Showing posts with label Inititative for Transgender Leadership. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Inititative for Transgender Leadership. Show all posts

October 19, 2011

Initiative for Transgender Leadership Commencement Celebration

IMMEDIATE RELEASE
For more information:
Contact: Madeleine Hershey and Rayden Sorock

INITIATIVE FOR TRANSGENDER LEADERSHIP
COMMENCEMENT CELEBRATION
An Evening for Appreciation, Entertainment and Community Building

On Friday, Nov. 18 from 6:30 to 9:30pm at the Union Project at 801 N Negley Avenue in East Liberty, the Initiative for Transgender Leadership (ITL), in partnership with the Union Project, will be hosting a Commencement Celebration.  ITL is inviting community members to honor the ITL’s first fellow, Rayden Sorock.  We are celebrating the completion of the inaugural 10-month fellowship program dedicated to the professional development and leadership of transgender youth in Pittsburgh.  The event is free and open to the public.

The Initiative for Transgender Leadership originated when three friends—R. T. Peck, Jen Saffron and Madeleine Hershey—decided they would do something to bridge the professional gap for transgender youth.  The ITL’s first project was a 10-month paid fellowship position at a Pittsburgh non-profit for one transgender youth.  The primary goals of the ITL fellowship program are: (1) to provide a professional and leadership development opportunity to one trans-identified youth; and (2) to serve the sponsoring organization's mission, as well as expand its service capacity.  The fellowship’s sponsoring organization is Coro Center for Civic Leadership.

Over the course of the evening, Rayden will present his fellowship experience and there will be performances by local artists.  Refreshments will be provided.  The Commencement Celebration is an opportunity to recognize everyone who has supported this project and Rayden.  We are celebrating our successes and opening up new possibilities for transgender awareness and youth leadership in Pittsburgh.

The space is handicapped accessible and sign language interpretation will be provided.  Parking is available in the Union Project parking lot and on-street.  Please contact transleadership@gmail.com to RSVP and with requests for accommodations.


EVENT:         Initiative for Transgender Leadership Commencement Celebration 
WHERE:       Union Project  801 N Negley Avenue Pittsburgh PA, 15206 
WHEN:          Friday, November 18 from 6:30pm-9:30pm 
RSVP:            transleadership@gmail.com 
ACCESSIBLE: Yes
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October 13, 2011

Sharing Piece from Coro Newsletter

Rayden Sorock is the first Initiative for Transgender Leadership (ITL) fellow, currently placed at Coro Pittsburgh. He shares with us about the ITL, his experience working with Coro over the past several months, and considers what could be next. His final presentation is Friday, November 18th at the Union Project from 6:30-9:30. This event is free and open to the public, so save the date!

So what is the Initiative for Transgender Leadership all about?

Often transgender people are held back from actively pursuing challenging professional experiences, of they are actively turned away from these positions due to discrimination. Two years ago, three friends—R T Peck, Jen Saffron and Madeleine Hershey—got together and decided they would do something to bridge the professional gap for young transgender people. What emerged was a 10-month paid fellowship position for one transgender person between the ages of 17-25. That fellow would be placed with a sponsoring non-profit organization in Pittsburgh and would receive mentorship from R.T., Jen and Madeleine throughout the term.

The primary goals of the Initiative for Transgender Leadership (ITL) fellowship are: to provide a professional and leadership development opportunity to one trans-identified youth; to serve the sponsoring organization's mission of diversity, as well as expand its service capacity; and to "change the world"!

How did you come to apply for this opportunity?

I have been living in Pittsburgh for almost 2 years. I first visited in 2008 to stay with a friend and fell in love with the city.

I grew up in Massachusetts and attended college at State University of New York at Purchase where I studied literature. After I graduated, I moved in with my parents to their new home in Maryland and started hunting for a position working on a farm. Through the PA Association of Sustainable Agriculture, I found Blackberry Meadows Farm in Natrona Heights, PA and lived and worked there for a full season. I continued an interest in the environment and education while working at the Waldorf School, Construction Junction and Garden Dreams.

Last fall, a friend of mine saw the ITL's call for applicants and suggested I apply. After an interview process, I was selected in November of 2010 and begun my fellowship is mid-January of this year.

