| Ben Fizer, Ian Hill, and Yvonne Fizer T. Lucas photos |
If you get asked for your time, your talent, or your treasure you may already be an informal community leader. Becoming a Community Builder (BACB) program developer Ian Hill wants to offer the chance for individuals to take their skills to a new level in leadership, and is offering a course free to the public to expand leadership skills.
Hill traveled to Pincher Creek on October 3 with Director of Special Initiatives Yvonne Fizer and Becoming a Community Builder Intern Ben Fizer. They logged between 1,400 to 1,600 miles last week and plan another 1,200 miles this week to visit 9 selected regions covering 56 communities that were chosen throughout Alberta for the initial BACB initiative.
The BABC program starts on October 18, and continues for 15 weeks. This program is free to the public with the areas of Pincher Creek, Piikani, and Waterton areas.
Even though all these people have very different roles in our society Hill expressed the value that they already give their community and what he could see them getting from the BACB program.
With all the groups he discussed the importance of good leadership, the importance of creating relationships based on trust, and how those that have leadership skills have opportunities into the future. He discussed how Athens was a model of modern and progressive leadership in the past and how the opportunities within Alberta are similar today. When he met with students he pointed out that this generation is more sophisticated that they have ever been before, in a time of faster change and global communication.
The program will offer the same concept of leadership capacity building with a different delivery to all the sectors that he visited, and an additional one aimed at youth leaders. Once registered for the program that begins on the October 18 the program will be targeted to this community, the sector needs that you have signed up for, with individual components. Hill requires everyone to make a written, personal commitment upon signing up.
| Ian Hill |
Hill sees this program as a way to garner the human capital within the community and help arm people by creating competencies in participants that they need for today's society. He is attempting to create a learning journey to to teach others how to be successful in life. To quantify this endeavour the University of Alberta will be doing a white paper study on this project.
"It is a community advantage to create a community that everyone wants to live in," said Hill.
To learn more about BACB, visit alberta.becomingacommunitybuilder.ca.
To register for the program, visit register.becomingacommunitybuilder.ca
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