Taking Stock with the NCDD Board of Directors

Hello, NCDDers!

The new year is always a great time to take stock of where we are and to think about how we want to move forward. The NCDD Board of Directors will be meeting next month (along with program director Courtney Breese and I) to Small NCDD logodo just that, but since we are a member-driven network, we want to make sure our conversation is firmly grounded in what is important and emerging for you – our members. To that end, we would appreciate your taking just a few minutes to give us your thoughts and observations on how things look from where you sit!

From your perspective, what is going on in the field that the NCDD Board should know about?

Use the following questions to help you think about your answer and then tell us in any format that will help us get your point. In addition to adding comments to this post, you can email me at sandy@ncdd.org with your contributions for the Board.

  • What are you focusing on in your current work?
  • What has been happening that you might want to celebrate?
  • What seem to be the key challenges in your work or in the field? Emerging opportunities? Why?
  • Given what you see on the horizon, what resources, tools, utilities, connections, etc. might we create together in the next year to help us all overcome our biggest challenges and realize our most exciting opportunities?

Thank you so much, and happy 2016!

Sandy, Courtney, and the NCDD Board of Directors

Barbara Simonetti, Board Chair
John Backman
Martín Carcasson
Susan Stuart Clark
Marla Crockett
Diane Miller

Sign Up for December’s Tech Tuesday on Common Ground for Action

Registration is now open for December’s Tech Tuesday event featuring Common Ground for Action. Join us for this FREE event Tuesday, December 1st from 2:00-3:00pm Eastern/11:00am-12:00pm Pacific.

NIFI-CGA_Branded_LogoIn 2013, Kettering Foundation and the National Issues Forums collaborated with Conteneo, the developer of the San Jose Budget Games, to produce a platform that could allow truly deliberative online public forums. The result is Common Ground for Action, a simple, intuitive tool that allows participants to examine options for dealing with the problem, weigh tradeoffs, and find common ground, with beautiful visuals that let you actually see the shape of your conversation as it evolves. And because CGA works in any browser, there’s nothing to download, nothing to update – no technical mumbo jumbo.

CGA works not only for National Issues Forums issue guides, but also for localized adaptations of those guides, or in fact, any deliberative framework on any wicked problem.

On this call we will be joined by NCDD Members Amy Lee from the Kettering Foundation and Luke Hohmann from Conteneo, who will tell us more about how this tool was developed and demonstrate how it works. Amy will also tell us more about the current schedule of forums, and how you or your organization can utilize this FREE tool!

Don’t miss out on this opportunity – register today!

Tech_Tuesday_BadgeTech Tuesdays are a series of learning events from NCDD focused on technology for engagement. These 1-hour events are designed to help dialogue and deliberation practitioners get a better sense of the online engagement landscape and how they can take advantage of the myriad opportunities available to them. You do not have to be a member of NCDD to participate in our Tech Tuesday learning events.

 

More about Common Ground for Action…

CGA can be helpful for any conversation where you need:

  • the ability to convene people from diverse locations
  • the ability to convene people who may not be able or willing to participate
    in-person
  • the ability to let people talk together about an issue
  • visuals showing the group’s evolution in judgment
  • an easy-to-analyze record of the entire forum.

Other important facts about CGA:

  • It’s free!
  • It’s easy to become a moderator – 2 simple online sessions!
  • It can be used to augment in-person deliberations as well.

Confab Call Launches Nevins Democracy Leaders Program Partnership – Apply Today!

Wow. Our NCDD team was blown away by the amazing response from the field to the announcement we recently made about the launch of our partnership with the McCourtney Institute for Democracy‘s new Nevins Democracy Leaders Program and the Confab Call we hosted on Wednesday to educate organizational leaders on how they can apply to host a Nevins Fellow. We had nearly 70 registrants for the call, including some of D&D’s leading organizations, and the excitement on the call for what this program can do for the field was palpable.

Mccourtney Institute LogoIn case you didn’t hear about it, this week’s Confab Call featured a presentation from NCDD member John Gastil on the brand new Penn State program that will serve to place D&D-trained students into funded fellowship positions with organizations focused on D&D, transpartisan dialogue, and civic renewal. We had a lively conversation, and John shared tons of helpful info and background about this amazing opportunity to support our field while developing the next generation of its leaders.

If you couldn’t join us for the Confab Call conversation, we strongly encourage you to listen to the recording of the call to learn more about the program and how to apply.

