Civic Spring Fellowship
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Opportunities to Lead & Learn
Young people play a critical role in strengthening our democracy today and for the long haul. Civic Spring Fellows are young people and members of youth-centered organizations working on projects that address a local need around issues including criminal justice, education, community health & wellness, economic opportunity, environment, immigration, transportation, and/or elections.
More Than Funding
Fellows build an extensive network of peers and adult partners to help maximize their impact. They build civic knowledge and skills while gaining on-the-ground experience in effecting change in their communities.
Civic Spring Fellows receive critical support through unique experience-based learning and interactions with an intergenerational team of coaches and civic leaders. With these supports, Fellows will develop a greater sense of efficacy, strengthen their abilities to affect positive change, practice collaborative problem-solving, and share their knowledge and skills with their peers and communities.
Civic Spring: Summer 2024
In summer 2024, teams of Civic Spring Fellows from New Jersey will participate in a set of key learning experiences, engage in Community of Practice meetings, and receive support from a dedicated Civic Spring Peer Coach. The Civic Spring Fellowship is generously sponsored by the Maher Charitable Foundation.
Past Civic Spring Fellowship Projects
The inaugural 2020 Civic Spring cohort implemented projects responding to COVID-19 and building civic capacities for the 2020 election cycle. Fellows worked in communities in Minnesota, New Jersey, North Carolina, Kentucky, and Texas.
In 2022 Fellows addressed voter registration, education, access to continued COVID-19 resources, student mental health, and more. Fellows worked in communities in Arizona, California, Illinois, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia.
Most recently, in Summer 2023, Fellows in Missouri, New Jersey, Oregon, and Texas projects focused on climate change and environmental rights, youth activism and mental health projects.
The Beginning
The Civic Spring Fellowship was originally developed in 2020 by an intergenerational team of 40 subject-matter experts, funders, practitioners, and leaders. An independent evaluation of the 2020 Civic Spring Fellowship conducted by Tufts University’s Center for Information & Research on Civic Learning and Engagement (CIRCLE) confirmed both the individual and community impact of the program. Key findings included that the fellowship helped youth:
- Find or strengthen their own voice, including their social-emotional learning capacities, abilities to navigate both civic institutions and their mental health, and strategies for working with stakeholders across lines of difference.
- Make their city or town a better place, including advocating for policy change to city leaders, securing seats for youth on local government committees, holding voter registration events, and engaging local news media.
- Gain knowledge and skills that would typically be part of a Civics class.