Literacy and the Justice System Conference – November 15, 2011

Tuesday, November 15, 2011 from 12:30PM-5:00PM join Frontier College and Elgin-Middlesex Detention Centre for their Literacy and the Justice System Conference, in partnership with Literacy Link South Central, and sponsored by the OLC at the Civic Gardens Complex – 625 Springbank Drive, London, ON. This conference is geared toward Police Officers, Probation and Parole Officers, Correctional Staff, Educators, Community Workers and Volunteers.

$20 per participant, with free parking. Registration deadline is November 8 – register soon as space is limited!

Please click Literacy and the Justice System Conference Speaker Agenda for more information. Download the registration form here: Literacy and the Justice System Conference Registration Form

Join OLC’s Free Webinar on Continuous Improvement!

Tuesday, October 18 at 1:00PM EDT, join OLC for our fourth webinar - What is Continuous Improvement? What you Should Know about Lean – hosted by Tracy Defoe, President of The Learning Factor Inc.

This free, one-hour webinar focuses on what workplace learning practitioners, especially those specialized in literacy and essential skills, need to know about Continuous Improvement (also known as Lean) as a workplace culture imperative for many industries worldwide. Understanding Continuous Improvement helps in communicating, working effectively, and tailoring content and methods for workplaces on a Lean journey.

In this webinar we will:

• Introduce the basic concepts of Continuous Improvement
• Consider the learning demands of Continuous Improvement on the individual, the team, and the organization
• Review examples of material, approaches, and learning from real life experience and from  literature
• Flag some of the contested terrain of Lean in workplaces
• Discuss your questions, and leave with a resource list for further learning

We will also be tweeting during the webinar, so please join our conversation the day of the webinar through the hashtag #OLCweb! To register for the webinar, please click here.

A Look into International Literacy Day 2011

OLC would like to send out a big thank you to everyone who participated in this year’s International Literacy Day! Social media outlets were bustling with participation, statistics, and comments! The Social Media Guide created by OLC, ABC Life Literacy Canada, and Frontier College was well received and well used! Twitter was buzzing with individuals and organizations tweeting about International Literacy Day! With almost 1,500 tweets under the #IntLitDay hashtag alone, even some celebrities participated via Twitter – singer Shakira, and actress Ashley Judd! What was happening around the world during International Literacy Day? According to Twitter:

  • The Nova Scotia School for Adult Learning was busy handing out their 2011 International Literacy Day awards
  • Honorable David Johnson, Governor General of Canada, wrote a message for International Literacy Day
  • USAID,  in cooperation with NASA, shared a special taped video message from astronauts at the International Space Station, encouraging world leaders to continue efforts to improve literacy rates around the world to open the celebration of international literacy
  • UNESCO posted a video explaining why literacy means peace
  • Vegmin Learning in Alberta was busy celebrating with their Bucks 4 Books Hot Dog Sale
  • Children were engaged at a University of Laos reading festival 
  • The Florida Literacy Coalition added these tips for teaching English to ESL and ESOL students
… and much more! To check out what other individuals and organizations were up to this International Literacy Day via Twitter, simply look up the #IntLitDay hashtag, and don’t forget to continue to promote literacy and essential skills every day!

Five Ways to Rebrand When You’ve Changed Your Strategy

Nonprofits are quickly drawing their attention to the importance of brand. Branding is developing a clear identity for your audience: the better you can say who you, what you do and – a particularly important point for nonprofits – your value, the easier you will gain supporters for your work.

Currently, the OLC is reevaluating and updating its brand and strategy by looking at new and innovative ways to stay relevant and better address the growing and complex skills needs of Ontarians in the 21st century.

In this context, using a roundtable discussion, the OLC assembled a team of professionals from a variety of different fields – marketing, web design, branding, etc. – with experience in rebranding and asked “When it comes to rebranding, what works?” An open-ended discussion followed based largely on the need to rebrand when an organization’s strategy has changed. From this discussion, five main themes emerged.

