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Listening to difference,
made practical
Hannah du Plessis and Marc Rettig
2 April 2018
Welcome!
Get a cup of coffee,
find a table,
and please make a name tag
Name
Affiliation (optional)
Preferred pronoun
Listening to Difference, Made Practical
Marc Rettig and Hannah du Plessis, Fit Associates
fitassociates.com
marc@fitassociates.com
hannah@fitassociates.com
These notes were produced in support of a workshop conducted April 2, 2018
as part of Pittsburgh Inclusive Innovation Week. See weinnovationpgh.net for
more information.
© 2018, Fit Associates LLC
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike-4.0 International
License. You can copy and redistribute it, so long as you attribute credit to its authors and
offer what you make under the same license.
To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View,
California, 94041, USA.
How might we
create a world
that works for all?
Briefly share why you care about this question
Principal
Professor, Design for Social Innovation
Adjunct Professor
Fit Associates
School of Visual Arts
Carnegie Mellon School of Design
hannah@fitassociates.com
@hannahdup
Principal
Professor, Design for Social Innovation
Adjunct Professor
Fit Associates
School of Visual Arts
Carnegie Mellon School of Design
marc@fitassociates.com
@mrettig
frontierretreat.com
We equip people with tools, methods
and practices that help them transform
their world
We teach
Individual transformation
Healthy relationships
Good gatherings, good facilitation,
and collaboration
We teach the fundamentals of
emergent change
Slides and more: bit.ly/Fit_ListeningWorkshop
Do your best to return to the present
Be mindful to include all voices
Keep the story teller’s stories
in confidentiality
As citizens of this experience, we ask you to
Thank you to
for sponsoring the
room and the breakfast
Tip o’ the hat to Jennifer Cloonan
“We’re on the same ship, but
we live on different decks”
Victor Lee Lewis
What would happen if you could strip
away all difference? At what point
will we show favoritism for the in-
group and bias towards the other?
Once our identity is tied to our group
membership, we tend to see other
groups as “lesser then”
Henri Tajifel
See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Tajfel
“Oppression is the systematic and pervasive mistreatment
of individuals on the basis of their memberships in various
groups which are disadvantaged by the institutionalized
imbalances in social power in a particular society… It
includes the invalidation, denial, or the non-recognition of
the complete humanness (the goodness, uniqueness,
smartness, powerfulness, etc.) of those who are members
of the mistreated group.”
Oppression
www.unlearningracism.org/writings/lib_theory.htm
“It is possible to recover the buried memories of our
socialization, to share our stories and heal the hurts
imposed by the conditioning, to act in the present in
a humane and caring matter, to rebuild our human
connections and to change our world.”
Ricky Sherover-Marcuse
Liberation is possible …
www.unlearningracism.org/writings/lib_theory.htm
“If you have come here to help me, you are
wasting your time. But if you have come because
your liberation is bound up with mine, then let
us work together.”
Lilla Watson
Our liberation is tied together
The ideal: power to create is shared
James Charlton
“We know what is
best for us”
Approaches to power inequity within organizations
Exclusionary Neutrality
Adapted by AORTA from a handout from Leadership Development in Intergroup Relations/ Asian Americans Advancing Justice
Multi-
Culturalism
Cultural
Competency
Social
Justice
Stages in adult development
Unaware
Unable
Aware
Unable
Aware
Able
Unaware
Unable
Unaware
Unable
Aware
Unable
Aware
Able
Exclusionary Neutrality
Multi-
Culturalism
Cultural
Competency
Social
Justice
This method is great way to help people move
Experience is much
more transformative
than persuasion.
We find that
The key idea,
why it matters,
where it comes from.
22
Same people, same space,
same conversation, same outcomes
The Office, NBC
23
Different people? Different space?
Closed ears & hearts: same outcomes.
SAP
24
We can’t mandate openness. We can’t
repeat our way to something new.
The Office, NBC
25
What conditions open conversations,
loosen the old story, afford new outcomes?
How we
divide and
use time
Agreements about
speaking, listening,
deciding, and control
The space
and stuff in
the room
The way we
group ourselves
What conditions create more openness, make room for open
conversations, loosen the old story, afford new outcomes?
We can learn to use our ingredients differently:
A global community of people is exploring this.
Just two of many examples:
Liberatingstructures.comartofhosting.org
World Café
Story circles, reflection circles, “the circle way”
Situation Modeling
Collective Story Harvest
How can we focus a group’s attention on
stories that matter, and get the most from them?
Collective Story Harvest provides…
An easy-to-facilitate method for group listening
and sense-making
A fast way for many people in an organization or community
to get meaningful exposure to “others“ (and each other)
A way to get from stories to “so what”
Let’s try it.
