Westside Communities Alliance http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca A partnership between Atlanta's westside communities and institutions of higher education. Mon, 04 Apr 2016 20:50:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/wp-content/uploads/sites/507/2016/11/cropped-WCA_FB_profile-32x32.jpg Westside Communities Alliance http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca 32 32 Westside Innovation Lab http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2016/04/04/westside-innovation-lab/ Mon, 04 Apr 2016 20:50:15 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=1494328 Last week, WCA staff attended the launch of the Westside Innovation Lab at the Center for Civic Innovation. The application submission is now live! CCI is looking for people and organizations with innovative ideas to address social challenges in their own neighborhoods on the westside of Atlanta. Applications are due on April 25, 2016. Please consider applying or passing this on to someone, or an organization, you know that may be a good fit. Winning submissions will be chosen BY THE COMMUNITY. Those winning ideas (6-8) will receive seed funding and technical assistance in their entrepreneurial endeavors.

Submit your idea now! http://www.civicatlanta.org/westside-idea-submmision

If you are interested in volunteering time or skills: http://www.civicatlanta.org/westside-volunteer

 

CCI has hired two new program managers that will be focused on this initiative full-time: Raina Turner and Nathan Jones.  Reach out to them at westside@civicatlanta.org

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WCA Launches Data Dashboard http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2016/02/22/wca-launches-data-dashboard/ Mon, 22 Feb 2016 20:14:42 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=1494244 The Westside Communities Alliance introduced a comprehensive interactive Data Dashboard for Atlanta on February 11th.

The WCA Data Dashboard serves as a one-stop shop for key data that is accessible to community stakeholders, researchers, local government agencies, and relevant foundations interested in sustainable Westside community development.

“We believe that this tool has the potential to encourage greater data-driven decision-making at the neighborhood and Neighborhood Planning Unit (NPU) level in addition to supporting research and policymaking that addresses significant challenges in areas of education, economic development, transit and mobility, and public safety,” said WCA Associate Director Mackenzie Madden.

In its current form, the dashboard offers resources in seven categories:  1) Community Profiles, 2) Economic Development, 3) Education, 4) Public Safety, 5) All Data, 6) Historical Data, and 7) Resource Library.

Presently, the dashboard displays information for NPU’s K, L, and T – the three NPUs connected to the WCA – as compared to the City of Atlanta.

The dashboard is a user-friendly tool that:  1) draws upon available quantitative and qualitative data, 2) stores data collected for current and future research initiatives, 3) provides metrics for assessing the success of diverse engagement and intervention models, and 4) develops comprehensive reports to identify the impact of “anchor institutions” such as Georgia Tech on neighboring communities to highlight knowledge gaps.

The Data Dashboard project began in 2011 as a static Westside neighborhoods asset map created in conjunction with faculty in the Georgia Tech College of Architecture. Under the leadership of Dean Royster and her WCA leadership team, the first virtual tool was created in Fall 2013 by a group of graduate students in Dr. John Stasko’s Data Visualization class. That iteration mapped transit and walkability in the city. The platform also provided a heat map of census data that has since been transformed into the Big Data tool available today. Graduate Research Assistants in the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts continued building the dashboard into its present form.

Katie O’Connell, MCRP 2015, was hired as the Project Manager for the Data Dashboard in Summer 2014. She began by researching similar platforms across the country and collecting relevant data for the city of Atlanta. During an Online Tools session of the WCA’s 2014 Community Studio, O’Connell was able to determine the basic pros and cons of existing resources such as the Atlanta Regional Commission’s Neighborhood Nexus, the U.S. EPA’s Enviromapper, and the U.S. Census Bureau’s American Community Survey. Several focus groups with Westside residents and stakeholders were held as various portals were designed to garner feedback on the usability of the dashboard.

The WCA staff has presented the dashboard at various conferences and symposia including The Center for Community Progress’ Vacant Properties Conference in 2015, Atlanta Studies Symposium, TEDx Atlanta, and the Georgia Tech Center for Urban Innovation.

The WCA Data Dashboard has been made possible through various stages of development in collaboration with entities at Georgia Tech including College of Architecture, College of Computing, Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, the Center for Geographic Information Systems, and with funding from the Ford Foundation.