After the call, NCDD Sustaining Member David Nevins – whose gift to the McCourtney Institute has endowed the program – shared some of his reflections on last summer’s pilot fellowships and his excitement about the full launch of the Nevins Democracy Leaders Program:

My vision of the program was very much based on the symbiotic relationship between the Fellow and the organizations that the Fellows engage with…  The letters I received from [last summer’s first two Nevins Fellows] in which they said things like “this summer changed my life” or “thank you for allowing me the opportunity to gain real world experience in deliberative democracy and trans-partisan politics” shows that experiences were rewarding and perhaps even life changing for the interns.

Thus my goal of a relationship equally as valuable to all parties involved seems to have been achieved. I could not ask for more in these early stages of the program, and I am confident that with each additional experience the program will blossom beyond my initial expectations.

We at NCDD share David’s confidence for the future of this great effort and are proud to be part of this transformative work.

If you are in leadership with an organization that would benefit from working with a Nevins Fellow, we encourage you to submit an application today! Please note that for priority consideration in the next round of fellowship matches, you must apply before the end of the day on Monday, November 2nd. Applications received after Nov. 2nd will still be considered, but may be put on the wait list for the next round of fellowship matches. We’ve already received over 20 applications, and competition for fellowship placements is going to be stiff, Confab bubble imageso make sure to apply ASAP!

To learn more about NCDD Confab Calls and find recordings from past presentations, visit www.ncdd.org/events/confabs.

Get 20% Off NCDD Membership & Renewal During Membership Drive!

Hi, everybody!  To round out our summer membership drive, we wanted to offer a special incentive for any of you XS Purple NCDD logowho have not yet renewed or upgraded your membership.

For the rest of the week, you can save 20% on all membership types and upgrades by entering “SUMMER-DRIVE” in the discount field in any of these three forms:

You can even renew for two years with the discount!

As always, you can look yourself up in the member directory at www.ncdd.org/directory to see what your member type is (“Member” means you’re non-dues, so please upgrade to Supporting Membership today!), and what your renewal due date is (if it is in the past, you’re lapsed, so it’s time to renew for sure!).  Or just send an email to office manager extraordinaire Joy Garman, at joy@ncdd.org, and she’ll let you know your status.

IMG_2123We know you appreciate the work NCDD does, and many of you are already supporting, sustaining, and organizational members.  But for those who aren’t, please consider upgrading or renewing this week.  Your support means the world to us, and helps us continue serving this amazing community.

Feel free to encourage other friends and colleagues to join NCDD this week using the SUMMER-DRIVE code – anyone can use it.

And as always, thank you for investing in the future of NCDD!

A Time of Transition for NCDD

It has been a crazy summer — a crazy year so far, really — for me and for NCDD. Those of you who are connected to me on Facebook or who have seen me at events likely know what’s been going on. But this is an overdue update to the whole network.

Sandy and Andy picAs many of you know, NCDD was co-founded in 2002 (13 years ago now!) by me and Andy Fluke. The vision for NCDD was primarily mine, but Andy’s skills in website and graphic design were critical to the organization’s success. Back in 2002, everything we did to initially build this largely virtual network, from online survey creation to listserv maintenance to website design, required a very specialized skill set we wouldn’t have had the budget to acquire. Andy and my partnership and perseverance were what made NCDD possible.

Back in November of last year, Andy and I decided to get a divorce. We hoped for a while that he would be able to continue having a key role in the organization (publication design primarily, as he wanted to have someone else manage the website), but as we announced in April, it ended up being best for everybody for Andy to move on to other opportunities.

IntroGuide-CoverThis wasn’t an easy transition for any of us, or for the organization, but we managed — and pretty darn well, all things considered! Andy and I are amicable (indeed, I can now honestly say we are friends), and we are still working with him to finish up a project or two. Check out the gorgeous new pamphlet we created this summer! (pictured at right)

Andy is now pursuing his own projects related to dialogue and deliberation, and we plan to help him share those projects with the network.  He will also, always, be recognized as Co-Founder of NCDD.

In May, Andy moved from our house in Boiling Springs, PA to nearby Mechanicsburg, PA.  In June, I moved myself to Boston (I found a great place in Belmont, right outside of Cambridge).  I chose Boston because I wanted to be surrounded by NCDD members, and we have hundreds in the Boston area.  I also planned to co-locate NCDD with one of our founding members, the Public Conversations Project (PCP).  It turns out that PCP has decided to sell its two buildings in Watertown, MA and move to a new space in Cambridge or Boston, so for now I’m still working out of a home office.