Please click on the link below to view the full discussion.

OLC – Five Ways to Rebrand When You’ve Changed Your Strategy

OLC’s Election Kit Now Available!

An election is an exciting time. It is a time to share ideas and to reassess the vital questions of the day. In this election, jobs and the economy are expected to dominate public attention – therefore we have an important opportunity to demonstrate the link between the economy and literacy and essential skills. There is no better time to bring the importance of this issue to the attention of key decision-makers.

The Ontario Literacy Coalition’s (OLC’s) Election Kit is designed to help learners, champions, practitioners, and organizations speak to the needs of Ontarians requiring literacy and essential skills training. The kit is a set of tools that will help you facilitate meaningful conversations with MPPs and candidates – at meetings, on your doorstep, and during debates. We hope it will help all Ontarians make informed decisions about the literacy sector’s contribution to the future direction of our province.

OLC’s key messages focus on linking the literacy and essential skills of Ontarians to Ontario’s economic recovery and growth and to creating a higher-skilled province.

OLC’s Election Kit includes:

  • a briefing note to be shared with MPPs and candidates that presents a number of cross-cutting issues affecting the sector. Remember, it is important to remain non-partisan and to speak to all political parties;
  • two template letters that can be specifically edited to reflect your experience and shared as needed -  one for use by literacy advocates, the other for learners;
  • a template for literacy service organizations that can be filled in using  program data that candidates are likely to ask about; and
  • key information about the voting process and where to find relevant information.

We encourage you, your stakeholders, and clients to ask locally relevant questions of candidates in your riding.

OLC’s Election Kit is a living document. Please adapt it to the circumstances and realities of your community. While the messages we put forward resonate across Ontario, feel free to include your own perspective on the issues.

In order to support practitioners, programs, support organizations, interested Ontarians, and most importantly, literacy learners, OLC will be hosting a weekly series of teleconferences in the weeks leading up to the election. On these teleconferences, Gareth Blair, OLC’s Manager of Research, Policy and Development will be answering your questions on policy, government relations, the election and OLC’s work. Each of the calls will last approximately one hour, and will take place on the following dates:

Wednesday, September 7, 2011 at 4:00PM EDT

Thursday, September 15, 2011 at 10:00AM EDT

Friday, September 23, 2011 at 11:00AM EDT

Tuesday, October 4, 2011 at 12:00PM EDT

If you are interested in participating, please dial in at the stated time to 1-888-289-4573 and enter the code 4873431#.

We encourage each of you to bring to OLC’s attention any media coverage, political announcements, or other election developments of interest to the sector so that we can share them with colleagues and supporters across the province.  If you have any questions, information to share, or requests for assistance, please contact Gareth Blair at gareth@on.literacy.ca or (416) 963-5787 Ext.32.

To view OLC’s Election Kit, please click here or visit http://www.on.literacy.ca/make_literacy_an_issue.

Help OLC Pick our October Webinar Topic!

OLC’s October webinar is just around the corner and we want your help picking the topic!

Our free October webinar will be hosted by Tracy Defoe of The Learning Factor Inc. on October 18 at 1:00PM EDT. Tracy Defoe and The Learning Factor Inc. work with forward-thinking companies, community organizations and their partners on the learning and literacy challenges of the workforce. Her work typically involves research, program design and development, delivering customized training, teaching peer trainers, evaluation and being a catalyst for change.

Please help us choose from the following potential topics:

1) Literacy and Essential Skills in Work Culture: Making Sense of the Workplace

2) Meeting and Engaging Employers, Union Partners and Individuals

3) What is Continuous Improvement? What you should know about Lean

4) See this Scar? Learn from Tracy’s Experiences so you can Make Original Mistakes

Please take our poll to help pick OLC’s October webinar topic! Registration information coming soon.

Don’t forget to sign up for our free September webinar on Workforce Essential Skills, with Karen Geraci and Marisa Mazzulla on September 13 at 1:00PM EDT. To register for the September webinar, please click here.

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