Please visit wcadatadashboard.iac.gatech.edu to explore the platform. Please use the hashtag #WCADataDashboard in social media settings, when referencing the tool.

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Breast Cancer Awareness Dinner and Play http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2015/10/15/breast-cancer-awareness-dinner-and-play/ Thu, 15 Oct 2015 16:50:16 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=1494062 Westside Communities Alliance at Georgia Tech teams up with Susan G. Komen Greater Atlanta and HEALing Community Center for Breast Cancer Awareness

Breast cancer is the second-leading cause of death and the most commonly diagnosed cancer among African-American women. The Westside Communities Alliance, of the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts at Georgia Tech, in partnership with Susan G. Komen Greater Atlanta will sponsor a night out for 50 westside community residents and leaders for Breast Cancer Awareness Month. These women will be treated to a HEALing Dinner Party focused on breast health and FREE tickets to a play at the Ferst Center Theater.

This Friday, October 16th, our westside residents will meet at the Neighborhood Union Health Clinic on Sunset Avenue, a newly-opened location of the HEALing Community Center. A bus will transport them to the Ferst Center at Georgia Tech where they will be treated to a special dinner catered by local favorite Urban Cannibals. Susan G. Komen Greater Atlanta and the HEALing Community Center will discuss the importance of breast health and affordable healthcare options available in the westside communities.  Participants will also have the opportunity to make appointments to receive mammogram referrals. Following dinner, attendees will enjoy the play Sister Outsider inspired by the writings and teaching of Audre Lorde, author of The Cancer Journals.

This event provides the unique opportunity to reach communities of color with textured narratives that speak to their experiences as women. Working with campus and community partners, and with generous support from Georgia Power, we seek to encourage more women of color to get breast health screenings, while also promoting general health and wellness in the areas we serve.

Breast Cancer Awareness Flyer

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Quilting Workshop – April 27th http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2014/04/22/quilting-workshop-april-27th/ Tue, 22 Apr 2014 18:55:15 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=2704 The NAMES Project Foundation, the international caretaker of The AIDS Memorial Quilt, invites the public to gather to create new Quilt panels for members of the community lost to HIV/AIDS.  This is a free, panel making workshop titled “Call My Name” and will be hosted by AIDS Memorial Quilt Curator Jada Harris and Julie Rhoads, President & CEO of The NAMES Project Foundation.

The “Call My Name” workshop will be presented on Sunday April 27th 2014, at the Lindsey Street Baptist Church (550 Lindsey St NW, Atlanta GA 30314) from 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm.  No sewing experience is necessary and materials will be provided. Williams explains, “We have all been touched by HIV/AIDS and by creating a panel for The Quilt, we, as a community, are honoring those we have lost and we are transforming that loss into something that offers hope and can keep others safe from this horrible disease.”

QuiltingWorkshopFlyer

The AIDS Memorial Quilt was created one 3 x 6 foot panel at a time by more than 100,000 individuals from across the country and around the world. With everything from teddy bears to wedding rings, B

oy Scout badges to love letters, the more than 48,000 handmade panels that comprise The Quilt are as varied as the individuals they honor and the people who created them.  Each year, sections of The Quilt are presented in nearly 1,000 displays around the world — in community centers, schools, places of worship, corporations, etc. — in an effort to share the messages of hope, healing and action found on The Quilt.

As HIV/AIDS claims more and more lives in the African American community, the demand for Quilt is growing.  Communities understand the power of The Quilt to open hearts and minds and to save lives, but right now we simply don’t have enough Quilt made by and for the African American community to meet this demand.  Atlanta Harm Reduction Coalition (AHRC), a partner on this project, uses the harm reduction model as a key prevention tool to fight the transmission of HIV and other blood borne diseases. Please consider attending and helping us remember, create and strengthen our greatest HIV prevention tool– The AIDS Memorial Quilt.

This program is supported in part by the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs, the Westside Communities Alliance, and Africa Atlanta 2014. For more information on the “Call My Name” workshops, please go to aidsquilt.org/callmyname or e-mail sheridf@iac.gatech.edu.

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Africa Atlanta 2014 Initiative http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2014/03/02/africa-atlanta-2014-initiative/ Sun, 02 Mar 2014 00:30:54 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=2589 http://www.news.gatech.edu/2014/02/04/tech-launches-africa-atlanta-2014-initiative

Arts and culture, innovation, and entrepreneurship — these aren’t concepts that typically come to mind when Americans think of Africa.

