AN
OVERVIEW: BUILDING POSITIVE CULTURES IN NORMATIVE
COMMUNITIES

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NAFI/NFI is a Massachusetts-based, nonprofit human service agency that operates a coordinated network of over 90 community-based schools and programs from Maine to Florida. NAFI/NFI's services are driven by the agency's commitment to develop normative communities that empower its members to become partners and active participants in shaping their mission and culture.
Since the mid-1990s, NAFI/NFI's Training and Consulting Group has been in the forefront of providing training and consulting to public and private organizations in the field of human services. The group has helped many agencies, schools and organizations develop a philosophical and practical framework in which to establish and monitor positive, mission-driven norms that shape their cultures. Additionally, the training group provides technical assistance to organizations facing challenges in managed care, education, leadership, organizational commitment and their overall quality of service. NAFI/NFI has also assisted organizations in such areas as homelessness, mental health, hospital care, police community training, adult corrections and juvenile justice. NAFI/NFI designs each training to fit the specific needs of the organizations it serves.
THE NORMATIVE APPROACH
In
the course of working with hundreds of organizations since 1974, NAFI/NFI developed the Normative
Approach, which is a systematic
method to help a school, program or organization develop a
culture that reflects its vision while applying the tenets
of its mission to all aspects of community life.
The
process of developing a Normative culture in a school first
focuses on the vision of its leaders, then aids the
community to hone a mission that is understood and relevant
at all times to every teacher, student and parent. The
degree to which this mission is experienced in every program
activity will determine the degree to which a program creates
a safe, caring environment that nurtures growth and,
ultimately, academic performance. Although NAFI/NFI realizes
that the path that connects vision to student growth is
demanding, utilizing the Normative Approach has proven to be
a very effective way to empower staff, students and
parents to build cultures in which expectations of behavior
and achievement are mutually established and observed. In
the Normative Approach, program communities structure time to
allow its members – faculty, students and parents -- to
examine shared expectations and continuously measure the
resulting norms of behavior that occur. This ongoing process
of evaluation and feedback allows everyone to have a voice
as well as an opportunity to advocate for their point of
view. If fully heard, participants become invested
stakeholders in their community – whether it is a
classroom or the entire program, with a sense of belonging.
(see following description for a lengthier explanation of
the Normative Approach).
To
facilitate proactive forums for stakeholders to examine
their community norms requires skills that are not
traditionally taught to teachers. NAFI/NFI has the ability to
offer peer empowerment and facilitation training as part of
its training and consulting curriculum.
Currently
NAFI/NFI operates over thirty schools within more than 90 programs that it
manages for youths at risk who are referred from courts,
juvenile justice organizations and state departments of
social services. Additionally, NAFI/NFI is currently working
closely with a number of public and private schools to help
their leaders develop mission-driven, Normative Communities
(See following for examples).
HOW TO BUILD A NORMATIVE COMMUNITY OR PROGRAM
The Normative approach to
building a successful program, school or working environment
begins when a leaders identify and clarify their
organization’s operating philosophy and goals and share
the resulting vision with all of their community
members. This starting point provides an opportunity to
develop a shared sense of purpose that is critical to
establishing a mission.
A second and vital part of
establishing a Normative community occurs when an
organization creates a mission statement that makes
concrete the core values of the organization in a way that
employees and clients can honor them. In Normative
environments, it is common to discover that every community
member, from veteran staff to the newest client to enter a
program, knows and embraces the mission statement. It
becomes a context in which goals are developed and achieved.
Through active participation in community meetings, all
community members in Normative environments become advocates
of the mission. And, as advocates, they help other
employees/students remain focused on their purpose through feedback
and respectful confrontation, and by modeling behaviors
that are consistent with the goals of the program, school or
agency.
Just as the vision and mission
form the foundation of a Normative culture, norms are
the building blocks that truly shape the organization’s
structure. By definition, norms are patterns of behavior
that reflect values and shared expectations.
Norms are explored and discussed in the context of
supporting the mission and ultimately supplant rules.
For example, a school rule may require that staff be
punctual but if it is not the common practice, the rule is
meaningless in light of the norm of students or employees
being tardy. Another example is a rule that requires all
students to
clean their desks before leaving a classroom. Yet, if
students fail to comply, the rule has no bearing on the norm
of students having messy work spaces. In a community
structured to give all community members the opportunity to
examine and monitor their norms, the gap that often
separates rules from norms closes. Instead, the community
establishes mutual support for shared expectations and
community members agree to hold each accountable to uphold
the agreed-upon norms that reflect the organization’s
mission.
