Invitation to October 2013 International Dialogue Education Institute in Baltimore

This post was submitted by NCDD supporting member Michael Culliton of Global Learning Partners via the Add-to-Blog form.

NCDD folks, please Join us in Baltimore, MD, October 24-27, 2013, for the 2013 International Dialogue Education Institute!

The Institute is an intensive and engaging conference for educators, facilitators, coaches, consultants, trainers, and others from around the world who are interested in Learning & Change, and in Dialogue Education.

Highlights of the conference will include:

  • Plenary keynote session on the biology of learning with Dr. Jane Vella
  • Variety of 90-minute and 3-hour active sessions (you won’t be sitting and listening much!) on topics related to learning and change
  • Interactive poster gallery where you can showcase your own ideas, tips and tools related to learning and change

See our list of 19 reasons to consider attending.

The Institute is hosted by Global Learning Partners, Inc., an organization dedicated to using an approach called Dialogue Education to create effective learning and change in the world.

Registration for the Institute is $479 and covers all Institute materials; a Thursday evening reception with hearty hors d’ouevres; breakfast, lunch, and snacks all day on Friday and Saturday; and breakfast on Sunday morning. Dinner Friday and Saturday are on your own. Lodging is at the Marriott Waterfront, where you’ll get our discounted room rate of $185/night (a $300/night value).

World Cafe Learning Program offered via Fielding Graduate University

This announcement was submitted by NCDD supporting member Amy Lenzo of The World Cafe & weDialogue via the Add-to-Blog form.

A World Cafe Signature Learning Program, “Hosting World Cafe: The Fundamentals” is offered in association with Fielding Graduate University.

Providing a fundamental understanding of The World Café theory and method, this course applies the World Café design principles to bring forth the creative power of conversation and engage questions that matter. Participants will develop the capacity to use the World Café in their own lives and work, and gain a basic understanding of World Café hosting practices.

WorldCafe-logoDETAILS:

  • 8 weeks; 6 CEUs; 19 CCEUs
  • Cost: $750 US Early Bird Registration (before Sept 15); $800 after that (costs include all required reading materials in e-format)
  • Presented by Bo Gyllenpalm and Amy Lenzo

Learn more at www.theworldcafe.com/learning-fundamentals.html. Register at https://secure.fielding.edu/forms/WC-reg.htm (registration closes September 22nd).

The course will be delivered online in asynchronous learning forums, designed as World Cafe tables, with required opening and closing “real time” sessions on September 29th and November 17th.

Juanita Brown will be hosting a World Café for the class on November 10th, and video-enhanced study groups with David Isaacs and other senior World Cafe hosts will be held on October 5, 19th, 26th, and November 5th, from 9 – 10:30am Pacific Time.

Questions? Contact us via email: learning@theworldcafe.com.

Group Facilitation Skills workshop with Sarah Fisk

The Community at Work course, “Group Facilitation Skills: Putting Participatory Values into Practice” is being offered both October 1-3 and December 10-12, 2013. The course is taught by Sarah Fisk, PhD, and will be administered at Community At Work in San Francisco. NCDD members receive a 25% discount.

COURSE SYNOPSIS
This course teaches participants how to put participatory values into practice. Skill building is emphasized, with practice sessions in the following areas: stand-up skills; group-oriented listening skills; brainstorming technique; tools for prioritizing long lists; facilitating open discussions, breaking into small groups; using structured go-arounds; understanding and working with group norms; handling conflict respectfully; consensus-building technique; dealing with difficult dynamics; goal setting;agenda design; and procedures for making final decisions. Participants are exposed to more than 200 tools and techniques. Everyone receives a copy of the Facilitator’s Guide to Participatory Decision-Making.

FOR A COURSE OVERVIEW
Go to www.CommunityAtWork.com/groupfac1.html

ABOUT THE WORKSHOP LEADER
Sarah Fisk, PhD, is a nationally-known specialist in group facilitation and collaboration. She is a co-author of the internationally acclaimed Facilitator’s Guide to Participatory Decision-Making. Sarah has been a featured speaker at the annual conferences of the International Association of Facilitators and the National Organization Development Network, and she holds an adjunct professorship at the California Institute of Integral Studies. Sarah’s corporate clients have included Hewlett-Packard, Charles Schwab & Company, Symantec, and many other Fortune 500 Companies. Her public sector clients have included the City of Edmonton Canada, Special Olympics and March of Dimes. Since 1996 Sarah has been a senior consultant with Community At Work, a San Francisco-based consulting firm that specializes in designing and facilitating participatory approaches to solving complex problems.

MORE INFORMATION
Contact Duane Berger: duane@CommunityAtWork.com or 415-282-9876

New Training: Integrating Collab Tech for Public Participation

This post was submitted by Jason Gershowitz of Kearns & West, and NCDD organizational members, via out Add-to-Blog form.

