Tuesday, 11 December 2012

Teacher Training, NET Ministries Course and CLA teachers

At the end of October, the Cornerstone Veritas team traveled to Masaka.  Our time there began with a training for new facilitators. The new facilitators were being prepared to be of help when we need assistance in different trainings. Noelle did this successfully and they were all very ready to help were needed.


6 NET Ministries members, Antony Elliot with YWAM, and Fr. Henry of the Missionaries of Africa were all trained in course facilitation.



After the teacher training, the Cornerstone Veritas team, and the newly trained facilitators taught the 10 principles of leadership 5 day short course to the rest of the current NET Team.  This was a great week together.  We were able to stay together at Holy Trinity Community, which provided a comfortable residential environment.  The new facilitators got a chance to teach and receive feedback on their talks. 


This was the game night, always lots of fun!


At the end of the course, the participants go through graduation.  They receive a candle, and are encouraged to go and be lights in their lives through living lives of integrity.  
Graduates with their candles

Carol graduating students
Note:  This 10 principles course was a little different, as Noelle left for the States at the beginning of the course!  This meant that Carol was in charge, and she did a great job!


 TEN PRINCIPLES TRAINING AT EKITANGALA- RANCH

 It was a great time with the teachers of Cornerstone schools that is Cornerstone Leadership Academy, Ekitangala Transformational High School and the Primary School. We estimated a number of fourty teachers but it was a great number of fourty-six teachers that attended the 10 principles of leadership training.
In the picture bellow are some of the teachers in class.

Below are the three different teachers during the teachers training (Antony, Frank and Carol). It was such a great opportunity to stay with the Cornerstone teachers.





The joy of graduation. As each member rose up to go and pick their certificate and candle, others raised their hands up as a sign of victory and achievement for their fellow trainee. This caused a cheerful and happy environment.

Tuesday, 25 September 2012

What are our participants saying?

As we do the evaluation of the most recent 10 Principles of Leadership... I thought it would be good to share with all of your the response from some of our participants!  In their own words...

Note:  The current course we run has an expressly Christian focus, trying to help Christian leaders to become leaders like Jesus.  However, we can run our program for secular organizations as well, as long as we have advanced notice.


“I would encourage people to study this course, because it is for everyone to know this teaching”

“This course has challenged my life because I realized that there are a lot of things I need to work on in order to be a complete person i.e. to build my personal integrity, being proactive not reactive as I have been, and to have a vision in life which will help me to achieve what I want eg. Put first things first”

“I would advise others to go through the course, especially my parish in Arusha”

“This is a life transforming course, which can make you be committed and Christ Centred person.  You should attend this course.”


“...the course has re-awakened me from the deep slumber I had immersed myself in.  It has given me a wake-up call that my life was headed in the wrong direction and that I need transformation.  A paradigm shift is definitely going to take place in my life...”

“This course is very important because it will give you/help you to live a life which is valued and to know how you are and where you are.” 

“The Ten Principles of Leadership has great life treasures! It has many solutions to all human life difficulties.  The course is recommended to anyone alive; young or old!”

Sunday, 23 September 2012

Life in Translation: Tanzania ... The Course

Borrowed from Noelle in Africa...


We have taught our main course, The 10 Principles of Leadership in all different places, for a hugely diverse audience.  Everywhere it is taught, it has an impact.  And this time, in Shinyanga, TZ it was no different. 
This was the first time we had taught this course A) Outside of Uganda and B) In translation.  It was a new experience for sure!

We had over 50 people the first day.  Of course, throughout the week we lost a few, but overall we graduated just under 50 people!  We had a fantastic team that helped with music, a wonderful venue, good food, and a reliable sound system.

John Bahati, our translator (and trip hero!) did an incredible job.  He wrote summaries of each talk in Swahili, so that the participants could have some basic notes.  The participants were engaged and very ready to learn.  It was great to have a wonderful interaction with them, even though there was a language barrier. 

Because of translation, we made some small changes to the talks.  But we were able to do well and stick to the time we had.  I had asked that we have 6 days, in case translation was very slow. But we finished in 5... so the 6th day was able to be a big party!  Wow, they can celebrate!  So much dancing, so many photos, and a ton of excitement!  Our courses usually end well, but this one ended fantastically!

Throughout the course there were various profound experiences and moments.  The time of footwashing, which shows Servant Leadership in action, was especially beautiful, there were so many people!  We had the 3 team members from Cornerstone Veritas, and then 3 men from different Christian denominations wash feet.  In Africa, there can sometimes be a lot of tension between different Christian groups.  This was such a beautiful moment of unity! 

The course was comprised of people from every Christian expression in Tanzania.  It was incredible.  We broke them into small groups, which met every day.  This was a time to process what they were learning.  These groups were totally mixed, and you could tell that people began to really loved each other and got to know each other by the end of the course.  What an incredible opportunity to build bridges. 
Several moments while teaching were very profound as well.  When teaching about Seek First to Understand, I was speaking about not trivializing pain.  I used a random man as an example, in the group.  I said to imagine that he had lost a child, and then proceeded to teach about how we should respond to someone who had experienced something truly challenging.  I didn’t know this man, or anything about his life.  Later on, one of the men whom we spent lunch with each day, told us that the man I had randomly chosen had actually lost 3 sons.  My using him as an example was actually a moment of healing for him, because I acknowledged the pain of that loss, and didn’t just brush it away.

