Bonner Leader Program: Start-Up Check List
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Transcript of Bonner Leader Program: Start-Up Check List
Bonner Start-Up Check-List Review
Access to Education,
Opportunity to Serve
Agenda
Agenda
• Staffing and Location
• Securing Work-Study Stipends
• Recruiting Your First Class of Bonners
• Setting Training and Enrichment Calendar
• Developing
Staffing and Location • Decide where would the program be housed.
• Decide who will coordinate the Bonner Leader Program in the first year and other individuals who can provide support for the program.
• Recruit 2-3 sophomore or juniors to assist you with the start-up steps outlined below (and then be available to serve as Bonner Senior Interns in the start-up year).
Securing Work-Study Stipends • Secure the Community-Service Federal
Work-Study or College Work-Study stipends for your Bonner Leaders so they can serve an average of 10 hours per week throughout the school year.
• If possible, identify additional sources of funding that might be offered to your Bonner Leaders (including summer service stipends).
Bonner Leader Funding Survey (34)
Funding Level Schools Additional Notes
Less than $2,500 2 programs 1 Liberal Arts/1 large public
Between $2,500-$3,000 3 programs
2 Liberal Arts/1 large public/
Tuition varies ($11K-41K)
$3,350 14 programs Most common (regardless of summer)
More than $3,350 11 programsNumber of students range from 8 to 93; old and new
programs
Bonner Leader Funding ModelsSchool Funding Per Student Tuition Cost
College of Saint Benedict $3,500 (FWS) + $2,500 scholarship $39,402
Montclair State University $2,575 $11,318
University of North Carolina - Chapel Hill $2,175 $8,340
Washington and Lee University
$3,350 + summer award $44,507
Profile: Who to Recruit
Ethic of service and 4-year commitment
Min 5 per class with minimum of 20 total
> 75% Federal Work Study eligible
> 60/40 gender balance
> diversity of school
Recruiting Your First Class • Decide how many Bonner Leaders you want
to recruit for the first year.
• Develop marketing material (e.g., website, brochure)
• Develop application material and process
• Recruit selection committee and process
Recruitment Basics• Incoming students (+
some upper-class leaders)
• Build into school recruitment & admissions process as yield tool (liaison)
• Engage current Bonners in process
• Formal application
• On-campus interviews
Admissions Collaboration•Designate 1-2 admissions
counselors as liaisons
•Annual presentation to all Admissions staff
•Identify eligible Students
•Align application process
•Intentional outreach
•Recruitment events/calls
•Synchronize timelines
Recruiting for Diversity
• Begin where campus stands as a whole
• Male, Students of Color, First Generation
• Admissions has these stats
• Diverse Recruiters, Engage Bonners
• “Small & Wide Net” Pipelines
• Appealing Language/Approaches
Interview Day
• Opportunity for face-to-face
• Engage Bonners and key campus contacts
• Go over Program Requirements
• Service partners and placements
• Parent/family sessions
Setting Training Calendar • Plan your Bonner Orientation, ideally for one
or two days before the regular first year orientation.
• Decide when during each week can you schedule a regular Bonner training and reflection meetings.
• Plan the topics for the first year of weekly Bonner meetings.
Community Partnerships: Service Road with Rising Expectations
Exploration - intentional placements that provide exposure and result in additional commitment
Experience - solid programmatic role (Program Assistant or specific title)
Example - Site or Project Leader
Expertise - Specialist
Finding Service Placements • Decide which community partners would be
good placements for the first year Bonners.
• Meet with community partners to explain Bonner Program model and begin planning service placements.
• Hold an orientation for Bonner community partners.
Site-BasedTeam
Site-BasedTeam
Site-BasedTeam
Site-BasedTeam
Regular Volunteer
Intentional Short-Term Placement
Program Coordinator
Community Partnerships: Organizing Structure
Community Engagement ModelsPartners Service Provider Collaborative Campaign
Roles Client Service
Program Coordinator Organization Capacity Building Advocacy
Taskse.g., tutoring, serving soup,
etc.
Recruiting, training, and supervising volunteers
1) Volunteer Management 2) Program Development
3) Fundraising 4) Communication
5) Research: CBR & PolicyOptions
e.g., letter writing,
community organizing, etc.
Program Structures
Clearinghouse/Directory Listing of Opportunities (online database)
Site/Issue-Based Teams (coalition of student-led service projects)
Bonner Program (four year training & increased roles culminating in capstone project)
Academic Structures
Service-Learning & Community-Based Research Courses
Problem / Issue-Based Concentrations(courses, service roles, CBR, and capstone project)
Skill-based Certificate / Fellowships(courses, client-defined capacity-building projects)
Bonner Engagement Model
Connecting to Bonner Network • Ask the Bonner Foundation staff to recommend
2-3 current Bonner directors/ coordinators as mentors during your start-up phase.
• Invite Bonner Foundation staff member to visit campus during planning year and/ or your start-up semester.
National Bonner Meetings • Consider sending the Bonner coordinator/director and the
student interns (Bonner Senior Interns) to the Bonner Summer Leadership Institute (May 23-26) (~$200-225 room & board fee).
• Decide who will attend the New Bonner Director and Coordinator Orientation held in Princeton, New Jersey (July 30 - August 2) (~$375-400 room & board fee).
• Begin thinking about who will attend the Fall Bonner Student Congress (mid to late October)(~$75-100 room & board fee).
• Begin thinking about who will attend the Fall Bonner Directors and Coordinators Meeting (early November)(~$375-400 room & board fee).
Bonner Wiki Resources
Bonner Wiki Resources
Bonner Wiki Resources