Solidarity and National Development: Short-Term and Long-Term Projects (Student Made)

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LESSON 6: SOLIDARITY AND

NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT,
SHORT-TERM & LONG-TERM
PROJECTS
Community Engagement,
Solidarity and Citizenship
MELC:
• Recognize the importance of solidarity in promoting
national and global community development.
LESSON OBJECTIVE:

• The learners will be able to recognize the


importance of solidarity in promoting
national and global development.
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SOLIDARITY
• Solidarity is about regarding our fellow human
beings justly and respecting wo they are as a
person.
• A person is in connection with other people, with
the society, and with the environment.
• A person must relate responsibility and act in
solidarity with others and the whole humanity
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SOLIDARITY
In most part of the country and in the
world, there is an indication of social
injustice and inequality. Poverty is
widespread. There is also increasing
social disintegration and environmental
degradation. In this kind of circumstance,
the voiceless and those with less income
suffer the most.
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SOLIDARITY
This situation calls for act of solidarity;
particularly for the affected sectors of the
society- the poor farmers, fisherfolks,
informal settlers, indigenous people, laborer,
and the physically challenged.
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SOLIDARITY
• A community not simply as assemblage of
people brought together by their common
experience, practice, and shared values, but
also as a collective body bonded together by
solidarity. – Andrew Mason
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SOLIDARITY
• Solidarity is about treasuring our fellow human
beings and regarding who they are as people of
God (religious perspective)
• “Building a Community that empowers
everyone to attain their full potential through
each of us respecting each other’s dignity,
rights, and responsibilities.” – St. John Paul II
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IMPORTANCE OF SOLIDARITY

SOLIDARITY IS SOLIDARITY IS SOLIDARITY IS


MORE THAN A DEFYING FORM
UNION BOUNDARIES COMMUNICATION
TO ACTION
SOLIDARITY IS MORE THAN A UNION

• It’s about working with people on the same things


that matter to them.
• It is about removing the boundaries that prevent us
from working together.
• It’s about believing that what hurts my neighbor also
hurts myself, that when I need a neighbor, I have no
right to expect if I have not first helped others.
SOLIDARITY IS MORE THAN A UNION

• It is both an emotion and a goal, a


process and a state of being.
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Solidarity is more than a Union


• The boundaries that we get in the way can
be race, nation, gender, wealth, indeed
anything upon which a segregation can be
created.
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Solidarity is more than a Union


• First, that people on one side cannot
experience that privileges that are largely
arbitrarily awarded to people on the other
side.
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Solidarity is more than a Union


• Second, that those on the latter side
cannot appreciate life on the first side,
and therefore feel they are justified in
their current position.
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SOLIDARITY IS FROM
COMMUNICATION TO ACTION
• Solidarity can flow from
communication, but it requires action to
become a real and present force.
• Without Solidarity, without considering
other’s needs, creating a more civilized
world will be a challenge.
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DIFFERENCES BETWEEN A SHORT-TERM


& LONG-TERM PROJECTS
• Short-term projects takes a few hours, days or
weeks to complete.
• Long-term projects takes months or even years to
finish.
• Effective project managers start by assessing the
project need and determining how much time is
needed to meet the desired outcomes.
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BUDGET
• Budget Short-term projects typically require less
money to complete than Long-term efforts.
• Short-term projects typically cost less, they usually
require fewer approvals to get started and
completed.
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BUDGET
• Larger and more complex projects might require
the use of more sophisticated accounting software
packages to track and monitor forecast and
spending.
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RESOURCES
• The number of resources required for a short-term
project typically depends on the type of product or
services being developed.
• Sort-term projects usually require specialized
expertise; you might institute a short-term project
to analyze a recurring product problem and devise
a solution.
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RESOURCES
• Large, complicated development projects typically
require numerous resources over the course of the
project life cycle to initiate, plan, execute, control,
and close the project.
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Impact
• Shor-term project typically have a limited
impact.
• Longer-term project tends to have a
larger impact on the business, community
or employes.
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Scope
• Long-term project tends to be complex.
• Project plans describe multiple objectives,
requirements.
• Long-term projects may be divided into
smaller projects to make them more
manageable and to produce more
immediate results.
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Scope
• Short-term projects typically focus on a
single goal.
• Evaluate short-term projects requires less
effort and analysis than larger projects.

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