We’ll describe how it works.
Then we’ll introduce our topic question,
and four guest storytellers.
We’ll take 3 minutes to capture our assumptions
about the topic question,
then do the “Collective Story Harvest.”
(with a short break partway through)
When it’s over, we’ll reflect on the experience,
talk about its usefulness, and answer questions.
Here’s how it works… Short introduction
to our stories…
Got it!
First stage: all together
Once upon a time,
there was…
Second stage: small groups
Environment
Relationships
Emotions
…with “listening lenses”
Four story groups will be going on at the same time.
The listening lenses
Key moments: decisions, conflicts,
learning, resisting, letting go, resolving,
persisting, giving up,….
Relationships: other people in the
story: their perceptions, actions, and
words
Inner experience: emotions, beliefs,
mood. Capture the inner ups and
downs of the story.
Environment: places, objects, systems,
interfaces, policies, infrastructure,….
Listeners…
• Please listen and take notes according to the
instructions on your listening lens worksheet.
• Hold questions until the end of the story.
Of course it’s okay to ask the teller to repeat
something you didn’t understand, or to explain an
unusual word. But let’s do our best to let the person
tell their story with minimal interruption.
• Give the gift of your full attention.
Catch yourself being distracted? No worries.
Just notice it, take a breath, and come back to
what’s happening.
Let me clarify…
Emotions? Environment?
Relationships?
After the story, a chance to ask questions
After a break: lenses get together, with a job to do
Emotions…Emotions…Emotions…Emotions… Environment…Environment…Environment…Environment… Relationship…Relationship…Relationship…Relationship…
Finally we’ll all get together again.
Environment! Relationship!Emotions!
What did we learn?
What are the things that help people feel
they truly belong in the city? What things
are in the way? What moves us toward the
feeling of true belonging?
Our question
Tell a story about a time when a service, a
system or design in the city of Pittsburgh
failed to meet your needs. It might have
worked for some, but not for you.
The story request
A note of importance about the way
we choose to make these spaces.
Trust is fragile.
When there is an imbalance of power…
Let’s meet our storytellers
Michelle
King
Vanessa
Braun
Idasa
Tariq-
Wessell
Ahmed
Ansari
What are your assumptions?
Story time.
15 10 5 3 2 1
Questions?
Discussion?
10 5 3 2 1
Break time!
We start again at ____
Welcome back.
Sit with your
lens-brothers
and sisters.
Common barriers
Common helps
Top three things you want
to report to the room
You have 15 minutes. Your job is to identify…
(If it helps, notice where your assumptions need
adjusting, or were just plain wrong.)
15 10 5 3 2 1
Key moments
What showed up?
Inner experience
What showed up?
Relationships
What showed up?
Environment
What showed up?
Storytellers
What showed up?
What struck you?
Let’s talk about the
method and the big
picture.
A story
The gathering
A “diagonal group”
Diverse vertically: levels of power
Diverse horizontally: many depts. and functions
Diagonal groups, gathering, and sequencing participatory efforts interest you?
You might like Marc Rettig’s three part series (diagonal groups are in part 2):
www.fitassociates.com/blog/participation-series/
The key activity: Collective Story Harvest
Mean to animals, for decades
Collects animals, over-loves
City official who “gets the call”
Rehabilitates animals
The empathy map canvas:
medium.com/the-xplane-collection/updated-empathy-map-canvas-46df22df3c8a
Many ways to use this method
Gather people from across a system to harvest deeply from
many points of view.
Harvest your own organization’s stories for learning, team
building, group memory, informing strategy, etc.
Use story harvest between different parts of the same
organization that don’t really see or hear each other.
Harvest stories to inform a new effort or practice.
Periodic harvesting as part of a “developmental evaluation”
approach—use stories to help you ask, “Are we on the right
track? What adjustments should we make?”
What do you need to do this?
You’ve listened to the system, community, organization well
enough to inform an invitation that matters to the mix of
people you’d like to have in the room.
A little capacity to host a group of people, to make the
space for listening, to let go of control and let the
conversation do the work.
A sense of the stories and storytellers that will open the
conversation, challenge the long-repeated story, bring a
dose of real life to the gathering.
Be just a shade braver than a meeting planner.
Making this method your own
Curate the stories
Do your homework to bring in stories worth hearing. Use this to
hear voices from the fringes, to dig into challenging questions,
or to get compelling stories to be really heard by stakeholders.
Customize the lenses
Ask, “What do we most want to learn from these stories?” Then
create your lenses accordingly.
Trust the process
Don’t over-coach the story tellers. They just tell their story. The
listeners will catch what matters.
Don’t let the conversation flinch from the hard stuff
There may be challenging views or disconfirming data. Go there.
Thank you.
