understanding community
Communities - could either be referred to as a territorial, a network of interrelationships within a common interest, or as a shared spiritual/emotional connectedness.
Communities - are social constructs
1. Community as a shared political territory and heritage - a traditional understanding of community refers to a group of people living in the same geographical area
INSTITUTIONS:
Educational
Military
Government
Health Care
GRASSROOTS:
Enclaves (sitio)
Villages
Barangays
Community as a network of interpersonal ties based on a common interest - these ties, as it turns, provide mutual support, a sense of identity, and a sense of belongingness for the members
3. Community as a profound sharing of spiritual and/ or emotional connection - This understanding of community pertains to a sense of spiritual and/or emotional connection to others, or communication with others on the basis of an experience of a common problem (e. g., being afflicted with cancer or any form of terminal illness), bond (e.g., experiencing life after death), or a situated cognition (e.g., having realizations that individual actions are inevitably linked to others, which evoke meaningful attachments) (Wilmott 1989, Sunduram et al. 2012).
Sense of Community - “a feeling that members have of belonging, a feeling that members matter to one another and to the group, and a shared faith that members’ needs will be met through their commitment to be together.”
4 Elements of the Sense of Community
Membership - refers to the feeling of belonging or sharing a sense of personal relatedness.
Boundaries - allowing others to belong and keeping others out
Emotional safety - feelings of security and trust in revealing how one really feels
Sense of belonging and identification - members’ feeling that they belong, fit in, and are accepted by the community
Personal Investment - sacrifices made to maintain membership
Common symbol system - things used to represent the community
Influence - refers to the sense of having importance or of feeling valued
Integration and fulfillment of needs - refers to the feeling of fulfillment, which stems from the personal investments that members make in maintaining community membership or in participating in community activities and affairs.
Shared emotional connection - refers to a sense of shared cultural and historical heritage and the feeling that common experiences will continue to be shared
Contact hypothesis - members of the community become close when there are lots of opportunities for interaction
Quality of interaction - when interaction brings about positive experiences and good relationships, it would then fosters a great bond
Closure to events - when iterations are ambiguous and community tasks are unresolved, then community cohesion will be inhibited
Shared event hypothesis - increased importance of shared event results into greater community bond
Investment - the community becomes important to someone who has given time, energy, money, effort, and emotional openness to other members of the community
Effect of honor and humiliation to community members - members who have been publicly rewarded or recognized by the community will be more attracted to that community, similarly, members who have been publicly humiliated
Spiritual bond - the spark of friendship where members are able to be with other members in the community in order to have a setting and audience to express unique aspects of one’s personality and see oneself mirrored in the eyes and responses of others
Communities - could either be referred to as a territorial, a network of interrelationships within a common interest, or as a shared spiritual/emotional connectedness.
Communities - are social constructs
1. Community as a shared political territory and heritage - a traditional understanding of community refers to a group of people living in the same geographical area
INSTITUTIONS:
Educational
Military
Government
Health Care
GRASSROOTS:
Enclaves (sitio)
Villages
Barangays
Community as a network of interpersonal ties based on a common interest - these ties, as it turns, provide mutual support, a sense of identity, and a sense of belongingness for the members
3. Community as a profound sharing of spiritual and/ or emotional connection - This understanding of community pertains to a sense of spiritual and/or emotional connection to others, or communication with others on the basis of an experience of a common problem (e. g., being afflicted with cancer or any form of terminal illness), bond (e.g., experiencing life after death), or a situated cognition (e.g., having realizations that individual actions are inevitably linked to others, which evoke meaningful attachments) (Wilmott 1989, Sunduram et al. 2012).
Sense of Community - “a feeling that members have of belonging, a feeling that members matter to one another and to the group, and a shared faith that members’ needs will be met through their commitment to be together.”
4 Elements of the Sense of Community
Membership - refers to the feeling of belonging or sharing a sense of personal relatedness.
Boundaries - allowing others to belong and keeping others out
Emotional safety - feelings of security and trust in revealing how one really feels
Sense of belonging and identification - members’ feeling that they belong, fit in, and are accepted by the community
Personal Investment - sacrifices made to maintain membership
Common symbol system - things used to represent the community
Influence - refers to the sense of having importance or of feeling valued
Integration and fulfillment of needs - refers to the feeling of fulfillment, which stems from the personal investments that members make in maintaining community membership or in participating in community activities and affairs.
Shared emotional connection - refers to a sense of shared cultural and historical heritage and the feeling that common experiences will continue to be shared
Contact hypothesis - members of the community become close when there are lots of opportunities for interaction
Quality of interaction - when interaction brings about positive experiences and good relationships, it would then fosters a great bond
Closure to events - when iterations are ambiguous and community tasks are unresolved, then community cohesion will be inhibited
Shared event hypothesis - increased importance of shared event results into greater community bond
Investment - the community becomes important to someone who has given time, energy, money, effort, and emotional openness to other members of the community
Effect of honor and humiliation to community members - members who have been publicly rewarded or recognized by the community will be more attracted to that community, similarly, members who have been publicly humiliated
Spiritual bond - the spark of friendship where members are able to be with other members in the community in order to have a setting and audience to express unique aspects of one’s personality and see oneself mirrored in the eyes and responses of others