carolina.gif (1377 bytes)

                                                                                                                                                                                                                               NEWS SERVICES
210 Pittsboro Street, Campus Box 6210
Chapel Hill, NC  27599-6210
(919) 962-2091   FAX: (919) 962-2279
 www.unc.edu/news/


NEWS

For immediate use

Sept. 16, 2003 -- No. 474

Cullowhee Community Forum to discuss in civic education and engagement in Western North Carolina

CULLOWHEE -- On Sept. 22, residents of Cherokee, Clay, Graham, Haywood, Jackson, Macon, and Swain counties and the Qualla Boundary have the opportunity to shape the future of citizenship in North Carolina by participating in a Western North Carolina Community Forum in Cullowhee. The forum will be held from 5:30–8:30 p.m. at the Ramsey Activity Center, WCU Campus, and the public is invited. Students are encouraged to attend the forum, as they will have a special opportunity to let their voices be heard during a pizza reception with public officials.

Residents of other areas of Western N.C. are invited to forums held that same week in Hendersonville (Sept.23) and Asheville (Sept. 24). Forum participants will learn how Western N.C. compares to the rest of the state in civic education and engagement. Such regional comparisons include findings that youth in Western N.C. are the most likely to report high levels of confidence in nonprofit groups, but are least likely to report high levels of confidence in the federal government. Also of interest is that young people in Western N.C. are the most likely in the state to report having worked in their community to solve a problem.

Small group discussions will focus on statewide and regional results from the North Carolina Civic Education Consortium's Civic Index 2003, the first-ever statewide assessment of youth and adult civic education and engagement. Participants will brainstorm community-specific strategies to improve civic engagement. Additional information on the forums, including directions to the site, can be found at the Consortium's website, www.civics.org.

Five other forums will take place throughout the state later this fall. Because the Civic Education Consortium will not be able to reach all of North Carolina's municipalities through the forums, the Consortium will publish a Community Forum Tool Kit, which is a how-to guide for communities to host their own community forums. These tool kits will be available in winter 2003.

The Western North Carolina Community Forums have been funded through a generous grant from the Community Foundation of Western North Carolina. The forums were planned by a dedicated group of local organizers and the North Carolina Civic Education Consortium, a statewide partnership housed at the School of Government at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The forums have been endorsed by the following groups: Asheville-Buncombe County League of Women Voters, Asheville-Buncombe County Youth Council, Asheville Citizen-Times, Buncombe County Parks and Recreation Services, Children First, Community Foundation of Henderson County, Girl Scouts of Western North Carolina Pisgah Council, Junior League of Asheville, Kids Voting Buncombe County, Kids Voting Haywood County, Kids Voting North Carolina, Western Carolina University, University of North Carolina-Asheville, and Youth Leadership Asheville.

- 30 -

Details on Western North Carolina Community Forums

All residents of Western North Carolina are encouraged to attend the forum nearest them. Forums will begin at 5:30 p.m. and end at 8:30 p.m.; light hors d'oeuvres will be served.

Contact: Leslie Anderson, Special Consultant to the Consortium, 828-252-4913, lesliea@ioa.com;  KelleyO’Brien, Civic Index Project Director, Civic Education Consortium, 919-960-4226, obrien@iogmail.iog.unc.edu; Jennifer Hunt, Swain County Youth Advisory Council, 828-488-0453, jen_hunt_1@hotmail.com