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	<title>Prout Journal &#187; research</title>
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		<title>Participatory Action Research: Some Personal Reflections</title>
		<link>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-some-personal-reflections/</link>
		<comments>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-some-personal-reflections/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Jun 2002 00:51:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ranaviira Robinson</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[PROUT JOURNAL Summer 2002 Issue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[action]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Environment]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[participatory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[research]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.proutjournal.org/?p=154</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The highlight of the long awaited return of the PROUT UTC was the activist workshop on Participatory Action Research. This system helps us learn about ourselves and our environment through teams that explore the needs and solutions to problems in our communities. First, all participants gathered to hear brief, yet inspiring introductions to the history [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The highlight of the long awaited return of the PROUT UTC was the activist workshop on Participatory<br />
Action Research. This system helps us learn about ourselves and our environment through teams that<br />
explore the needs and solutions to problems in our communities. First, all participants gathered to<br />
hear brief, yet inspiring introductions to the history and culture of the area surrounding the Ananda<br />
Kanan retreat center in the Ozarks. Four teams were assigned to explore four issues: Environment,<br />
Population &amp; Poverty, Economic Stability, and Native Americans. All participants in these groups were<br />
very inspired by what they learned by meeting and interviewing various people in the community.</p>
<p>I feel the success of this project stem, in part, from the comprehensive preparatory work done by the<br />
facilitators, Allan Rosen and Matt Oppenheim. For months before the PROUT UTC workshop, they conducted<br />
research and made phone calls to set up meetings with local leaders and groups. I would encourage anyone<br />
who takes part in such a workshop to get involved by helping to conduct follow-ups with the contacts<br />
already established, and, if possible, continue to make new ones. It would be great for the locals to<br />
know that we are indeed concerned about their communityís welfare and are willing to help find solutions<br />
to some of the problems in their area.</p>
<p>Next year, during the Global PROUT Conference, we can again get an outlet for the activist spirit in us<br />
all by meeting with the same local people and activists. Like us, they are attempting to solve their<br />
problems in a coordinated, maybe even Proutistic, manner. My personal experiences during the PAR<br />
workshop were very inspiring. I participated in the Environmental Research Group. At fist, we were given<br />
a very informative presentation by a local Natural Resource Management team, which included a question<br />
and answer session. We explored the history of settlements in the Ozarks and its impact on topography,<br />
flora, and fauna. We then visited the local swimming pool. There we interviewed two high school students<br />
about their awareness of environmental issues. One of the boys said that the creek near his backyard was<br />
used by residents as a dump for broken toys, appliances, car parts, and even used motor oil. After our<br />
conversation, we went to explore this area and gathered photographic evidence of the debris scattered along<br />
the creek.</p>
<p>Lastly we conducted some interviews at the University. In summary, I found that environmental problems<br />
were not a high priority amongst the people in this area. Instead, most people were afraid of loosing<br />
the small town atmosphere they have been accustomed to. Everybody knows each other by name and wave to<br />
friends and neighbors when passing by in cars or on bicycles. The recent additions of a shopping-mall,<br />
a new highway, several parking lots, and the associated traffic were changes not accepted open-heartedly.<br />
Nonetheless, a warm smile and a friendly &#8220;hello&#8221; from a passersby helps ease the growing pains experienced<br />
by this community so rich in its heritage.</p>
<p>Volume 9, No. 2, Summer 2002 [Exact date not known ]</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<item>
		<title>Participatory Action Research in the Missouri Ozarks</title>
		<link>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-in-the-missouri-ozarks/</link>
