Fostering Belonging

Overview of the Presentation
Erik W. Carter offers ten elements of belonging: to be present, invited, welcomed, known, accepted, supported, cared for, befriended, needed, and loved. Focused on moving from barriers to inclusion of persons with special needs in a faith community, Carter provides an inventory through which any faith-based community—parish, school, classroom, committee—can evaluate itself on how it engenders a sense of belonging. Carter also offers many concrete strategies for inclusion.
Erik W. Carter offers ten elements of belonging: to be present, invited, welcomed, known, accepted, supported, cared for, befriended, needed, and loved. Focused on moving from barriers to inclusion of persons with special needs in a faith community, Carter provides an inventory through which any faith-based community—parish, school, classroom, committee—can evaluate itself on how it engenders a sense of belonging. Carter also offers many concrete strategies for inclusion.
isCornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Special Education, Vanderbilt University
Using this Resource
This resource is a guide to using an STM Online: Encore presentation as a conversation starter with members of a faith community. Each part of the presentation may be used separately, in combination with each other, or in a sequence over a period of time. The general nature of “Fostering Belonging” gives it broad application and makes it an excellent choice for a variety of groups. For example, consider using one or several of the segments with a parish council, a hospitality committee, catechists, Catholic school faculty, and high school religion classes. If you are looking for a service opportunity for a high school confirmation class, consider leading a discussion around Parts 3 and 5, and commit to implementing one recommendation to enhance belonging in the community.
Overview:
This segment provides an overview of the ten dimensions of belonging to a community: being present, invited, welcomed, known, accepted, supported, cared for, befriended, needed, and loved. It ends with some questions that assist the listener in assessing one’s own community. Although Carter focuses on persons with disabilities belonging within congregational life, his elements of belonging can apply to any member of a parish or school.
PDF Transcript (opens new window)
Questions for Reflection or Discussion:
1. Comment on Carter’s definition of belonging. Is there anything you would revise or add?
2. In which elements of belonging is your community or school strong? Weak?
3. What are one or two tasks you would give priority to, so that persons with disabilities would feel welcome?
Overview:
A person cannot have presence if they are not physically present. Carter speaks about physical barriers in a faith community’s buildings as well as false assumptions or “barriers of awareness.” Two assumptions he debunks: 1) there are no persons of disability in our town/region/county; and 2) faith is not important to persons with disabilities.
PDF Transcript (opens new window)
Tip: The presenter personalizes the statistics about persons with disabilities in a neighborhood surrounding Boston College. You can customize your own presentation by finding out the population of your town, state, diocese, etc. and multiplying by 20%. This is the number of persons with disabilities in your area.
Resources
mentioned in the segment (updated):
Questions for Reflection or Discussion:
1. What does your community’s architecture say about its theology?
2. What hidden barriers or barriers of awareness might be reflected in your parish or school community?
3. What can you do to change the barriers in your community?
Overview:
Are you intentional about inviting persons to belong to your community? How are newcomers welcomed? How does your community facilitate folks getting to know each other? These questions of hospitality may have already been asked in your community, but they may need to be raised again with persons with disabilities in mind. These questions are not just for a committee, but need to be embraced by the entire community.