Engagement Pathway

Everyday Change Makers

Service, Agency, and Civic Contribution

While the pathway applies across a wide range of historical, civic, and community contexts, it aligns strongly with lessons that emerged in the aftermath of September 11. In communities across the country, millions of people responded not because they were asked to become heroes, but because they recognized opportunities to help.

Elementary K-5 Middle School 6-8 High School 9-12 College and Civic Community Organizations Families

This pathway begins with a simple question

How can one person make a difference? Its long-term vision is to help participants spend a lifetime answering it.

About This Pathway

Making Your Mark on the World

Whether helping a neighbor, supporting a local organization, volunteering within a community, or leading a small initiative, participants recognize that contribution does not require authority, recognition, or extraordinary circumstances.

Participants understand the power that individuals have when it comes to shaping and supporting communities. They gain a new way of looking at helping others, solving problems, and contributing where they can. While historical examples provide inspiration, the ultimate goal is participation.

Foundational Premise

Within this model, change begins close to home and expands outward through relationships, communities, and acts of contribution. Small actions accumulate, and individual efforts inspire others. Participants come to view themselves as something more than observers to history: they are critical links in a long line of service, leadership, and contribution.

The Five Questions

A Framework for Everyday Action

01

What needs attention?

Notice
02

Why does it matter?

Care
03

What can I do?

Act
04

What did I learn?

Reflect
05

How can contribution become part of who I am?

Continue

Each question corresponds to one phase of the pathway. Together they form the complete arc, from awareness through lifelong civic participation.

How the Pathway Works

Five Phases of Engagement

The pathway moves through five phases. You may enter at any point depending on your context. Each phase activates a stage of the Active Remembrance engagement model.

Cross-Environment Adaptability

Works Across Every Audience

Elementary Schools

Students explore concepts such as kindness, helping others, community awareness, and everyday acts of service. Activities focus on identifying opportunities to contribute within classrooms, families, and local communities.

Middle Schools

Participants engage in service-learning projects, collaborative initiatives, peer leadership opportunities, and community engagement activities that encourage responsibility and teamwork.

High Schools

Students explore civic participation, volunteerism, leadership, public service, community partnerships, and larger questions surrounding responsibility, contribution, and social impact.

Colleges and Universities

Participants connect historical lessons and community engagement to leadership development, public service, civic responsibility, and professional growth.

Families and Youth Organizations

Families, youth groups, scouting organizations, faith communities, and after-school programs can use the pathway to encourage service, volunteerism, stewardship, and community engagement.

Community Organizations and Business

Organizations can adapt the pathway to support volunteer programs, leadership development initiatives, community partnerships, mentorship opportunities, and cultures of service.

Long-Term Vision

Notice, Care, Act, Reflect, and Continue.

By connecting historical lessons, community engagement, service, and personal responsibility, the pathway encourages participants to develop a lasting sense of agency and civic purpose. Participants learn that their actions matter, that communities are shaped by contribution, and that even small acts of service can create meaningful ripple effects.

The goal is to help participants see themselves as contributors. When people recognize their ability to positively influence the people and communities around them, they begin developing the habits, confidence, and responsibility necessary to create lasting impact.

Leadership is not always positional, service is not always visible, and change often begins with a single decision to help.

Related Curriculum

Lessons Connected to This Pathway

Individual lessons from the History, Response, and Legacy pillars connect directly to the themes explored in this pathway.

2D · Coming September 2026

Everyday Heroism

Connecting 9/11 heroism to local service, oral history, and community action.

4D · Coming September 2026

National Unity & Division

The unity that followed and the divisions that emerged over time.

5C · Coming September 2026

Leadership in Crisis

Decision-making under uncertainty for civic and workplace leaders.

Full Educator Guide

Download the Complete Pathway Document

The complete document contains full phase descriptions, activities for every audience type, all reflective questions, and cross-environment implementation guidance.

Free Download · PDF

Everyday Change Makers: Complete Guide

Full phase descriptions, audience-specific activities, reflective questions, and cross-environment adaptability notes. 9/11 Legacy Foundation, Active Remembrance Framework.

Download PDFComing Soon

We Remember So They Never Forget

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