Marc Rettig
marc@fitassociates.com
@mrettig
Hannah du Plessis
hannah@fitassociates.com
@hannahdup

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Listening to Difference, Made Practical

  • 1. Listening to difference, made practical Hannah du Plessis and Marc Rettig 2 April 2018 Welcome! Get a cup of coffee, find a table, and please make a name tag Name Affiliation (optional) Preferred pronoun
  • 2. Listening to Difference, Made Practical Marc Rettig and Hannah du Plessis, Fit Associates fitassociates.com marc@fitassociates.com hannah@fitassociates.com These notes were produced in support of a workshop conducted April 2, 2018 as part of Pittsburgh Inclusive Innovation Week. See weinnovationpgh.net for more information. © 2018, Fit Associates LLC This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Sharealike-4.0 International License. You can copy and redistribute it, so long as you attribute credit to its authors and offer what you make under the same license. To view a copy of this license, visit creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 444 Castro Street, Suite 900, Mountain View, California, 94041, USA.
  • 3. How might we create a world that works for all? Briefly share why you care about this question
  • 4. Principal Professor, Design for Social Innovation Adjunct Professor Fit Associates School of Visual Arts Carnegie Mellon School of Design hannah@fitassociates.com @hannahdup
  • 5. Principal Professor, Design for Social Innovation Adjunct Professor Fit Associates School of Visual Arts Carnegie Mellon School of Design marc@fitassociates.com @mrettig
  • 7. We equip people with tools, methods and practices that help them transform their world We teach Individual transformation Healthy relationships Good gatherings, good facilitation, and collaboration We teach the fundamentals of emergent change
  • 8. Slides and more: bit.ly/Fit_ListeningWorkshop
  • 9. Do your best to return to the present Be mindful to include all voices Keep the story teller’s stories in confidentiality As citizens of this experience, we ask you to
  • 10. Thank you to for sponsoring the room and the breakfast Tip o’ the hat to Jennifer Cloonan
  • 11. “We’re on the same ship, but we live on different decks” Victor Lee Lewis
  • 12. What would happen if you could strip away all difference? At what point will we show favoritism for the in- group and bias towards the other? Once our identity is tied to our group membership, we tend to see other groups as “lesser then” Henri Tajifel See en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henri_Tajfel
  • 13. “Oppression is the systematic and pervasive mistreatment of individuals on the basis of their memberships in various groups which are disadvantaged by the institutionalized imbalances in social power in a particular society… It includes the invalidation, denial, or the non-recognition of the complete humanness (the goodness, uniqueness, smartness, powerfulness, etc.) of those who are members of the mistreated group.” Oppression www.unlearningracism.org/writings/lib_theory.htm
  • 14. “It is possible to recover the buried memories of our socialization, to share our stories and heal the hurts imposed by the conditioning, to act in the present in a humane and caring matter, to rebuild our human connections and to change our world.” Ricky Sherover-Marcuse Liberation is possible … www.unlearningracism.org/writings/lib_theory.htm
  • 15. “If you have come here to help me, you are wasting your time. But if you have come because your liberation is bound up with mine, then let us work together.” Lilla Watson Our liberation is tied together
  • 16. The ideal: power to create is shared James Charlton “We know what is best for us”
  • 17. Approaches to power inequity within organizations Exclusionary Neutrality Adapted by AORTA from a handout from Leadership Development in Intergroup Relations/ Asian Americans Advancing Justice Multi- Culturalism Cultural Competency Social Justice
  • 18. Stages in adult development Unaware Unable Aware Unable Aware Able Unaware Unable
  • 20. Experience is much more transformative than persuasion. We find that
  • 21. The key idea, why it matters, where it comes from.
  • 22. 22 Same people, same space, same conversation, same outcomes The Office, NBC
  • 23. 23 Different people? Different space? Closed ears & hearts: same outcomes. SAP
  • 24. 24 We can’t mandate openness. We can’t repeat our way to something new. The Office, NBC
  • 25. 25 What conditions open conversations, loosen the old story, afford new outcomes?
  • 26. How we divide and use time Agreements about speaking, listening, deciding, and control The space and stuff in the room The way we group ourselves What conditions create more openness, make room for open conversations, loosen the old story, afford new outcomes? We can learn to use our ingredients differently:
  • 27. A global community of people is exploring this. Just two of many examples: Liberatingstructures.comartofhosting.org
  • 29. Story circles, reflection circles, “the circle way”
  • 32. How can we focus a group’s attention on stories that matter, and get the most from them? Collective Story Harvest provides… An easy-to-facilitate method for group listening and sense-making A fast way for many people in an organization or community to get meaningful exposure to “others“ (and each other) A way to get from stories to “so what”
  • 33. Let’s try it. We’ll describe how it works. Then we’ll introduce our topic question, and four guest storytellers. We’ll take 3 minutes to capture our assumptions about the topic question, then do the “Collective Story Harvest.” (with a short break partway through) When it’s over, we’ll reflect on the experience, talk about its usefulness, and answer questions.
