve different community members in constructing the asset map, the process itself can be an organizing tool. For example, mapping local public services and identifying the dollars spent per community member can mobilize residents to lobby city or county council members to improve local public services. Planning Asset Mapping Identifying and mapping assets in your community can be easier than you think. The following are the steps to create an asset map. 1.1 Define community boundaries 1.2 Identify and involve partners 1.3 Determine what type of assets to include 1.4 List the assets of groups 1.5 List the assets of individuals 1.6 Organize assets on a map 1.1 Define community boundaries The first step is to define your community’s boundaries. Remember that geographic boundaries of cities or towns do not always reflect citizens’ perceptions of their community or neighborhood. Decide what streets or landmarks are your boundaries. Use your partnership and residents to decide. 1. 2 Identify and involve partners Find people and organizations that share your interests. It is also important to involve people and organizations that have different community networks and knowledge about the neighborhood (its resources, residents and problems). Involve key people with a stake in your issue. Finally, involve enough people—community residents, organization staff, or volunteers—to complete all the activities needed to finish the asset map. 1.3 Determine what type of assets to include There are lots of different types of assets. The most obvious are money and access to economic resources. Others include physical assets (buildings), knowledge and skills, political connections, legitimacy in the community, and access to the public (such as the media and clergy). Identify any specific skills or assets needed to address the issue on which you are focusing. For example, if you are looking at assets around physical activity among children, you may want to identify parks and recreation centers, YMCAs, athletic clubs or leagues, recreation classes at community colleges or after-school fitness programs. Link your purpose with the kinds of assets you want to identify. UCLA Center for Health Policy Research Health DATA Program – Data, Advocacy and Technical Assistance • Conducting interviews • Conducting group interviews Each method has its pros and cons. Test your questions on a sample group and make revisions based on their answers and suggestions. 1.6 Organize assets on a map Maps are important visual aids that help highlight available resources. Maps also explore resources and assets, and show the relationships among assets. Mapping community assets on street maps allows communities to see if there is a concentration of available programs, service overlaps, gaps in services, and unmet community health needs. The street map may highlight the need for developing programs to meet particular health needs of a community, and be helpful in writing grant proposals and talking to policy makers. The following describes how to map community assets using a street map. General steps for mapping community assets on a street map: • Find a map that contains the area you identified in 1.1 above. You can get a map of your community from different sources. Contact your local government (city hall) to see if they have a map of your community. You can also go to the following websites http://www.mapquest.com, http://maps.yahoo.com or http://www.thomas.com to find and print out an area map of your neighborhood. Remember to look for an area map that provides many details of your community and its boundaries, such as major streets, parks, freeways, lakes, or other landmarks. • Compile a list of resources from 1.4 (groups) and 1.5 (individuals) above. Organize your findings by identifying the type of services provided or type of available skills; note the street address of every resource you have identified. • Use dot stickers to identify the location of the groups and organizations you have found. Use different colors for different types of resources. This map becomes a visual representation of your findings, and perhaps reveals gaps in services and identifies areas for further work or improvement. • If you have information on individuals, decide if you want to map each individual (such as mapping key community contacts at their organization’s address) or types of individuals (for example, putting a number on a dot to indicate how many people in an area have nursing degrees). • Summarize key points about what your members see on the map. You might ask: What are the underused assets? What resources could be included in your activities that are not currently involved? Where are the most obvious gaps, and how might they be filled? UCLA Center for Health Policy Research Health DATA Program – Data, Advocacy and Technical Assistance • Use the asset mapping project as an opportunity to identify and develop relationships. The ways residents or interested parties talk and interact with each other—and form relationships—is a major part of community development. • Determine what to do with the community asset map and with whom you will share the results. The next steps could be redirecting program priorities, applying for grant proposals, informing city board members, or contacting policy makers or funders. General guidelines for presenting asset map data: • The area map should be specific enough that it clearly shows your defined community boundaries. • Enlarge the map if needed. Leave a border around the map with enough room to add a map legend and title. • Purchase color dot stickers. Create icons for each asset that you have identified, by hand or on the computer. In your map you could include health services, parks and recreation facilities, businesses, clinics, schools, and transportation facilities. • Create a legend that accompanies the color sticker dot. • Sticker dots representing organizations or services might overlap on the area map. In this case it is fine to approximate the location. • Remember that the map should not only be visually appealing but also highlight something. For example, show gaps in services, areas where services are needed, or where there exists a cluster of services in only one geographic area. UCLA Center for Health Policy Research Health DATA Program – Data, Advocacy and Technical Assistance Figure 1. Map of a Los Angeles Community This map was retrieved from Healthy-Children-Healthy City Asset Mapping Project at http://www.healthycity.org/ UCLA Center for Health Policy Research Health DATA Program – Data, Advocacy and Technical Assistance
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