We’re all hoping that PCP’s new space will be conducive for me to work out of as well. In the meantime, I have options. One of the NCDD members I’ve been spending a lot of time with since moving here is Frances Moore Lappe (author of Diet for a Small Planet and 17 other books, and founder of the Small Planet Institute). Frankie, it turns out, lives just a few blocks from me. And she and her partner Dick have kindly offered me daytime use of the writing cottage Dick built for her. It seems Boston is full of this kind of serendipity!

Frankie, for those who don’t know, gave me my first job in this field — hiring me as an intern at her organization the Center for Living Democracy in Brattleboro, Vermont. For my internship, which was also part of my Master’s program at SIT Graduate Institute, I interviewed 75 leaders of race dialogue programs across the country. It was these interviews that made me realize how disconnected these amazing facilitators were from one another, and how much of a difference it would make to their work to have more access to each other and each other’s resources and know-how.

Sandy-soloMy transition out of a long-term business partnership and marriage, and into a new life in Boston on my own has been complicated, emotional, amazing and challenging. It has been filled to the brim with new people, new experiences, an unprecedented reliance on my network of friends and colleagues for support, and yet a new sense of being completely on my own.

There is still so much that remains to do. But NCDD has stayed strong and resilient through all of this — in large part due to our amazing staff.

We are a small but mighty staff of five, plus some additional contractors. I want to recognize our core staff in this post, because these very special individuals have kept NCDD running seamlessly, and in fact kept it growing and thriving, during Andy and my transition.  I cannot tell you how grateful I am to these people.

Courtney Breese, Program Director (based in San Francisco)

Courtney-profile2-borderCourtney directs NCDD’s ongoing programming for our network (Confabs, Tech Tuesdays, and more) and manages numerous NCDD projects and contracts. Courtney has been involved with NCDD for years, co-leading the Boston regional event in 2010, serving as Conference Manager for the 2012 and 2014 national conferences and serving as a member of NCDD’s Board of Directors before transitioning to the staff. She is a trainer, mediator, and facilitator with extensive experience in the National Issues Forums framework. When she isn’t working with NCDD, Courtney also works part-time with the Massachusetts Office of Public Collaboration, where she works on training projects and manages a mediation program. Courtney can be contacted at courtney [at] ncdd [dot] org. More about Courtney.

Joy Garman, Office Manager (based in Boiling Springs, PA)

JoyGPic2014NCDD has grown from a Coalition of 50 in late 2002 to a Coalition of more than 2,200 members and 35,000 subscribers. Processing new members and renewals, coordinating and managing our database, member directory and listservs, and managing our financial records are critically important to NCDD’s effectiveness, and Joy has managed all of these things swimmingly since early 2006. Joy can be contacted at joy [at] ncdd [dot] org. More about Joy.

Roshan Bliss, Blog Curator (based in Denver)

RoshanPic2014Roshan Bliss is an inclusiveness trainer and group process facilitator who began working with NCDD when he stepped up to serve as volunteer coordinator for our 2012 national conference in Seattle. We enjoyed working with Roshan so much that we asked him to serve as our Blog Curator starting in 2013, helping us all stay up-to-the-moment on the most interesting and vital goings-on in our growing field. His work outside of NCDD (and sometimes with NCDD) focuses on increasing the involvement of youth and students in public conversations. Roshan can be reached at roshan [at] ncdd [dot] org. Learn more about Roshan.

Keiva Hummel, Resource Curator (based in San Francisco)

Keiva-profile-borderKeiva Hummel serves as NCDD’s Resource Curator, managing content in our well-loved Resource Center and working with Sandy, Courtney and Roshan on NCDD’s social media. Keiva also serves as Social Media Coordinator for Public Dialogue Consortium. We fell in love with Keiva when she stood out as an extraordinary volunteer at our 2014 conference. She graduated cum laude from San Francisco State University with a B.A. in Communication Studies, Minor in Global Peace, Human Rights and Justice Studies, and a Certificate in Conflict Resolution Studies. Keiva can be contacted at keiva [at] ncdd [dot] org. More about Keiva.

I am also indebted to our amazing Board of Directors, led by our chair Barb Simonetti. They (including Marla Crockett, Diane Miller, Martin Carcasson, John Backman, and Susan Stuart Clark) have worked tirelessly to ensure the organization came out of this transition with a strong footing — and yet managed to be as patient as possible with me. And I am grateful to my friends and colleagues at the Kettering Foundation (where I also serve as a Research Deputy), who have helped me through this transition in more ways than they know.