At one point in the session “Resourcefulness”, I was talking about the fact that life is difficult.  When we believe this, and live embracing it, then we are able to not be so caught off guard when hard or challenging things come our way.   As I taught, you could see from the people’s faces, and the atmosphere in the room that people were really understanding and that, somehow, their perspectives were being changed.  Many of them nodded and were obviously agreeing and understanding how this reality can improve our lives.

And finally, we had 2 sharing at the end of the course, one from a woman and another from a man.  Both of them were breathtaking, and overwhelmingly beautiful.  The woman shared deeply about what she had been going through, and how what she had learned that week would enable her to change her own life and come out of the previous ways she had been living.  The man who shared talked about how learned about the idea of “Covenant Relationship” had inspired him to refresh and renew his relationship first with his wife, and then to invest more time with his children!  At the end of his sharing he said “At the beginning of the week, we were told that we had tool boxes, which were going to be filled with tools.  Mine is full, and I intend to start using them to improve my life and the life of my family.”

We talk about tool boxes in our course introduction.  That’s the best description I’ve been able to come up with.  The myriad of things which we teach throughout our course; Emotional Bank Account, Paradigm Shift, the problem solving line, Personal Weekly Schedules, how to write a Vision and Mission, Circle of Influence/Circle of Concern, Think Win Win, Listening skills in Seek First to Understand, how to become resourceful and creative, how to maintain balance... all of these and more are incredible tools.  Even if only 1, 2, or 3 are actually applied, they will make a tangible difference in the life of that person and in their community.

I can see the impact of what I teach, most of all on myself.  It is so beautiful to see my life change, and to see the glimmer in a participant’s eyes when they get it... when they realize that they can change, that there is hope, and that with a little creativity and perspective, they can do something worthwhile with their lives.  That is what our course is all about.  We empower people, and those people go and change their worlds.

This is why I work in Africa.

Next Post... all of our crazy adventures while in Tanzania!

Thursday, 30 August 2012

Intern Graduation



Patricia, Edmond, Yololin, Joshua and Bernard were the 2012 Cornerstone Veritas (CV) interns.  They began their internship in January 2012.  They completed their internship on August 7th.  They worked very hard throughout their time of service, to see that the work of Cornerstone Veritas flourishes.  

The CV crew (minus Yololim and Frank)  What a great day!
To celebrate the completion of the internship program, we had a whole day at KK beach.  KK Beach is off Entebbe road, just outside of Kampala on the shores of Lake Victories.  (Click here to see where we were!  The large body of water is Lake Victoria) 

It was a time for both the CV interns and staff, as well as a representative from Cornerstone Development (our friend, Asiimwe) to catch up, laugh, play games, eat, and enjoy time together as a family of friends.
We had many games throughout the day, it was great fun!
Asiimwe was able to join us for part of the day from the head office.


We laughed a lot.
 
Edmond and Bosco...

Chips, just before everyone realized Edmond had covered them with hot sauce!

Swimming in the lake


These boys can jump! 



Later in the day, all the interns received affirmations from both their fellow interns and the staff members.  This was a wonderful time because though the small things said the inters felt loved, appreciated and blessed.  In addition to the affirmations, the interns received a certificate, thank you card and a small stipend. 
All in all we had a fantastic day!  It was a success and we were thankful to that!

Patricia was the only female intern, she did a great job


A Josh and Noelle celebratory dance party!
Written by Carol Nansukusa,  CV Staff

Friday, 17 August 2012

An Update on our work

Allow me to apologize for the lack of posting on this blog.  For more regular information about the last few months, feel free to check out Noelle in Africa.  This detail's Noelle's experiences over the last months, but also has some photos and notes about Cornerstone Veritas activity. 

However, this blog is going to now get a lot more attention, I promise!  So to start off that new trend, check this out!  This is an email update which I recently sent out which tells about Cornerstone Veritas and what we're up to!

Click here to read it!

New posts will be put up weekly or bi-weekly... and there wil be contribution by a variety of team members!

Keep an eye out! 

Saturday, 11 February 2012

Team Photos

While this is not our WHOLE team, it's close enough.   I hope you enjoy some images of our life together.  Thank you Philip for the photos! 
-Noelle

Team CV!
Our crazy staff


3 out of 5 interns





Sunday, 29 January 2012

Welcome to the Cornerstone Veritas Blog!

Welcome!  Thank you for visiting our organization's blog!

Cornerstone Veritas is based in Kampala, Uganda and is working all over Uganda with hopeful expansion throughout Eastern Africa.

We are a part of Cornerstone Development Africa, and work out of their offices.  They are our parent organization, from which comes the material we use in our trainings. 

Our small team will regularly update this blog, telling you about the work which we are doing and projects we are undertaking.

May this blog inspire you to do something great with your life!