Video
Welcome to the KLCC Collective Leadership Video Resource section. We have designed this portion of our site to catalogue a sampling of first-person accounts that capture the thoughts and experiences of several KLCC participants from around the country.
To get started, just click on the link to view and/or download the video.
Finished Videos
The videos below are in a finished form. They can be viewed and/or downloaded for various uses.
A short documentary about a group of energetic young people and adults who are working together to improve the decaying school system in Benton Harbor, MI. Their group is one of five funded through the Kellogg Leadership for Community Change (KLCC) project. Duration: 10 minutes.
Crossing Boundaries, Strengthening Communities
This features fellows from two of the six Session I KLCC program sites discussing their experiences with the program and how it is helping to transform them and their communities. Duration: 7 minutes.
Framework Video Series- This exciting digital storytelling series captures the thoughts and experiences of several KLCC participants from around the country, as they describe how incorporating the Framework into their community change work has proven worthwhile.
- Mi Casa Resource Center - This video features the KLCC leadership team from the Mi Casa Resource Center in Denver, Colorado, talking about their journey to live into the concepts of collective leadership and youth-adult partnerships. Their discussion illustrates how using the KLCC Framework can shift perspective about the best ways to work together.
- Roca - The KLCC Framework calls for community groups to invest ample time to develop a shared vision before they move to collective action. When all participants contribute to, understand, and buy into the higher-level vision, it can help the collective action phase of change efforts move more smoothly and productively. In this video, members of the KLCC leadership team at Roca, in Chelsea, Massachusetts, describe how they get to and practice this stage of the Framework and how it is helping them to move collectively toward their goals.
- Lummi Cedar Project - Developing a shared understanding of place, culture and history in the journey toward collective leadership for community change is a critical stage of the KLCC Framework process. In this video, members of the KLCC leadership team at the Lummi Cedar Project, in Bellingham, Washington, describe how appreciating their place, culture, and history has helped them begin to bridge generational divisions within their community.
- Framework evolution - The KLCC Framework was shaped collectively by members of the Center for Ethical Leadership, the Institute for Educational Leadership and the W.K. Kellogg Foundation, with additional contributions by the Innovation Center for Community and Youth Development and participants in the first two sessions of KLCC. In this video, some of the Framework's developers discuss the evolution of the tool, its intended uses and how they envision it assisting communities and grass- roots organizations to bring about positive change in the years ahead.
- New Mexico - KLCC Fellows in Eastern Cibola County New Mexico talk about the history of their community and describe how KLCC is helping them find new ways to engage residents of all ages and cultural backgrounds around issues of education and youth. Duration: 6 minutes
- Mississippi National Gathering March 2006 - Several Session One fellows talk about how their participation in Kellogg Leadership for Community Change (KLCC) has influenced them, their communities and their views of collective leadership. Duration: 8 minutes.
- Stone Mountain National Gathering, July 2007 -Stone Mountain, Georgia, was the setting for the 2007 National Gathering of KLCC fellows from Sessions One and Two. The event encouraged cross-site learning and was punctuated by an emotional and festive celebration of KLCC’s fifth anniversary. Duration: 7 minutes.
- In their own words: Kellogg fellows talk about collective leadership
a. Anita Big Springs, Montana
b. John C. Davis, NY
c. Fabilola Friot, NY
d. Harry Goldman, Montana
e. Carol Ahenakew, New Mexico
Raw Footage
There are hours of footage that the finished videos were derived from that is also cataloged and maintained. Because of the size and the need to manage these materials they can only be made available on a written request basis to Steve Stapleton [sstapleton@ethicalleadership.org]
Some of the available footage includes the following:
- Center for Ethical Leadership—various footage from events, gatherings and meetings
- Evaluation Team—various footage primarily from site visits
- Institute for Educational Leadership—various footage from events, gatherings and meetings
- Langhum Mitchell—various unused footage from Buffalo and Montana
- Llano Grande—various footage from digital storytelling, gatherings, and events
- New Mexico—various footage