Others of you (you know who you are!) have been sources of regular support and encouragement on Facebook, via phone calls, and otherwise. And some of you are supporting and helping Andy through his transition, and I am also very grateful to you for that.

Originally, this post was going to be an announcement about NCDD’s (my) move to Boston, and an appeal for our membership drive. But I found it difficult to announce the move without explaining the full picture. NCDD has always been a transparent, open organization, and it feels right to share the whole story — especially since many have seen NCDD as a “mom and pop” operation, and that is changing.

That said, we do still need your support to remain a strong, resilient organization. If you are a non-dues member or not yet a member at all, would you please consider joining at www.ncdd.org/join or upgrading at www.ncdd.org/renew? Individual membership is only $75/year, and organizational membership dues are $200.

You can easily search for yourself in the members directory at www.ncdd.org/directory to see if your dues have lapsed or if you’re a non-dues “Member” (rather than a Supporting Member or Sustaining Member) who could show your support by upgrading. Or you can send a quick email to joy@ncdd.org to have her check on your status.

More than ever, I feel like NCDD is a strong, growing, resilient organization. With more than 2,200 members, 35,000 subscribers and 3,000 online resources, we have a lot to offer the incredible people and organizations we serve. Your support means a great deal to us, and I hope this update helps you feel more informed about where the organization is at right now.

Joy is receiving NCDD’s mail at our fairly new post office box back in Boiling Springs: P.O. Box 150, Boiling Springs, PA 17007.  I am receiving mail at my new place at 13 Bright Road, Belmont, MA 02478. You can email me at sandy@ncdd.org, but right now, Facebook messages reach me more effectively because there are so many fewer of them!

Thank you to those who made it to the end of this long note. I hope you had a great summer, and are gearing up for a productive fall.

Public Conversations Project Founder: “Invest in NCDD”

Please take a minute to read this wonderful letter from Laura Chasin – founder of one of our long-standing members, the Public Conversations Project – endorsing the value of an NCDD membership. As we’ve recently mentioned, NCDD is in the midst of an important membership drive. If you are a non-dues member of NCDD, if your dues have lapsed, or if you’re not a member at all, we hope this letter encourages you to support our work!
We encourage you to look yourself up in the NCDD member directory at to find out your membership and dues status and join or renew today!


PCP Founder and D&D Leader Laura Chasin

Hello NCDD Community,

I am an extremely grateful to NCDD for its having been central to my professional life and critical to the work of numerous esteemed colleagues.

As the founder of the Public Conversation Project, I’ve derived ever-increasing benefits from my involvement with NCDD since it began. Sandy Heierbacher’s high-energy, deft, walk-the-talk leadership has fostered unusual loyalty and exceptional growth. NCDD conferences are highly relevant and stimulating; the resources and the exchanges accessible through its website are amazing in size and scope, and the diverse colleagues I meet through NCDD venues keep putting my work in valuable contemporary perspective.

In addition, NCDD has made Public Conversations’ work more visible across the US and abroad. My colleagues and I are particularly excited that NCDD will likely soon be housed with us here in Boston.

Speaking as a citizen, I experience NCDD as a nodal point in a growing, largely under-the-radar, multi-silo network of antidotes to the polarization and cynicism that haunt and hobble US politics and civil society. Knowing that I am doing my bit to help this vital coalition reach its full potential helps me to remain hopeful on days that the headlines would otherwise tempt me to despair.

I hope you’ll join with me in investing in NCDD’s future by becoming a dues-paying member today

In grateful solidarity,

Laura Chasin

It’s a Great Time to Join NCDD

The NCDD Board of Directors is reaching out to the NCDD community with the following message…

There is so much to talk about in America – gun violence, racism, healthcare, climate change, same sex marriage, voting rights, the shrinking middle class, presidential campaigns. Now more than ever, Americans need to be able to talk and act together to solve our most pressing problems.

NCDD plays a unique and important role in supporting and accelerating the work of practitioners and the public in building democratic capacity. Our strength and ongoing success depends on the active involvement and support of our members. We hope you will take a moment today to join NCDD, and if already a member, increase your show of support by becoming a dues-paying member.