How did Coro Pittsburgh get involved?

Regina Anderson, the former Director of the Regional Internship Center (RIC), requested that Coro, being the parent organization to the RIC, sign on to be a sponsoring organization. The RIC pledged to provide a welcoming and supportive place to work; to offer direct supervision; and to attend a transgender cultural competency training led by a member of the ITL team.

Since January, the RIC and Coro have provided to me direct human resources support, access to trainings, events and resources, as well as enabled my integration into the Coro experience and network.

The Pittsburgh Parks Conservancy also applied to be a sponsoring organization. Even though a position at the PPC would have provided an opportunity to work in the field of environmental advocacy and education (which are primary interests of mine) and the opportunity to work under Marijke Hecht, Director of Education, I decided to go with Coro because of it's extensive network in a variety of non-profit and service areas, and because I saw similarities between the opportunity I was given and the internship opportunities I would be working to create and improve as a member of the RIC team.

What have you been working on?

For the majority of my fellowship, I have been working with the Regional Internship Center (RIC) and learning all about social media, the creation of successful internship programs, and how to outreach effectively. I went from just taking notes at the RIC's signature "Creating a Successful Internship Program" workshop to preparing to lead my own on October 19th at Penn State Fayette. I can see how the process for creating successful internships can be used as model to improve efficiency and sustainability for an organization as a whole. 

More recently, I have been working with Misti McKeehen, Director of Operations & Outreach at Coro, on a series of recommendations to improve LGBT inclusion in the part-time Coro program, Women in Leadership (WIL). Also, I am working on a resource for Coro to share with partner organizations and businesses interested in learning more about LGBT workplace inclusion.

Also, I am working on the Outreach and Action Plan committees for an upcoming conference called Building Change: A Convergence for Social Justice. This conference will occur October 13-15 and it seeks to engage as many people as possible into building a social justice movement throughout southwestern PA. For more information please visit www.buildingchangewpa.org.

One main goal of the conference is to generate discussion and progress around an "Action Plan": a plan to build social justice in our region over the next five years. I thought, why not get this discussion started amongst members of the LGBT community and organizations serving the community in Pittsburgh? In August a group of nearly 60 people met at United Cerebral Palsy to begin generating a vision for the LGBT community. Please contact me at rsorock@coropittsburgh.org for more information or to get involved.

Throughout the fellowship, I have led and co-led trainings and focus groups on transgender awareness and LGBT workplace issues.

What's next for you? What's next for the Initiative for Transgender Leadership?

First of all, my fellowship culminates on Friday November 18th with my final presentation at the Union Project. This event will be free and open to the public. For more information visit: www.transyouthleaders.blogspot.com. Being the ITL fellow and working with Coro Pittsburgh has helped me build a strong network of people doing great work throughout this region. I feel confident that my experiences in this fellowship put me at a professional advantage and I am excited to think about what's next.

For the ITL, we are exploring a few different ideas including continuing the fellowship program and developing a "mentoring the mentors" program to promote peer-to-peer mentorship among transgender youth. I intend to stay involved with the ITL in the future and I know we will continue to do great things. Please stay in touch by emailing transleadership@gmail.com.

August 19, 2011

Stories on the Square: Coming Out From Under/Stories of Emergence

Do you like passionate, fly-by-the-seat-of-your-pants story-telling? Come to STORIES ON THE SQUARE to witness great story-tellers doing what they do best.

STORIES ON THE SQUARE happens at the Square Cafe in Regent Square on Fri. Sept. 16th. Doors at 7pm, show at 8pm. Tickets are $45 and benefit the Initiative for Transgender Leadership

Hosted by Wendy Bell of WTAE. Featuring Brian Broome, Phat Man Dee, Vanessa German, Christina Springer, and more!

Check out the Facebook event page here and invite your friends!

Note: Donations made through PayPal will not result in ticket reservations.  To purchase tickets stop in Square Cafe during business hours or email TransLeadership@gmail.com.




August 12, 2011

Transgender 201 Training 8/4/11

At the beginning of August, Bobby and I had the opportunity to share our knowledge of trans issues with my co-workers: staff at Coro Pittsburgh as well as Public Allies and someone from the Allegheny County Dept. of Human Services.