  • 34. Here’s how it works… Short introduction to our stories… Got it! First stage: all together
  • 35. Once upon a time, there was… Second stage: small groups Environment Relationships Emotions …with “listening lenses”
  • 36. Four story groups will be going on at the same time.
  • 37. The listening lenses Key moments: decisions, conflicts, learning, resisting, letting go, resolving, persisting, giving up,…. Relationships: other people in the story: their perceptions, actions, and words Inner experience: emotions, beliefs, mood. Capture the inner ups and downs of the story. Environment: places, objects, systems, interfaces, policies, infrastructure,….
  • 38. Listeners… • Please listen and take notes according to the instructions on your listening lens worksheet. • Hold questions until the end of the story. Of course it’s okay to ask the teller to repeat something you didn’t understand, or to explain an unusual word. But let’s do our best to let the person tell their story with minimal interruption. • Give the gift of your full attention. Catch yourself being distracted? No worries. Just notice it, take a breath, and come back to what’s happening.
  • 39. Let me clarify… Emotions? Environment? Relationships? After the story, a chance to ask questions
  • 40. After a break: lenses get together, with a job to do Emotions…Emotions…Emotions…Emotions… Environment…Environment…Environment…Environment… Relationship…Relationship…Relationship…Relationship…
  • 41. Finally we’ll all get together again. Environment! Relationship!Emotions! What did we learn?
  • 42. What are the things that help people feel they truly belong in the city? What things are in the way? What moves us toward the feeling of true belonging? Our question
  • 43. Tell a story about a time when a service, a system or design in the city of Pittsburgh failed to meet your needs. It might have worked for some, but not for you. The story request
  • 44. A note of importance about the way we choose to make these spaces. Trust is fragile. When there is an imbalance of power…
  • 45. Let’s meet our storytellers Michelle King Vanessa Braun Idasa Tariq- Wessell Ahmed Ansari
  • 46. What are your assumptions?
  • 47. Story time. 15 10 5 3 2 1
  • 49. Break time! We start again at ____
  • 50. Welcome back. Sit with your lens-brothers and sisters.
  • 51. Common barriers Common helps Top three things you want to report to the room You have 15 minutes. Your job is to identify… (If it helps, notice where your assumptions need adjusting, or were just plain wrong.) 15 10 5 3 2 1
  • 58. Let’s talk about the method and the big picture.
  • 60. The gathering A “diagonal group” Diverse vertically: levels of power Diverse horizontally: many depts. and functions Diagonal groups, gathering, and sequencing participatory efforts interest you? You might like Marc Rettig’s three part series (diagonal groups are in part 2): www.fitassociates.com/blog/participation-series/
  • 61. The key activity: Collective Story Harvest Mean to animals, for decades Collects animals, over-loves City official who “gets the call” Rehabilitates animals
  • 62.
  • 63. The empathy map canvas: medium.com/the-xplane-collection/updated-empathy-map-canvas-46df22df3c8a
  • 64.
  • 65.
  • 66.
  • 67.
  • 68. Many ways to use this method Gather people from across a system to harvest deeply from many points of view. Harvest your own organization’s stories for learning, team building, group memory, informing strategy, etc. Use story harvest between different parts of the same organization that don’t really see or hear each other. Harvest stories to inform a new effort or practice. Periodic harvesting as part of a “developmental evaluation” approach—use stories to help you ask, “Are we on the right track? What adjustments should we make?”
  • 69. What do you need to do this? You’ve listened to the system, community, organization well enough to inform an invitation that matters to the mix of people you’d like to have in the room. A little capacity to host a group of people, to make the space for listening, to let go of control and let the conversation do the work. A sense of the stories and storytellers that will open the conversation, challenge the long-repeated story, bring a dose of real life to the gathering. Be just a shade braver than a meeting planner.
  • 70. Making this method your own Curate the stories Do your homework to bring in stories worth hearing. Use this to hear voices from the fringes, to dig into challenging questions, or to get compelling stories to be really heard by stakeholders. Customize the lenses Ask, “What do we most want to learn from these stories?” Then create your lenses accordingly. Trust the process Don’t over-coach the story tellers. They just tell their story. The listeners will catch what matters. Don’t let the conversation flinch from the hard stuff There may be challenging views or disconfirming data. Go there.
  • 71. Thank you. Marc Rettig marc@fitassociates.com @mrettig Hannah du Plessis hannah@fitassociates.com @hannahdup