GroupWithBubbles-600px

Here’s a taste of the meaningful work NCDD is currently doing:

  • Convening meetings across the country bringing together NCDD members with staff members of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Community Relations Service
  • Hosting regular “Confab Calls” and “Tech Tuesdays” to help NCDD members stay current with the latest innovations in our rapidly growing field
  • Curating our field’s most important news and resources on our rich website
  • Developing an innovative leadership program in partnership with Penn State that matches students with deliberative democracy organizations for valuable fellowships

By becoming an NCDD Member, you’re not only expressing your support for the value NCDD offers you, but for our collective work in fostering a living, thriving democracy. Everyone who joins is entitled to the benefits of membership, and those who pay dues are eligible for additional benefits.

Here are some actions you can take:

  • If you’re not already a member, please join!
  • If your membership dues have lapsed, please renew and get your dues up-to-date. Check on our Member Map & Directory to see the status of your membership.
  • If you previously joined as a non-dues member, consider upgrading to Supporting Member status for $75.
  • If you’d like to increase your support, please become a Sustaining Member for $150.
  • If you’d like to make a donation to NCDD, you can do that too (we are a 501c3 after all!).

In these challenging, exciting and unpredictable times, we are more committed than ever to help increase the practice of democratic skills that will benefit us all. We need each one of you to help make that possible. Please take a few moments today to add your support.

Thank you!

Sincerely,

The NCDD Board of Directors

Barbara Simonetti, Chair
Marla Crockett, Immediate Past Chair
John Backman, Treasurer
Diane Miller, Secretary
Martin Carcasson
Susan Stuart Clark

An Update on the NCDD-CRS Meetings

As many of you know, NCDD has been working with the U.S. Department of Justice’s Community Relations Service since last October’s NCDD national conference, to organize meetings between NCDD members and CRS staff at their fourteen regional field offices. This was inspired, in part, by CRS director Grande Lum’s speech at the conference.

We wanted to let the network know that meetings have begun taking place in several cities over the past few months, and more are in the works!

GrandeLum-NextStepBubble-borderThese meetings are an exciting opportunity to start a productive relationship with staff of an important government agency based in your area. They are also providing the supporting NCDD members who attend with an opportunity to talk about how we can be more responsive during times of crisis that call for dialogue, and to build relationships that strengthen our ability to respond. See our November 6th blog post at www.ncdd.org/16724 for more information on CRS and our initial plans for these meetings.

Meetings took place this past winter and spring in Boston, Chicago, Detroit, New York, and Seattle, where our members came together with CRS staff to learn more about one another’s work and discuss opportunities to collaborate and support each other. Some exciting ideas have emerged from these initial discussions, including:

  • Supporting CRS and NCDD members alike by inviting one another to trainings
  • Sharing resources, including facilitators and mediators, and making referrals from CRS to NCDD members, and vice versa
  • Involving one another in regional networking
  • Working together on initiatives, such as CRS’ Student Problem Identification & Resolution of Issues Together (SPIRIT), or building a community responders network in members’ communities

NCDD members have reported back that they learned a lot about CRS and the kind of work that they do in communities in their region, and that CRS staff and NCDD members alike were very eager to explore ways to support one another and possibilities for working together. These initial meetings were just that – the start of what we hope will be a growing relationship between CRS staff and our members in their respective regions.

Meetings are still being planned this summer and in early fall for the following cities: Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, Philadelphia, and San Francisco. All NCDD 2014 attendees and supporting members of NCDD whose dues are in good standing are welcome to attend. If you would like to attend one of these upcoming meetings, please send an email to NCDD’s program director, Courtney Breese, at courtney@ncdd.org.CRS-offices

Many thanks to the NCDD members who have stepped up to serve as lead contacts in each of the cities where a meeting is being held. We couldn’t pull this off without their help! Lead contacts for the meetings that already took place were: Nicole Hewitt & Susan Shelton (New York), Elizabeth Hudson (Detroit), Kathryn Hyten (Boston), John Inman (Seattle), and Janice Thomson (Chicago). Our most heartfelt thanks for their help in organizing these meetings.

We are beyond thrilled with the next steps coming out of the meetings held to date, and look forward to engaging more of our members with CRS staff in their region. If you have any additional thoughts about how NCDD members might collaborate with CRS, please share them with us in the comments below. NCDD will share these ideas with the CRS staff and local members in each region as they continue to explore possibilities for these budding connections.

