World Café: Community Conversations that Matter
Have you been to a town hall meeting like this: Participants dutifully arrive; the 'experts' sit at the front of the room and share their knowledge and opinions and answer a few questions from the audience, the meeting ends and everyone goes home? Citizens attend, but have little opportunity to participate. We often depend on the 'experts' telling the community. But, what if we turned it around?
For CADCA’s National
Leadership Forum in February, LaDonna Coy
and I developed a session, Community Conversations that Matter, using
the World
Café method that intentionally creates a way for each of us to participate
in conversations that shape our lives in the community. We were surprised
at the response: the room was set up for 90 and we allowed
25 more in before putting out a 'session full ' notice.
The room arrangement set the stage for a very different experience. The bright fluorescent lights were off and the softer spots on. The tables each seated four and were covered with red and white checkered cloths. Our reference materials looked more like menus than standard workshop handouts.
The
World Café recommends setting this kind of atmosphere
and instructing participants to listen deep and share from the heart. Except
table hosts, participants move to different tables every 20 minutes for three
rounds, so people get to meet and listen to a variety of people and
perspectives. The conversations were stimulating and it was
hard to believe that an hour had passed when the session ended.
The session was so successful that we’re going to do it again at CADCA’s Mid-Year Training Institute in July. We hope you’ll join us and see what a World Café is like. In the meantime, you can get more information at the Town Hall Meeting Meets World Cafe Wiki pages.
If you’ve participated in a World Café, use the comments section below to tell us about the experience. Help us share our experiences and yours with the world!
This post was written by Diane Gallagher, Ph.D., Deputy Director for Evaluation and Research for CADCA's National Coalition Institute.
Her e-mail address is dgallagher@cadca.org.
Well stated, Diane! Thanks to LaDonna and Diane's excellent example at the CADCA Forum in February, my coalition adopted the World Cafe model for 4 town hall meeting's in late March and early April in our rual NE county. It was SUCH a success ... people shared insights that were often un-spoken for years; they forged relationships, developed partnerships, and left with truly a different "aura" about them. So many people commented that they had never truly listened to others on this issue, and/or they had never truly been heard. It was fantastic! I'm a "believer" in this model that makes true community conversations happen.
Posted by: tkuipers | June 11, 2008 at 05:21 PM