		<comments>http://www.proutjournal.org/2002/06/participatory-action-research-in-the-missouri-ozarks/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Jun 2002 00:39:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Allan Rosen</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[PROUT JOURNAL Summer 2002 Issue]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[action]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[activist]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[community]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[oppression]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[participatory]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[research]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[social]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[workshop]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://test.proutjournal.org/?p=150</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[“The aim of participatory action research is to change practices, social structures, and social media which maintain irrationality, injustice, and unsatisfying forms of existence. … [It] is emancipatory, it leads not just to new practical research, but to new abilities to create knowledge. In action research knowledge is a living, evolving process of coming to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“The aim of participatory action research is to change practices, social structures, and social media<br />
which maintain irrationality, injustice, and unsatisfying forms of existence. … [It] is emancipatory,<br />
it leads not just to new practical research, but to new abilities to create knowledge. In action<br />
research knowledge is a living, evolving process of coming to know rooted in everyday experience.”<br />
 - The Handbook of Action Research, Participative Inquiry and Practice, by Peter Reason and Hillary<br />
Bradbury</p>
<p>“To liberate society from this unbearable situation, [when bureaucracy is turned into oligarchy],<br />
consciousness will have to be aroused among the people; their eyes will have to be opened by knowledge.<br />
Let them uderstand the what’s the why’s and the where’s. Thus study is essential, very essential.”<br />
 - Liberation of the Intellect, P.R. Sarkar</p>
<p>This summer, at the Ananda Kanan Retreat Center near Willow Springs, MO, more than two dozen Prout<br />
activists took part in a Participatory Action Research (PAR) workshop. PAR is an activist strategy<br />
inspired by the Brazilian revolutionary philosopher and teacher, Paulo Freire (1921 &#8211; 1997). In this<br />
process, workshop participants form teams to learn about local issues, while reflecting upon their<br />
values, relationships and ideals in developing an activism of liberation.</p>
<p>The participants&#8211;from Germany, Portugal, Puerto Rico, Mexico, and the US&#8211;were comprised of teenagers<br />
as well as senior members of Proutist Universal. They came from all walks of life: professors, students,<br />
writers, business owners, volunteers and social activists.</p>
<p>The PAR methodology enabled the Proutists to learn about each other and the surrounding community<br />
in a hands-on setting. This action/research modality contrasts with other Prout workshops that focus<br />
almost exclusively on theoretical study. PAR was chosen to provide an opportunity for Prout activists<br />
to work together on a collective enterprise. The PAR workshop also allowed the Prout activists, who<br />
were simultaneously attending the Ananda Marga Yoga Society’s summer retreat, to begin to learn about<br />
the community and culture in and around Willow Springs, West Plains, and the South Central Missouri<br />
Ozarks.</p>
<p>By learning about the community and the local issues, and especially making connections with local<br />
activists and service providers, it is now expected that Proutists will maintain and expand these<br />
relationships, as well as become more committed to social service in the Missouri Ozarks, as part of<br />
their annual retreat experience. An additional goal was to introduce the participants to an effective<br />
methodology for doing action research when returning to their local community. Hopefully this summer’s<br />
workshop will be the first of many such local and regional PAR workshops sponsored by the Prout<br />
Research Institute in North and Central America.</p>
<p>Before reporting on the details of this workshop, a brief overview of the PAR model is warranted. In<br />
its simplest terms, the PAR model can be described in five steps: 1) participants form action teams, 2)<br />
the teams investigate community issues and the experiences of local residents, 3) an action strategy<br />
is developed for addressing the important community issues, 4) the action is implemented, and 5) the<br />
team reflects upon what has been learned about the issue, the community, and the team dynamics.<br />
In this particular workshop the traditional model was modified because the participants are not<br />
permanent residents of the local community. Hence, at this workshop, the participants focused on<br />
steps 1, 2 and 5.</p>
<p>During the introductory session Oppenheim presented an overview of PAR theory. He introduced the work<br />