KearnsAndWest_logoKearns & West is pleased to announce Integrating Collaborative Technologies into Public Participation: a one-day training on September 22 in collaboration with the International Association for Public Participation’s 2013 North America Conference in Salt Lake City, UT.

Participants will learn approaches for integrating collaborative technologies into public participation initiatives. Technologies will be applied in a hands-on format to varying levels of public engagement: Inform, Consult, Involve,
Collaborate, and Empower.

Register for the Training for $325 at http://tinyurl.com/CTTraining

For more info about Kearns & West’s Collaborative Technology services and training opportunities contact Jason Gershowitz, Collaborative Technology Associate at Kearns & West, at 202.448.8781 or jgershowitz@kearnswest.com.

Leading Engagement: Involving People in the Decisions that Affect Them

This post was submitted by NCDD supporting member Tuesday Ryan Heart of Confluence Unlimited via the Add-to-Blog form.

Join us in Chicago, Sept 30-Oct 2 for an Art of Hosting on developing strategy and methods for designing and hosting meaningful engagement. The tools and know how for meaningful and productive engagement are now available in the fields of dialogue, social media and design. The combination of these disciplines and tools enable us to genuinely integrate those who are most affected in the design and delivery of services, systems, strategies, products, plans, infrastructure and more.

AoH-logo

Learn how other communities ignite civic engagement and create meaningful stakeholder and public dialogue on tough issues. Find more effective ways to engage people in shaping the future that affects them.

Come if you want to …..

  • Practice using and hosting a set of simple, yet powerful conversational process for thinking together, such as Circle, Appreciative Inquiry, World Cafe, Open Space and Pro-action Cafe.
  • Explore how to build relationships of trust and reconsider the meaning and uses of power
  • Enhance your design and facilitation skills
  • Move beyond ‘planning a meeting’ to developing multi-step engagement processes, including diverse methods to effectively capture and use community input.
  • Hear and share success stories and put learning to work on real life concerns.

For more information, visit http://tinyurl.com/k573u78. For inquiries, contact Lina Cramer, Wisdom Exchange, at 847-530-6779 or lina.c.cramer@gmail.com.

You can learn more about the Art of Hosting at www.artofhosting.org.

Design dialogue, facilitate on your feet: Public Conversations’ Fall 2013 Trainings

Facilitate your meetings through the rough spots. Engage conflict constructively in your community or organization. Gain the skills and tools you need with one of the Public Conversations Project’s upcoming trainings.

Discounts for early bird registrants, NCDD members, and folks who bring a friend. Continuing Education credits available through NBCC and MAMFT.

Facilitating with Purpose and Poise—Even When Things Get Hot
October 8-9, 2013, Watertown, MA

Anyone who leads meetings can be thrown off balance when difficult moments arise. The difficulty might be an unexpected tense moment among group members, or it may come in the form of a challenge to your legitimacy. In either case, you can learn to prevent an intense “deer in the headlight” moment and instead act calmly and intentionally.

Whether you’re a civic or religious leader, trainer, committee chair, organizer, manager, or facilitator of any kind, you will benefit from a conceptual framework for thinking on your feet and the opportunity to apply that framework as you practice “staying grounded.” This highly interactive training provides both. Learn more and register.

Regular Fee: $300
Bring-a-friend discount (20% off each): $240
Early Bird Special (ends September 1): $250
NCDD dues-paying members & NAFCM members (15% off): $255

Please register by September 22.

The Power of Dialogue: Constructive Conversations on Divisive Issues
November 7-9, 2013, Watertown, MA

Do you work with groups challenged by deep differences? Do you need new ways to help them engage? Develop your dialogue design and facilitation skills with The Power of Dialogue. Our signature training offers a deep exploration of Reflective Structured Dialogue, an intentional communication process for reducing threat and fostering mutual understanding across lines of deep difference. Through immersion in an intensive case simulation, participants will learn about the dynamics of polarization and conflict, and explore modes of communication that increase understanding, re-humanize opponents and shift relationships. Learn more and register.

Regular fee: $450-700 (sliding scale)
Bring-a-friend discount (20% off each): $360
Early Bird Special (ends September 29): $375
NCDD dues-paying members & NAFCM members (15% off): $382

Please register by October 20.

Questions? Contact Amy at 617-923-1216 x27 or training@publicconversations.org. We hope to see you there!

Posted by Chloe Kanas of the Public Conversations Project via the Add-to-Blog form at www.ncdd.org/submit.

