Re: Inter-generational integration efforts | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: byron patterson (byronpatterson![]() |
|
Date: Wed, 18 Apr 2007 10:10:53 -0700 (PDT) |
On 4/18/07, byronpatterson [at] gmail.com Hi, Becky It is not easy to determine the views of individuals, when forming cohousing communities in the short time line segments needed to develop a cohousing project. This is especially inherent in multi-cultural communities. Where individuals have diverse economic resources and needs. Cohousing groups have to select group exercises to raise awareness and determine compatible goals of members. This is in part can create transparency of individual views of cohousing members. There is also a need to understand the dynamics of the region, which the cohousing community is being developed. This will help create a more viability in the decision making process for the community.The group exercises can be created to suit the mission of the cohousing community. Hope the suggestion help. On 4/17/07, Becky M. Pulito <Becky [at] pulito.us> wrote:
Thank you to all who have replied. I'm impressed any of you could make sense of my expansive query, and I'm grateful for your input. ~Becky -----Original Message----- From: Becky [at] Pulito.us To: cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org Sent: Thu, 12 Apr 2007 12:30 AM Subject: [C-L]_ Inter-generational Integration efforts Hello! I have a question to pose mainly geared towards established (aka, built and moved-in) communities. But if you have an opinion or idea, and you are pre-move-in, I am of course interested in your information as well. Bear with me. I cannot find a way to ask this question in a simple sentence or two, so here goes. I am interested to know what, if anything, your community did to prepare your members for living together in community, particularly in regards to children. Did you hold a discussion about expectations, concerns, requests? If you have policies or guidelines addressing concerns around children specifically, did you formulate them before move-in, and if so, how? And if you intentionally did not create such policy/guidelines, what was your reasoning? How did you learn what the wants and needs were within your membership? How did you address such a delicate subject? We have families with children, and we have couples and singles without children. We haven't expressly communicated about any expectations or concerns we may have. I'm sure we all have different ideas of "the way things will be". We need to communicate. We are having a hard time finding a good way to do that. Our meetings have a distinctly businesslike feel, so we are having difficulty figuring out how a discussion such as this could fit into our typical meeting structure. We've considered creative ways of integrating adults and children in certain activities, but some members bristle at the idea of forced or artificial integration. How to smooth the communication pathways and figure out. whatever we need to figure out?? Many thanks, ~Becky, Camelot Cohousing, Berlin, MA _________________________________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/
- Re: Inter-generational Integration efforts, (continued)
- Re: Inter-generational Integration efforts Sharon Villines, April 16 2007
-
Re: Inter-generational Integration efforts Tree Bressen, May 3 2007
- Opening up business meetings to other topics for discussion Rob Sandelin, May 3 2007
-
Re: Inter-generational integration efforts Becky M. Pulito, April 17 2007
- Re: Inter-generational integration efforts byron patterson, April 18 2007
- Re: Inter-generational integration efforts Gerald Manata, April 18 2007
- Re: Inter-generational Integration efforts Fred H Olson, April 27 2007
Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.