of Paulo Freire with quotes from “Pedagogy of the Oppressed.” Freire created a process of<br />
consciousness-raising and activism, helping oppressed factory workers to reflect upon the dominant<br />
themes of their daily lives, and then to take action to create a better future.</p>
<p>Freire was concerned that the oppressed could easily act through anger and recreate the oppression<br />
of their oppressors. He emphasized activism based on love, and the ability to transcend the mental<br />
colonization of the oppressor. PAR has evolved to become a way for communities to develop authentic<br />
knowledge based on real world experiences and to develop goals for improving communities based on an<br />
intimate relationship and partnerships amongst community members. PAR places an importance on<br />
creating knowledge through experience and relationship rather than through so-called “experts.” It<br />
is strikingly similar to Neo-humanist principles and the process that P.R. Sarkar advises for<br />
establishing self-sufficient economic regions.</p>
<p>After this, the group went through team-building exercises to build a sense of unity and common<br />
purpose. Several exercises developed an appreciation of individual strengths and talents as well<br />
as ways of working in groups that would help the participants support each other and work more<br />
effectively as a diverse team. It was emphasized that each person may value a different way or<br />
style of gaining knowledge about the community, and that all these styles are essential for an<br />
integrated understanding of a community. One person may prefer to interview someone for most of<br />
the time instead of gathering data, while another may learn more from drawing a polluted creek bed.<br />
Some prefer to understand a small neighborhood before looking at the overall region, whereas others<br />
need a regional overview before focusing on local businesses.</p>
<p>In the second session, Rosen presented an overview of the Ozarks bio-region. The settlement patterns<br />
and cultural legacy of the Native Americans and original European-American settlers were noted, as<br />
was the economic development history of subsistence agriculture, natural resource (minerals, timber)<br />
exploitation, and environmental degradation.</p>
<p>The current socio-economic condition was reviewed, highlighting the extreme rural isolation of the<br />
area, its cultural, religious, and ethnic homogeneity, and the South Central Missouri Ozarks’<br />
continuing isolation from the Ozarks&#8217; regional economic growth centers of the Springfield/Branson<br />
and Fayetteville, AR areas.</p>
<p>Important recent trends that were highlighted included the growth of West Plains as the regional<br />
economic trade center, the emerging satellite campus of Southwest Missouri State in West Plains,<br />
and the increasing settlement of middle-class, suburban retirees into the Ozarks, and how that is<br />
creating tension in the region. A highlight of this session included artist Michael McClure’s<br />
personal story of living at Ananda Kanan for the past twenty years, and his impressions of the<br />
people and the local culture and mores. McClure has gained rich personal experiences by painting<br />
the natural landscape and murals in the local communities, and playing basketball with local<br />
residents. His personal story reinforced many of the themes outlined by Rosen. Notably the strong<br />
family values and social networks, the fundamentalist Protestant Christian worldview, the slowness<br />
to accept change, and the intensity of the Missouri “Show- Me” attitude. History of how the<br />
introduction of the cash economy during the Great Depression public work’s programs began to weaken<br />
the settler’s cultural legacy was particularly moving and revealing.</p>
<p>The third session was devoted to fieldwork preparation. The participants were divided into four<br />
teams and trained in how to conduct their fieldwork. Each team was given a fieldwork kit with<br />
Polaroid camera, drawing pens and paper, maps, information about their topic, and interview forms<br />
with initial questions. Each team had three basic tasks: to develop interview questions and then<br />
hold interviews about their topics, to visit a site that would give them valuable experiences<br />
about their topic (for example the environment group visited a local creek where townspeople were<br />
dumping rubbish), and to visit a local expert. Teams spent times brainstorming ways to introduce<br />
themselves and to ask questions. Then each team assigned roles and developed a timeline to carry<br />
out their activities the following day.</p>
<p>Monday morning and afternoon, July 1, the four teams conducted their field work. Twelve participants<br />
focused on Native American issues and met with representatives of two Native tribes at their<br />
respective community centers in West Plains. Eight participants met with the Executive Director of<br />
the regional community action agency, Ozark Action, Inc. This group focused on family and poverty<br />
