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Reasons for networking

 

Introduction
 

Networking establishes the personal and institutional relationships you need to insure that a language program is designed and implemented in ways that are consistent with its context.

 
See:

Networking in a language program

Reasons
 

Networking benefits a language program in the following ways:

 
Relevance
 

You can help insure that a language program is relevant to the users of the language by networking with broad sections of the community to find out

 
  • what purposes the development of the local language may serve, and
  • how such an enterprise is best carried out.
 
Permission
 

You can enhance your ability to gain the required permissions for a language program if you are networking with authorities in positions to authorize or prohibit such programs.

 
Tip:

Those in positions of authority who understand the rationale and goals of a language program are more likely to look at the program with favor.

 
Promotion
 

You can promote the language program through networking by seeking to increase the level of local

 
  • moral support (the implied or explicit support of those who are not closely involved, but are in a position to permit or inhibit the language program)

  • ownership (the conviction among community leaders and members that the language program is relevant, worthwhile, and appropriate)

  • responsibility (the willingness to assume the direction and control of the language program), and

  • involvement (the active participation of community members in the day-to-day activities of the program).

 
Resources
 

You can identify personnel and funding resources through networking by

 
  • making known the need for suitable personnel and involving community leaders in identifying potential trainees
  • identifying local sources of finance, and
  • encouraging cooperation with agencies able to provide financial support and, possibly, consultant and training help.
 
Credibility
 

As you establish relationships through networking at the local level, you can enhance the credibility of the language program by

 
  • improving the visibility of the program and those involved in it, and
  • sharing how the program will be of genuine help in meeting particular community needs.
 
Expanded opportunities
 

You will see expanded opportunities for the use of local language literacy as

 
  • the local community understands and accepts the underlying vision of the program, and
  • national and international organizations--governmental and nongovernmental--become interested and begin to apply the principles of local language literacy more widely.
  • Example:

    Development areas such as health or women's issues


Context for this page:

Go to SIL home page This page is an extract from the LinguaLinks Library, Version 4.0, published on CD-ROM by SIL International, 1999. [Ordering information.]

Page content last modified: 3 March 1999

© 1999 SIL International