Announcing the Successful Communities Contest & Conference Call

CM_logo-200pxWe are pleased (and somewhat saddened) to announce the last conference call in the three-part capacity building series being hosted by our partners at CommunityMatters and the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design. This final call, titled “Secrets of Successful Communities”, is coming up on Thursday, August 22nd from 3-4pm EST and will feature CIRD’s own Ed McMahon:

Last year Barbara Walters asked four billionaires for their Top 20 Secrets of Success. The #2 secret? “Always be True to Yourself.” It turns out that applies to communities, too. Join national thought leader Ed McMahon of the Urban Land Institute for an inspirational conversation: Ed will share this and other secrets of successful communities that he has gleaned over the course of decades working in towns across the country.

We encourage all NCDD members to register here to participate in the call.

This call is all the more exciting because it is the feature of the first CommunityMatters Listening Party! Participants are being encouraged to organize groups to listen in on the conference call and use CM’s discussion guide to facilitate conversations about how to use the knowledge gained from the conference call in their own communities.

Listening party organizers will also be entered to win  the first Successful Communities Contest! The contest will award four $500 prizes to listening party groups that submit a plan for taking action that comes out of the call. More details on the contest are available here.

You can find out more details about the call, listening parties, and how to enter the contest at the CommunityMatters page here: www.communitymatters.org/event/secrets-successful-communities. Good luck in the contest, and we’ll look forward to “seeing” you all on the call!

Looking to find common ground and get the whole system in the room

Please join the Future Search Network this December 9-11, 2013 and take advantage of your NCDD 25% discount!

FutureSearch-logoManaging A Future Search Workshop with Sandra Janoff is for facilitators, leaders, managers or anyone who wants to learn how applying Future Search principles enables a community, group, company, unit or organization to transform its capability for action. Participants will acquire the tools needed to organize and manage Future Search conferences with integrity in any sector or culture.

The workshop is built around a simulated Future Search. The simulation is planned by the participants as part of the learning design. The whole group then has a basis for a shared experience with the techniques for building community, developing a mutual world view, creating desired futures, finding common ground, expanding the range of choices, and moving into action. Included are interactive sessions on theory, history, planning, facilitation and follow-up. $1695. SPECIAL NCDD OFFER — save 25% off!

People have come from Africa, Asia, Australia, Canada, the Caribbean, Europe, India, South America and the United States to attend this workshop. Participants from every sector, public and private, have gone on to stimulate positive social, technological and economic cooperation around the globe. The workshop goal is to give participants the tools, insights and support to manage successful Future Searches.

Learn more here or register today at https://www.futuresearch.net/frms/workshop/signup1.cfm.

Call Jennifer Neumer at 215-951-0328 or 800-951-6333 with any questions or to register over the phone. You can also email Jennifer at fsn@futuresearch.net.

Time to register for the 2013-2014 DDPE Certificate Program

It’s time to sign up for the next cycle of the award winning Dialogue, Deliberation, and Public Engagement Certificate Program. Kansas State University’s DDPE program is a transformative professional development program focused on making wise choices for engagement.

DDPE-logoNCDD is a ‘Collaborator’ of the program, and NCDD supporting members enjoy a 10% discount on program fees. Please note that information calls on the program are scheduled for today at 6pm Central, August 8 at 10am Central, August 22 at 6pm Central, September 4 at 10am Central and September 12 at 5pm Central.

This year’s cycle begins September 23rd. Learn more about the course offerings and costs here. NCDD strongly encourages our members to enroll.  It’s a great way to deepen your practice and gain some credentials in this work. The program’s faculty is an amazing group of leaders: Keith Melville, Hal Saunders, John Dedrick, Phil Stewart, Linda Blong, Jan Elliot, and Lyn Carson. Making connections with this group of superstars is worth the cost of enrollment!

This distinctive program focuses on developing mastery in making wise choices for bringing dialogue, deliberation, and engagement into situations where they are most effective. Through DDPE, we invite you to:

  • Work with proven frameworks for selecting and adapting effective processes.
  • Develop new skills for designing and facilitating meetings and whole initiatives.
  • Ground your work in the foundational underpinnings of dialogue and deliberation.
  • Deepen and broaden your knowledge of the diverse ways of working in this field.
  • Learn through collaborative reflective practice that impacts your work in the world.
  • Focus on effective action and the questions that are most pressing for your work.

The 20-week DDPE certificate program is composed of four component courses: Two involve learning at a distance (online and on the phone), and the other two are face-to-face workshops.

Designed and delivered in collaboration with the International Institute for Sustained Dialogue, the Kettering Foundation, and the Public Dialogue Consortium, the DDPE program is led by an outstanding faculty of scholar-practitioners who have played key roles in developing this field. It also features widely recognized guest scholar-practitioners who join us on the phone, and we are proud to partner with the National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation and other organizations that lead the field.

To learn more, go to www.dce.k-state.edu/conf/dialogue/

A couple of recent comments from DDPE alums:

“DDPE was one of the most valuable professional development programs I have experienced, and it was pivotal in grounding my work as I launched my own business as an engagement practitioner.”