issues. The third group, seven in all, went to the regional office of the Missouri Department of<br />
Conservation in West Plains and met with the office manager and a field conservationist. The fourth<br />
and smallest group, four persons, met with the Community Development specialist of the local<br />
University of Missouri County Extension service, as well as the Executive Director of the Mountain<br />
View, MO Chamber of Commerce. Each group spent at least two hours meeting with their respective<br />
“expert” contact, leaving an hour or two for each team to conduct some “person on the street”<br />
interviews.</p>
<p>At the final session Monday afternoon, each group presented their findings and answered questions<br />
from other participants. Special guests at this session included McClure, Dada IK, the rector at<br />
Ananda Kanan, and long-time Ananda Kanan resident Dharma Putra.</p>
<p>After this, each team came up with four or five key themes that arose from their fieldwork. Each<br />
team then came up with four or five over-arching themes that characterized their experience of the<br />
Ozarks, as well as key problem areas for us to focus on in the future. Some common themes that<br />
emerged from each team’s community study included the love of family, place and home, the clash<br />
between old and new, the stress on local government resources, the persistent relationship between<br />
poverty and environmental damage, the lack of widespread economic opportunity, and the ambivalent<br />
attitudes toward education. One goal was to relate fieldwork experiences to principles of Prout,<br />
and to begin to brainstorm a Proutist vision for the future of the Ozarks. Rather than prescribing<br />
solutions, these principles were meant as tools to look at problems and their causes and to better<br />
understand the dynamics of the Ozarks. For example, the group briefly discussed Sarkar’s principle<br />
of balanced economic planning, comparing the suggested model for economic prama (balance) with<br />
employment statistics from the local region. It was obvious that retail trade and the service<br />
economy were rapidly outpacing the manufacturing and agricultural sectors, which would clearly lead<br />
to a dependency on resources from outside the region &#8211; evidenced by the rapid takeover of locally<br />
owned businesses by a Wal-Mart. A lecture on the nature of Prout movements by Dada Vimalananda also<br />
helped participants begin to think about how local farmers, laborers and youths, students and<br />
intellectuals could unite in a common regional movement. However, lack of time did not allow<br />
participants to connect Prout theory to their experiences of the community in any great depth.</p>
<p>This last session concluded with a brief exercise where participants were asked to reflect on the<br />
workshop and provide feedback on the process. Many positive comments were voiced, including the<br />
following constructive criticisms: 1) It was difficult to condense so much material into a total<br />
of 15 contact hours (24 hours over a three day period would have been better), 2) most participants<br />
would have preferred more time to work with their team and their own trained facilitator; and 3)<br />
more time should have been devoted to fieldwork preparations, particularly the interview protocols,<br />
notetaking, and reporting back to the group. Still, the participants were inspired by the PAR<br />
workshop and would like to stay connected to the groups they met with.</p>
<p>Several members mentioned that their assumptions about the local community changed after the<br />
exercise. One participant, for example, assumed that local residents would not be supportive of<br />
Native American causes, while several residents mentioned that they had strong support for their<br />
rights. Many also mentioned that they learned much more about their fellow Prout activists through<br />
the fieldwork exercise, as well as learning, for the first time, how to be a Proutist in a<br />
supportive, non-invasive way. Some mentioned that local residents naturally symphatized with<br />
Prout principles, because of the values they held for their community, for the environment, and<br />
for the Ozarks region.</p>
<p>When asked how they might increase their involvement in the community while attending retreats at<br />
Ananda Kanan, participants suggested working with public education programs, going to community<br />
fairs, and co-sponsoring town meetings, as well as seeking volunteer opportunities at the various<br />
agencies they learned about.</p>
<p>Overall, the workshop was considered a great success and a good omen for future Prout training<br />
endeavors, including next summer’s Global Prout Convention to be held at Ananda Kanan. Oppenheim<br />
and Rosen are already collaborating with residents of the Ananda Marga Master Unit, Ananda<br />
Aeshvarya, in Urbana-Champaign, IL, about holding PAR workshop there this fall.</p>
<p>Volume 9, No. 2, Summer 2002 [Exact date not known ]</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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