ABOUT

Overview | History | Board | Staff | Partnership

Program Overview

AOP believes it is vital to empower more individuals to organize within their communities, and create a diverse culture of organizing that is an integrated, community-wide, effort across oppressed groups and purposes. To achieve this, AOP provides a unique opportunity that enables activists to learn grassroots community organizing skills through a combination of on-the-job training with experienced mentors, supplemented with intensive training by a variety of people active in the social justice movement.

AOP's apprentice training program supports and develops apprentices though a seven month, paid apprenticeship, including a wellness stipend. Apprentices have been active within their community and have demonstrated a commitment to social change, usually within their own communities. All possess a fundamental cognizance of the need to change oppressive attitudes, policies and systems. They are paired with mentors--seasoned organizers--working at organizations that match their interests and passions for social justice. The apprentices, with their mentors, develop their own work plan for the course of their apprenticeship based on their individual training needs, strengths, and the current needs of their community for social justice organizing. Apprentices work closely with their mentors throughout the program to develop, implement, and learn from their campaigns.

In addition to their work with their mentors, apprentices also come together two days each month to participate in training. Most of our trainers are experienced organizers who come from and work within Wisconsin's marginalized communities. At these trainings, apprentices learn ways to develop their skills and knowledge, reflect upon and process their work, and develop important relationships-- both with their trainers and fellow apprentices. The training sessions cover a wide range of topics related to organizing, including: skills, models and theories of organizing; anti-oppression training; fundraising; communications and coalition building.

By centralizing organizer training in Wisconsin, AOP gives apprentices (as well as their mentors), the chance to form relationships with established organizers, learn from one another, and develop the basis for ongoing collaboration between social justice efforts.

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History

The idea for AOP first emerged in 1997 as a project of the Verna Hill Memorial Fund, a sponsored project of the Wisconsin Community Fund. This Fund was first formed to honor the legacy of Verna Hill, a legendary community organizer in Madison. It is now called the Verna Hill/Dorothy Shannon Fund to honor two great women. The Fund provided the seed money for establishing AOP.

Early program planning was based on feedback of many organizers, activists and leaders of social justice organizations throughout Wisconsin, with early support provided by the Organizing Apprenticeship Project in Minnesota. Their valuable input focused on the needs of grassroots community organizing in Wisconsin.

AOP has trained and developed 15 grassroots community organizers since our first cohort of apprentices in 2004. As our apprentices graduate and become successful organizers with strong relationships across the community, our program has experienced increased demand both from prospective apprentices and from prospective mentors and mentoring organizations.

As a result of AOP's work, more highly skilled organizers are organizing in their communities, and are empowering underrepresented and oppressed individuals to work together as a community to create social change. The work of AOP builds a strong organizing culture across communities and a basis for ongoing collaboration between social justice efforts. Not only are the communities in which organizers are working taking direct action, but communities and organizations are more engaged with each other-- working together to achieve social change.

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Board of Directors & Program Committee

Alexis Anderson-Reed
2004 AOP Alumni
Youth Roc

Rob 'biko' Baker
League of Young Voters; Campaign Against Violence

Patrick Barrett
A.E. Havens Center, UW-Madison

Becky Glass
Midwest States Center

Tony Gibson
2007 AOP Alumni
Johnson's Park Neighborhood Association

Art Lloyd, Board Chair
Verna Hill/Dorothy
Shannon Fund

Tim Michael
2007 AOP Alumni
GSA for Safe Schools

Jen Sandler
Consultant
UW-Madison

Amy Stear
9 to 5 National Association of Working Women

Teresa Thomas-Boyd
Citizen Action of Wisconsin

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Staff

Rachel Crites, Executive Director

Rachel has been organizing and active in the social justice movement for the past 15 years. She began her career with the United Farm Workers where, over the course of four years, she worked on various local organizing projects in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. She then relocated to Chicago where she worked with a domestic violence shelter, and later with AFSCME Council 31, where she organized a variety of workers throughout Illinois, eventually becoming a lead organizer. She has also done additional project work for the Steelworkers in Colorado.

Talia Schank, Development & Program Coordinator

Talia has worked in community activism for 14 years, starting as a community educator and trainer. This led to student and political organizing, where she worked on a number of electoral campaigns, both candidate and issue-based. She has previously worked with, among others, Planned Parenthood of WI, the National Youth Advocacy Coalition, Elaine Bloom for Congress (in South Florida), Holden for Governor (Missouri), the Sierra Club, and most recently, Fair Wisconsin.

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Partnership

AOP is a program of collaborative organizational partnerships through our mentors, trainers and program committee. Many of our partners come from underrepresented and oppressed communities themselves, and donate their time to AOP. Our Program Committee gathers and provides ongoing feedback from activists and organizations throughout Wisconsin. AOP always welcomes and seeks new and additional collaboration in these and other areas, both with individuals and organizations.

In 2006, AOP began a partnership with the Wisconsin Council on Developmental Disabilities in support of its effort to develop a new network of community organizers to develop the power of Wisconsin's disability community, building off the strong history of grassroots community organizing for disability rights. In particular, WCDD is interested in developing relationships with communities of color and low-income communities to incorporate disability issues into the broader social justice movement in Wisconsin. In our 2006-07 apprentice cohort, AOP trained and developed two new organizers who are affected by a disability through our partnership with WCDD.