Africa Atlanta

Click image to enlarge

The full schedule of Africa Atlanta 2014 events is available at www.africaatlanta.org.

But a Georgia Tech-led initiative has ambitious goals to recast narrow and negative perceptions about the continent and highlight Atlanta as a center for action.

The idea for Africa Atlanta 2014 grew out of a conversation over lunch one day when Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts Dean Jacqueline Royster learned that the Royal Museum of Central Africa in Tervuren, Belgium, was closing for renovation and was willing to have pieces from its spectacular collection tour outside of Belgium.

She immediately set about finding partners and funding to bring to Atlanta an exhibition that was being curated for a U.S. tour, KONGO across the WATERS.

“From our start in 2012, we’ve found tremendous enthusiasm for this project,” Royster said. “The arts became our pebble in the pond.”

The ripple spread across universities, visual and performing arts organizations, African Diaspora heritage communities, governmental organizations and agencies (local, state, national, and international), nongovernmental organizations, business, and industry.

Taking a cue from the highly successful model for France-Atlanta, Royster chose a holistic approach and included activities spanning not only arts and culture, but education, business and innovation, and global affairs.

“The idea is to see the arts as a lens for understanding cultures more robustly within a global context,” she said. “We are thrilled to have one of the world’s foremost collections of African art to anchor this initiative. We are also thrilled to add many other amazing artistic and cultural activities.”

Campus sponsors include the Office of the Provost, Office for Institute Diversity, Office of International Education, College of Architecture, Scheller College of Business, Office of International Initiatives, College of Science, Institute of Paper Science and Technology, Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts, the IAC School of Literature, Media, and Communication, and the IAC School of Modern Languages.

Events across the city are already underway. Upcoming campus events include the
following:

  • Mapping Place: Africa Beyond Paper (Feb. 28-May 17): An exhibition exploring the changing representation and projection of space that has shaped our approach to Africa at the Robert C. Williams Paper Museum. Admission is free.
  • Shuffle, Shake, and Shatter by Sanford Biggers (March 28): A multimedia film suite exploring the formation and dissolution of identity at the Ferst Center for the Arts. Tickets are $15 for the general public.
  • Africa Beyond Africa: The Future of Cultural, Social, and Scientific Research Conference (May 16-17): This event will focus on challenges museums face today including uses of science and technology for presentation and representation. See www.africaatlanta.org for registration fees and details.
  • KONGO across the WATERS (May 17-Sept. 21): Art and artifacts from the Royal Museum for Central Africa explore connections between the art and culture of the Kongo peoples and African-American art in the United States at Jimmy Carter Library and Museum. Tickets are $8.

View the full schedule of events here.

Related Links

Contact Information

Rebecca Keane
Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts

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Origins Program: Teacher Workshops & Research Experiences for Art and Science Teachers http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2013/06/14/origins-program-teacher-workshops-research-experiences-for-art-and-science-teachers/ http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2013/06/14/origins-program-teacher-workshops-research-experiences-for-art-and-science-teachers/#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2013 20:51:15 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=2032 The Georgia Tech Center for Education Integrating Mathematics, Science, and Computing and the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts will create a program that will provide high school educators with the exposure, materials, and skills necessary to prepare our future workforce and to foster student interest in materials science and engineering, while integrating African art design and storytelling. The purpose of the program is to utilize summer research programs for teachers and undergraduate students interested in teaching to form a team and create lesson plans for high school Art and Science classes. Once these lessons are created they can be shared at a workshop for art and science teachers in collaboration with the Woodruff Professional Learning Program for Teachers.  The goals of the Origins Program are to 1) Increase the general public’s awareness of nanotechnology and sustainability, 2) Integrate nanotechnology and African art in the classroom, 3) Increase the public awareness of the evolution of materials found in African art and design.

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Cartography Workshops http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2013/06/14/cartography-workshops/ http://pwp.gatech.edu/wca/2013/06/14/cartography-workshops/#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2013 20:50:03 +0000 http://wca.iac.gatech.edu/?p=2030 The Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts in conjunction with the Allen Institute of Advanced Studies and the GIS Center will offer a full range of cartography workshops for Tech undergraduates and neighboring community high schools’ students.

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