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- .IF DSK3.C3
- .CE 6
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ^W-AGE/99 * NEW-AGE/
- ^99 *NEW-AGE/99* N
- ^EW-AGE/99 * NEW-AGE
- ^/99 *NEW-AGE/99*
- ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- ^^^^^^^^^^*by JACK SUGHRUE, Box
- 459, East Douglas, MA 01516*
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^#8
- Declining membership in the TI
- world is definitely a real problem
- which has some interesting and real
- solutions.
- The old guard is getting tired
- and its members no longer want to
- (or are too tired to) be presidents
- and newsletter editors and workshop
- demonstrators and librarians and
- bulletin board downloaders and
- whatever. They can't be blamed for
- this. Nobody can continue to operate
- well forever, particularly in what
- seems an unappreciative atmosphere.
- Almost every newsletter I read
- has the same common problems:
- basically, too few doing too much for
- too long. This is true in LA and in
- Boston and in Canada and England and
- Australia. Large changes are taking
- place within groups, in many cases
- with very bad vibes coming across
- strongly in the newsletter
- pleadings. Over and over we see such
- things as "This club is dying." and
- "If the members who never contribute
- don't start doing something soon... "
- followed by serious threats.
- Realistically, a group without a
- newsletter is a corpse that hasn't
- yet been identified as such. There
- are exceptions, of course, but a club
- without a newsletter is a body
- without a brain. So, first things
- first, keep a newsletter going. This
- is also the biggest (or only) contact
- with the outside world through
- exchanges.
- Next, a regular monthly meeting
- YEAR ROUND is essential. Without a
- place to gather (even if it comes to
- homes, as a last resort) there can be
- no club. A club implies a community,
- a spirit of friendship and
- commonality, a gathering. Business
- and pleasure must be mingled here and
- can only be done by meeting.
- Those are the two big things.
- Even if your group has only three
- members, but you put out a newsletter
- and you meet regularly, you can still
- have a viable, worthwhile user group.
- Nutmeg 99ers of Connecticut and the
- Lima User Group of Ohio are two fine
- examples of TerIffic TInies. But,
- believe me, there are many, many
- more, and they are more common than
- the large, flourishing groups.
- There are some other things to
- consider, too, of course.
- Is it worth complaining
- constantly in print and at meetings
- that too many are not doing their
- fair share. Most of the people who
- sit on their hands and don't take
- leadership roles are not capable and
- know it. Not everybody is a leader.
- Not everybody is outgoing and
- comfortable performing in public.
- There are lots of insecure (though
- maybe talented) people who just
- cannot put themselves on the line.
- It has nothing to do with laziness or
- meanness or unwillingness or lack of
- responsibility. Some of these people
- come to every meeting; all continue
- to pay their dues.
- And, in truth, everybody in the
- group has, when allowed and
- encouraged by the leadership,
- probably contributed in some
- continuous, if not significant ways.
- My own group - M.U.N.C.H. of
- Worcester, Mass. - is typical, I
- think, of most. We went from over
- 200 members to about 15 (5 or 6 of
- whom were active) to about 40 (a
- dozen of whom are active in one way
- or another). There are officers, of
- course. Our Treasurer (Jim Cox) was
- one of the founders and has continued
- to man that post and perform lots of
- others (including membership and
- newsletter editor at the present).
- Without him there'd be no club. Every
- club has a Jim Cox, someone with
- incredible dedication and common
- sense. All the rest of us have done
- different things: officers, editors,
- workshop demonstrators. Some have
- brought in friends; some have written
- programs; some have catalogued our
- libraries; some have repaired
- equipment; some have lugged in
- equipment or materials; some have
- helped with sales and fundraising and
- faires. All have paid their dues;
- most come to meetings, take part in
- raffles, appear interested in demos
- and workshops. All enjoy the company
- of fellow TIers, which has to be the
- most important aspect of a group.
- A lot of us lead some incredibly
- busy lives. One member flies all
- over the country and never knows when
- he'll be able to make a meeting. When
- he comes, though, he brings
- enthusiasm and knowledge which he so
- generously shares. Our chief BBSer
- who provides the club with many of
- the library and Disk of the Month
- goodies misses most meetings because
- of courses he's taking toward a
- degree. His sharing doesn't stop,
- though, as the boards, phones, and
- mail demonstrate. Then there are
- illnesses or family matters or all
- the other obstructions of life in
- this complex age. But we're still
- linked by newsletter, library, and
- common desire to keep a good thing
- going and growing.
- So our M.U.N.C.H. group is a
- success, as are lots of other groups
- who don't realize they are.
- If you still have an operating
- group; if you still put out a
- newsletter, share materials, meet
- regularly, enjoy some of the friends
- you've made through TI - then you
- have a successful group. The
- workload may not be equitable, but no
- situation in life ever is.
- For what it's worth, here are
- a few suggestions to get members
- reinvolved, revitalized:
- At the next club meeting find out
- the following:
- ^1) What kinds of newsletter does the
- club want (type-in programs, latest
- hard/software, reviews, club news,
- graphics, whatever)
- ^2) If everyone would be willing to
- contribute something to a raffle
- (blank disks, tapes, cables, non TI
- stuff even)
- ^3) If all members would dig through
- old disks and tapes and locate at
- least THREE programs they like (or
- liked back in the old days) to add to
- a giant club D.O.M. (games,
- utilities, kids' programs, LOGO
- stuff, tutorial text files,
- whatever)
- ^4) And maybe demo at least ONE????
- ^5) Hold a NOVICE NIGHT! This would
- be to introduce beginners, older
- kids, and definitely long-time TIers
- to the fun of writing in BASIC (or
- XB). I know there are thousands of
- TI users who became comfortable with
- their machines and have used them
- successfully for years and are now
- ready to learn to program or would
- take a refresher. All the old
- newsletters contain GREAT little
- tutorials, type-in programs, etc.
- Just what the doctor orders for a new
- boost in attitude. Maybe this would
- be a continuing thing with EVERYBODY
- who wants to getting involved in
- research, xeroxing, demoing,
- tutoring, whatever. But mostly
- sharing and helping. There are more
- of us amateurs out there (probably
- 1000 to 1) than wizards.
- In order to get reformed we need
- to remember the three Rs: Review,
- Rethink, Rekindle!
-
- [If you use NEW-AGE/99 please put
- me on your exchange list.]
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