A Resounding “Thank You” to Andy Fluke

NCDD Co-Founder Andy Fluke’s role as Creative Director is coming to a close in July. While many of you know Andy, you might not realize the scale of the contribution he has made over the years. It’s a story well worth telling.

Andy-pumpkin-borderAs creative director, Andy has been the graphic design force behind our website and publications, quietly anchoring NCDD’s infrastructure and fostering its growth for the past 12 years.  He may be best known for developing the website from a handful of pages to what it is today: a 6,000-page compendium widely regarded as the leading source for news and resources in the field. In NCDD’s first 12 years, Andy redesigned and expanded the website four times, in response to the needs of our community and the growth of the organization.

His first love has always been graphic design, a skill he learned in his father’s printing business and wielded to create the conference guidebooks, reports, signage, infographics, and other NCDD materials that have drawn praise from professionals throughout the dialogue and deliberation community.

To focus only on Andy’s creative skills, however, would be to miss the myriad other ways he has helped to shape NCDD since its founding in 2002. As co-founder, he played a critical role as sounding board and thinking partner for Sandy over the years. His contributions to NCDD’s day-to-day operations have also been significant: he has assisted with office tasks, written and edited content for the website, helped behind the scenes at NCDD’s events, maintained the staff’s computers, and much more.

AndyOnRock-borderAbove all, Andy has been essential as a problem solver, stepping into new responsibilities and mastering new skills on the fly. “There is no accomplishment that I’m more proud of than my overall ability to solve problems and create opportunities with little or no financial investment,” he said. “In every task, I’ve dedicated myself to seeking the most cost-efficient and productive ways to make things happen for NCDD.”

This ability has been indispensable to NCDD’s success. When Sandy and Andy co-founded NCDD in 2002 after running the first National Conference on Dialogue and Deliberation, planning conferences and running organizations were new territory for them. NCDD has always been a lean operation, and the desire to do as much as possible for NCDD members required them to be thoughtful, frugal, and clever when attempting anything new, especially online.

As Andy moves into the next phase of his career, we know that his resourcefulness and “keep it simple” approach will serve organizations well for years to come. At the same time, as Andy says, “I look forward to acting as an ambassador for the fantastic work that NCDD continues to do and continuing to support the dialogue and deliberation community.”

Andy will continue offering his skill and experience to the dialogue and deliberation community and is available to consult on or engage in any publication or internet design projects. His personal email address is afluke@gmail.com and you can also learn more about him at andyfluke.com.

Help NCDD Explore a D&D Youth Leadership Initiative

Some of you may have heard already on our Discussion Listserv that, as part of our continued commitment to cultivating “democracy for the next generation,” NCDD’s director Sandy Heierbacher asked me to help conduct a scoping project to explore what possibilities there are to potentially launch a youth leadership /emerging leaders program within the NCDD network.

IMG_7985We are already collecting input from NCDD’s student and young professional members (young folks/students, share your input on our survey for a chance to win $50, and write to me at roshan@ncdd.org to join our youth conference call Jan. 25th at 7pm ET!) , but we are also looking for ideas and suggestions from the broader NCDD community on the big picture questions of:

  1. How you think NCDD might best support students and young people who are interested in or want to be involved in the D&D field? And,
  2. What role would you want to see young people who are part of NCDD playing in the Coalition? What kinds of contributions could you imagine them making and/or see the network supporting them to make?

So we are looking to start a discussion here on what you think NCDD as an organization and as a community could potentially do to cultivate more opportunities for and leadership from young people – who are the next generation – in our field.

We are open to hearing any and all of your thoughts on these bigger questions for our field. And to help get the conversation started, we also want to invite you to think about a few more specific questions:

  • What do you think is THE most important and/or effective thing that NCDD and the D&D community could do to support you getting more involved in the D&D field?
  • What other programs, schools, organizations, etc. do you know of that already are doing a good job getting young people involved in D&D work? What are others doing that we could learn from or build on?
  • Is there anything else that NCDD and the D&D community should do, change, keep in mind, and/or work on to support youth and student involvement and leadership in this field?

We know there are a lot of possibilities for potentially creating more programmatic or organizational supports for young people looking to join the D&D field, and thinking together with our brilliant NCDD members is a great way to unearth some of the best of those potentials.

We hope that you will take a few moments to contribute your input to our ongoing exploration in the comments section below. We hope to harvest the ideas that this discussion generates by the end of the month, so please chime in soon!

Thanks so much for all that you do, and of course, thank you for continuing to support NCDD!