Diane Miller President, Civic Collaboration and Board Member, National Coalition for Dialogue and Deliberation

“Out in real world, my DDPE certificate is one of the most valuable tools I have.”

Dr. Kathy Armijo Etre Vice President of Community Health, St. Vincent Regional Medical Center

Tuition and Registration Information

Costs and package discounts: www.dce.k-state.edu/conf/dialogue/programcosts

Register Online: www.dce.k-state.edu/conf/dialogue/registration

Upcoming Conference Call on Community Vision and Values

CM_logo-200pxWe are excited to once again invite you all to join us for a free conference call being hosted by our partners at CommunityMatters and the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design this Thursday, July 25th from 3:00 to 4:00 pm Eastern Time.  This second call in the three-part capacity building series will feature David Hohenschau of the Orton Family Foundation and Peter Flinker of Dodson & Flinker Landscape Architecture and Planning who will share their knowledge and experience around the call’s theme, “Designing for the Vision and Values of Your Community.”

If you want your project to truly succeed, it must reflect the vision and values of the community. But that’s easier said than done. Join this call to confirm and deepen your understanding of a community’s vision and values, learn how to use that understanding to inform design projects and a range of issues facing communities today, and hear strategies from folks who have succeeded in designing for the vision and values of their community.

Register for the call here, and be sure to mark your calendars for Thursday evening.

For more background on this installment of the call series, you can check out the CommunityMatters blog post here or read the post below.  Don’t miss this great opportunity to strengthen your skills and learn from the experience of these knowledgeable guests!


The Values Behind a Vision

Let’s say your community was recently hit by a hurricane, a drought, or a tornado. Your downtown is devastated and it’s time to plan for recovery. That’s the challenge ahead of Live Oak, Florida, a community hit last year by Hurricane Debby and recently selected to host a 2013 Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design (CIRD) Workshop. But what do you demolish and what do you rebuild? Where do you even begin?

Or say your historic town is in danger of losing local businesses and its sense of place in the face of generic strip development. Lima, New York – another 2013 CIRD host community – is struggling with exactly that issue. How do you take a stand and help your small town survive? How do you create a vibrant and economically resilient future?

These stories are compelling, but not unique. Communities of all sizes face similar challenges and are working to craft futures that build on their strengths and assets. Towns in these situations often start with a visioning process. You pull people together, brainstorm about what you would like your community to look like in 10, 20, or even 50 years, and wait for change to happen.

A community vision is an important starting point, but is seldom enough to begin the transformation process. Broad goals like “building a strong future,” which is hard to argue with, can mean different things to different people. That becomes a problem when you are trying to use a vision to make specific planning or design choices. (How does a goal of building a “strong future” help you make a decision on where to put a park or how to design a block? Anyone?)

Visions are strongest when they reflect what people care most about in their towns – specific and widely-shared community values. A values-based vision is the foundation for a thriving community. It spells out who your community is and what it wants to be. Values are often initially captured in broad themes – “small town feel,” “rural character,” or “strong local economy.” But it’s the definition of these broad themes that allows you to make tangible decisions about the future of your community – from park design to downtown revitalization to disaster resilience.

You have to ask, how does a particular community value show up in my town? Or how could it show up? Think about “small town feel.” Is that value driven by a certain type of architecture? By neighbors getting to know each other? By the ability to walk places, the placement of front porches, or the number of street trees? The answer varies in every community. But by drilling down into the things that matter most to your community’s residents, it’s possible to clearly articulate values that are broadly understood and shared. They can then be used to drive clear policies and funding and design decisions that lead to collectively desired results.

Discovering values and vision isn’t just about decision-making. Knowing what your community is (and is not) is also critical to economic vibrancy. Towns across the U.S. are discovering that their prosperity rests in their distinctive character. This character can only be understood when a community takes the time to know itself.

No one said it’s easy, but David Hohenschau, a community designer and planner at the Orton Family Foundation, can give you a good roadmap to getting started. On this month’s CommunityMatters conference call, Dave will walk through the nuts and bolts of how to create a values-based vision. We’ll also hear from Peter Flinker, Principal of Dodson & Flinker Landscape Architects and Planning, who will share examples of how communities have successfully applied their visions to specific planning and design projects.

Join us for this month’s CommunityMatters conference call, hosted in partnership with CIRD, and learn more about how to develop or deepen a strong values-based approach and use it help your town pick up, move forward, and yes, even build a strong future.

This call is the second in a three-part series co-hosted by CommunityMatters and the Citizens’ Institute on Rural Design (CIRD). The series is designed to help people in any community working on a design or planning project get the skills to succeed and the inspiration to get started.O

Original blog post can be found at www.communitymatters.org/blog/values-behind-vision.

Registration page can be found at www.orton.org/civicrm/event/register?reset=1&id=68.