The Handbook is one of the Incubator products. It culminates the work of the research team. Written by the chief researcher Prof. Victor Friedman and the Research Officer Ms. Naomi Friedman.
“This handbook should not be read as a
definitive recipe for successful partnerships. Nor is it based on a claim that
the partnership formed in the “Educational Innovation Incubator” represents an
ideal to be aspired to… This handbook represents an opportunity to share lessons
learned and the best practices as they emerged from this particular project.
These lessons, however, need to be tested anew in each context where they are
applied. They can guide other CSOs – not
as a recipe, but as a series of questions and considerations to be taken into
account – when building partnerships.”
The Handbook is structured around five chapters:
Where the writers shortly introduce the“Educational Innovations Incubator” project.
2. Joint Action Space – A Conceptual Introduction,
This chapter presents the concept of a "social
space" as a framework for understanding how to build partnerships that
achieve more than each individual organization on its own.
3.
Mapping the Inter Organizational Space
Constitutes a very useful first step in building a joint
action space. Mapping means analyzing
and comparing the various partner organizations according to a number of key
dimensions: The Target Field,
Goals/Values, Players/Network, Action Strategies, Tools, and Resources
Participatory
goal setting is a crucial step in creating a joint actions space within a CSO
partnership. This chapter explains the
importance of participatory goal setting and describes a process for involving
all of the stakeholders in defining the success of the project, setting goals,
and building an action plan.
This chapter looks at the conditions and the facilitation
that foster productive learning spaces.
Creating and maintaining a joint action space requires a
manager role that is dedicated to the project, to differentiate it from the
partner organizations, and to nurture relationships, a common language, and
unique rules of the game. This chapter deals with issues such as the leadership challenge, who should be the manager and the transition
from coordination to leadership.