This is accomplished through interactive
meetings that allow people to talk about their community
values, mission and norms that govern daily life. Does a
behavior support the mission, or does it detract from it? Is
the activity or norm “on
mission” or “off mission”? These kinds of questions
are encouraged and deemed healthy and vital; and leaders of
Normative organizations make every effort to ensure that the
community meets regularly to address them, whether in a
classroom or in larger forums.
In many organizations engaged in
developing Normative communities, “norms committees”
are created that assess organizational practices in the
context of their goals. Committee members represent a cross
section of the organization. In all cases, their conclusions
are then shared with their larger community and discussed
for their merit and impact. Again, the process of allowing
all community members to review and discuss norms creates
ownership, which ultimately shapes the culture. When helping
an organization establish a Normative approach, the NAFI/NFI
Training and Consulting Group focuses on these principles
while giving trainees the opportunity to build interpersonal
and leadership skills to utilize the Normative approach.
An example of putting these principles to work is exemplified by Shelter
Care, NAFI/NFI’s 25-bed assessment program and residential
school for some of the most challenging adjudicated boys in
Massachusetts, recently celebrated 1,400 days without a run,
shattering every AWOL record in the state. Unlike many
programs with adjudicated youths, the program’s doors are
never locked. Although the typical stay of a resident is
only four weeks, the program’s mission – Give Respect,
Get Respect, Self-Respect – is an anthem that every new
student learns from other youths in the first hour of his
arrival. Within 24-hours, new students have attended
community meetings, understand the expectations of the
program and – very importantly – observe how openly and
respectfully feedback is given between all members of the
community in upholding the program’s norms and mission.
Over the years, Shelter Care has established a culture where
participation, speaking honestly and living the mission are
at the core of all of its activities.
Much of the success that Shelter Care has experienced
results from an understanding that the responsibility of
enforcing the program’s norms belong to every resident at
all times, not just to on-duty staff or self-selected
resident leaders.
A major difference between
cultures that take a Normative approach and those that
operate in a more traditional hierarchy is that, in
Non-Normative working environments, there tend to be
divisions between those who are responsible for the mission
and organizational goals and those who are not. In Normative
working communities, every employee and client becomes a stakeholder
through a process of orientation and training that teaches
them the values, mission and shared expectations of the
organization. In Normative working and living environments,
all staff and clients – managers, frontline workers and
students -- are given the opportunity to exchange ideas
about the issues that affect them.
Normative communities, then, are necessarily participatory
and inclusive in nature and operate under the assumption
that their members will develop a sense of ownership about
the goals of the organization if their opinions are
expressed, heard and valued.
As a Normative community
develops, it is critical that members learn how to
respectfully give feedback. Through training, community
members receive the opportunity to become catalysts of open
communication where accountability, feedback and
consensus are accepted and respected. As a result, they
become culture bearers of their community values, with the
skills and credibility to uphold their vision and mission.
One of NAFI/NFI’s most exciting
training projects that demonstrates the power of the
Normative approach is its work with a network of homeless
shelters outside of New York City. Two years ago, these
family shelters had high incidences of violence; litter was
visible throughout the grounds and graffiti decorated its
walls. Communication between staff and residents was
disjointed and often negative. There was a poor sense of
community and no clear mission.
Members of the NAFI/NFI Training and
Consulting Group met with the leaders of the organization to
identify problems, discuss their vision and collaborate
on solutions. They developed a plan with timelines that
included implementing Normative trainings and generating a “train
the trainers” component to help the organization
perpetuate its own success.
The plan was put into effect in a
structured, inclusive and rigorous way. At community
meetings, the organization’s leaders shared and discussed
their vision. A mission statement was honed and posted on
every floor of each facility. Staff and residents focused on
developing expectations. All staff, including
administration, participated in three-day Normative
trainings. They held community meetings. They formed norm
committees, and they created a culture of open
communication.
And with each step, the shelters
changed. First the graffiti and litter disappeared. Then the
shelters redecorated their buildings. Little by little,
staff and residents resolved ways to confront and discuss
problems.
Eventually, incidents of violence
fell. As a body of in-house trainers continually introduced
new residents to the growing Normative culture, the
organization was better able to help its residents become
more communicative and productive citizens.
In the year ahead, NAFI/NFI’s
Training and Consulting Group will be:
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Working closely with schools in the Bronx and in the South End of Boston to help develop Normative cultures in their classrooms
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Training and consulting with social service agencies in Maryland and New York
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Working with Police Corps Academies across the nation to develop leadership skills
Each project is an exciting
opportunity for NAFI/NFI to fulfill its mission of assisting
organizations to establish highly effective Normative
communities.