We presented a PowerPoint, which was a combination of many efforts. In some ways the presentation was similar top the one Mad and I did in March for the Presbyterian Task Force on Ministry with Sexual Minorities. We encouraged participants to take a close look at all of our gender assumptions, how really--no (or very few) people we know actually fit the stereotype of what a man is or what a woman is. We went through the basics: binary vs. continuum, pulling apart gender & sex, pulling apart sexuality & gender identity. We did our best to define who falls under the trans umbrella and who doesn't (this isn't always so clear). We talked about issues that trans people face, and showed profiles of trans celebrities (mostly academic, artistic and/or politically active).

One of my favorite slides is for when we talk about the positives of the trans community--our assets. I can get bummed out talking too much about all the hardships trans folks face, even though sharing that info is very important. I like to show what's so great about us too.


The main activity at the end was breaking into groups to begin to figure out how to create structures in the workplace (policy, procedure, culture, etc.) that support trans inclusion. For example, the Coro offices are located in a large building with many other renters. How do we ensure the bathrooms that we share are safe places for trans folks? What resources do we need to successfully address the need for safe bathrooms? What roadblocks do we foresee and how are we going to work through them?

Overall, I was happy with how the presentation turned out. I'm excited to do more of these (any takers?) especially because of the conversations that get started around trans issues and 'cause we get the chance to lend value to our own experiences as worthy information to share.

January 20, 2011

It's official!

I am writing this blog from my new cube at the Regional Internship Center on the South Side.

I started work here on Tuesday and since then:

I've gotten a run down on all the various social media outlets we use,
I've drafted my project plan and started thinking about how to get it really specific,
I've attended my first all-staff meeting of Coro Pittsburgh,
I've been introduced,
I've made small-talk,
I've tacked up my 2011 calendar,
I've commuted across the Smithfield Bridge in the gray morning and seen the frozen chunks of the river floating on top,
I've been thinking really big,
I've been thinking about how huge Coro's network really is,
I've posted my first entry on the Regional Internship Center's blog

So, probably after one more draft I'll post some of my project plan up here so you, dear reader, may get an idea of what I'll actually actually be doing. A lot of people have been asking me things like, "So tell me...what will you be, uh, doing?" And I can see how that is really a valid question. It's kind of a theme around here at the RIC to need a moderate amount of time to explain just what is it that we do. Explaining what the ITL is takes more time, and then if I have to come out on top of that, well...But, really, I think it's a good thing we'd really have to have a discussion to understand what we do here. It's hard to measure human interaction, social change, purpose and interconnectivity. I imagine I'll be working on a succinct quip until the end of the program. In the meanwhile--we're making connections here!

January 4, 2011

The Next Step

As the new year begins, I am thinking ahead to the start of my fellowship and all the ways it may change things in my life. I have met again with folks from the Regional Internship Center in order to get further acquainted and also to get a better idea about what it will be like to work with them. I met with Mad over dinner last week and she asked some really tough questions. I'm talking more and writing more and reflecting more...

I can more clearly now the scope of this project, how the missions of Coro Pittsburgh, the Regional Internship Center, the Initiative for Transgender Leadership are all wrapped up in my own mission now. This is not just a 10 month job to get me through. Here is a chance to do all that self-work and more I doubted I could do. Here is a chance to ally myself with a lot of people doing a lot of good work. All those goals and big ideas that have been clattering around in my head for some time might now get a chance to take center stage.

Michael Baltzer at the RIC asked me a great question when we met a few weeks ago: Where do I see myself and the ITL fitting into the RIC? Why here? Why now? I shared my own questions about how it would be to be more fully out on the job than I have ever been before. Being so out has great potential to initiate discussion and bolster the RIC's and its parent organization Coro Pittsburgh's missions.

So--why here? Why now? I think it helps that I am so excited about being in Pittsburgh now. I see myself as a part of this community--as a queer person, as a young person, as someone who votes, as a part-time farmer, as someone who cares about social justice and environmental issues, etc. This fellowship is one avenue by which I can serve all of these communities and all the parts of myself.

I see many themes emerging as this project moves forward: community, meaningful work, being one's whole self, commitment to diversity, "talking through it", why here? why now?, telling our stories, solidarity & support.

I like where this is going...

--Rayden