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The Art of Facilitation: Roots and Blossoms of Facilitation // with Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg & Joy Roulier Sawyer

  • 15 January 2020
  • 25 February 2020
  • Online
  • 8

Registration


Early Bird rate ends 2 weeks before class starts.

What does it mean to facilitate arts- and change-based workshops, coaching or consulting sessions, meetings and classes that help people amplify their voice and illuminate their vision? Designed for writers, storytellers, performers, artists, community leaders, change-makers, and those helping their communities enhance health, spiritual practices, and personal growth, this class focuses on how to design and facilitate meaningful sessions that better align your facilitation practice with your core values and ethics, community and purpose.

We'll explore how to create workshops, meetings, and other sessions tailored to your audience and purpose, and whole-self facilitation, including the care and feeding of the facilitator. Whether you're involved or want to start offering writing workshops, storytelling coaching, nonprofit consulting, or meeting facilitation, you'll find many treasures in exploring best practices for planning, facilitating, and assessing session, including the role of ground rules or agreements, beginnings and endings, pacing and rhythm, and evaluation and continuing education.

Listen to a podcast with Joy and Caryn on "The Art of Facilitation" here.

TLA invites many practitioners to the table, including those drawing on various models of facilitation, some reified and some more open source (from social change theater to poetry therapy to healing stories). We'll overview those models as well as how you can come to the potluck and draw from what feeds your emerging work.

The Art of Facilitation Series: Facilitation is a life-long art of presence, engagement, and ethics. By immersing yourself in a variety of facilitation traditions, approaches, tools, techniques, best practices, and philosophies, you can discover, embody, and enact your life's work and art in facilitating workshops, classes, meetings, coaching and consulting sessions. "The Art of Facilitation, Part 1: Roots and Blossoms of TLA Facilitation" explores designing, organizing, facilitating and assessing relevant, effective, and creative sessions. "The Art of Facilitation, Part 2: Facilitating Change and Community," June 10 - July 21, 2020 -- focusing on fostering community and working with various populations for transformation, discovery, and liberation.

Week By Week

Week by week topics: Ethical and self-care considerations thread through each week to help students better develop their practice and understanding of whole-self, real-world facilitation.

Week 1: ROOTS OF FACILITATION: In our introductory week, we'll investigate the meaning, origins, ethics, and possibilities of facilitation. We'll also explore the care and feeding of the facilitator and how to sustain your facilitation practice.

Week 2: SETTING THE TABLE: Facilitation embraces hospitality and an engaged  understanding of the facilitator’s role. This week's focus is on the meaning, roots, possibilities, and manifestations of inclusive facilitation that also can diminish and challenge damaging power dynamics and welcome all participants to the table.

Week 3: WHOLE-SELF FACILITATION: What does it mean to facilitate an artistic or community-building session while staying true to yourself? Or to work within the boundaries of being a facilitator (and not a therapist) while engaging fully with others? We'll look deeper at the role of the facilitator, rank and privilege in groups and relationships, and how to facilitate with your whole self.

Week 4: CALLING THE CIRCLE: Groups and communities can come together effectively and compassionately in a circle of learning and growth when there are clear group rules or agreements. We'll also look at language and facilitation as well as facilitation beyond words (including how to cultivate a clear and attentive presence).

Week 5: THE MUSIC WE MAKE TOGETHER: Whether you're facilitating a workshop, retreat, class, or meeting, rhythm is everything when it comes to cohesive sessions. We'll dive into questions and possibilities of pacing, how to open and close sessions, and overall rhythm and pacing across multiple-session workshops.

Week 6: BRANCHES AND BLOSSOMS OF FACILITATION: Assessments and continuing education are necessary for the lifelong art of facilitation. We'll take a look at strategies and practices to grow your art and heart of facilitation, the populations you are drawn to facilitate, and what to do when your path curves or changes.

Guest Teachers

Callid Keefe-Perry is an Executive Director of ARC: Arts | Religion | Culture, a traveling minister in the Quaker tradition, and an advocate for the arts as a way of deepening spiritual practice. He has been a public school teacher, co-founder of a community theater, and Coordinator of the TLA Network. He thinks it is OK for people to laugh a lot, that power cedes nothing without demands, and that creativity is a vital quality of adaptive and effective leadership. Callid will share a bit about the field of theopoetics and talk about using different modalities for group facilitation and what is gained by doing so.

Beatrice Briggs helps leaders and organizations co-create conditions that make their meetings worthy of people's time, talent, and energy. 
 As Director of the International Institute for Facilitation and Change, she has worked in over 30 countries with an change-oriented organizations such as UNICEF, World Wildlife Fund, Inter-American Development Bank, and the International Center for Development Research. A native of the United States, has made Mexico her home since 1998 and is fluent in both English and Spanish.

Marianela Medrano is a Dominican writer, poet and a psychotherapist with a Ph.D in psychology whose practice include Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, Mindfulness, and Integral Psychotherapy. The author of numerous poetry books, Medrano's poetry has been widely published and translated. She is a certified poetry therapist and serves as a mentor/supervisor for the International Federation for Biblio/Poetry Therapy. Medrano’s Tedx Talk can be found here.

Joy Roulier Sawyer -- (bio below) will speak on working with populations living through  hard times, as well as the historical roots of an accessible model of biblio/poetry therapy.

Who This Class is For

This class is intended for all who facilitate or want to facilitate arts, healing, and/or social change-based groups, whether it takes the form of writing, storytelling, spoken word, drama, debate, public speaking, organizational storytelling, or other areas. While focusing on workshop facilitation, this class will also help students better facilitate Transformative Language Arts and related fields in other settings, including classrooms, coaching sessions, meetings, and more. Because learning to facilitate well is a lifelong art, this class is aimed toward all who seek to deepen their facilitation practice, whether they are a beginner or seasoned facilitator. The class meets students wherever they are.

Format

This class encompasses weekly discussions (with a guiding question each week), creative writing prompts, readings, podcasts and videos, ample resources, and live video-conferences with people who can bring to the table vast experience with a wide spectrum of communities. The four video-conferences (which can be done easily on computers or phones), which will be held for four Sundays at 8 p.m. EST/ 7 p.m. CST/ 6 p.m. MST/ 5 p.m. PST on 1/26, 2/2, 2/9, and 2/23 also allows time for students to discuss and practice aspects of facilitation. Each video session will be 60-75 minutes.

Teacher Bios

Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg Ph.D., the 2009-13 Kansas Poet Laureate, is the founder of Transformative Language Arts and the author of 23 books, including Miriam's Well, a novel; Everyday Magic, memoir, and Following the Curve, poetry. Her previous work includes Needle in the Bone, a non-fiction book on the Holocaust and six poetry collections, including the award-winning Chasing Weather. Mirriam-Goldberg has facilitated community writing workshops widely since 1992 with diverse populations throughout the Midwest, the U.S., and in Mexico, including people living with serious illness, intergenerational communities, women living in public housing, teens and young adults, and humans at large in big-life transitions. She offers one-on-one coaching on writing and right livelihood. She co-leads Brave Voice writing and singing retreats with Kelley Hunt and the Your Right Livelihood training with Laura Packer. You can find her on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and Linkedin. Her Patreon campaign to create transformative writing, workshops, and podcasts and offering patrons weekly inspirations is here.

Joy Roulier Sawyer is the author of two poetry collections, Tongues of Men and Angels and Lifeguards as well as several nonfiction books. Her poetry, essays, and fiction have been widely published. Joy holds an MA from New York University in Creative Writing and a master's degree in counseling. Her extensive training and experience as a licensed professional counselor and in poetry/journal therapy gives her special expertise in facilitating expressive writing workshops. Joy was selected by poetry therapy pioneers to revise and update Arleen McCarty Hynes’ groundbreaking textbook, Biblio/Poetry Therapy: The Interactive Process. For over a decade, she’s taught at Denver’s Lighthouse Writers Workshop, the largest literary center in the West. Along with her other creative writing and poetry classes, Joy helps facilitate Lighthouses's Denver Public Library, Arvada Library, and Edgewater Library’s Hard Times workshops, designed for those experiencing homelessness or poverty, as well as the Writing to Be Free program, an outreach for women transitioning out of incarceration. She has also taught at the University of Denver and in the TLA MA program at Goddard College. Find her on Twitter and Instagram.

The TLA Network exists to support and promote individuals and organizations that use the spoken, written, or sung word as a tool for personal and community transformation.

The Transformative Language Arts Network (TLAN) is committed to diversity, equity and inclusion in our offerings, organization, and aspirations. Words have the power to question, subvert, and transform limiting cultural narratives as well as reinforce entrenched stories and stereotypes. The TLA Network wants to make clear that we celebrate and uplift conversations across identity and difference, whether rooted in race, religion, social class, ethnicity, disability, health, gender, sexual orientation, age, military service, and other identities. In the past we have responded to a lack of diversity by actively recruiting underrepresented groups to: present and keynote at the Power of Words conference; serve on the TLAN board; teach classes; and contribute to our publications. We will continue to look at ways to incorporate greater access and representation in all of our projects, not just through the power of words but through the specifics of our practices.


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