sociogram: an exercise in which participants arrange their bodies to show something about themselves or to stimulate a new awareness. For example, participants are asked to range themselves along a line that shows how long they've been active with a particular cause. See also "spectrum." Read more...
This question has been addressed all along, but here's a condensed summary you may find useful:
Define and refine your concept, identifying the communities you will work with by drawing a "map" of those communities, the influential individuals within them, and how they relate to one another
Clarify the terms you will use to identify these communities
Create a timeline and, half-way through your project year, revise the timeline to take into account reality
From the beginning, pay explicit attention to the dynamics of race, class, gender, ability/disability, sexual preference, as they relate to your project.
Try to find sensitive facilitators already experienced in group process and not easily intimidated; they will still need outside training to facilitate dialogue
Encourage facilitators to keep a written log of their learnings, observations, and process as the project goes along
Encourage one-on-one, informal sharing between facilitators, outside of staff meetings
Encourage facilitators, above all, to stay present, to check assumptions, and to enjoy the ride
Scheduling, for us, was the single most challenging issue, requiring tremendous patience and persistence. Be ready for the frustrations of reschedulings, cancellations, and no-shows. Sense of humor is essential, as are carefully kept logs and confirmation calls.
Documentation: it's difficult to discipline oneself to document the work as it tumbles along, but it's even more difficult to recreate it afterward. Extensive note-taking is essential, and writing up summaries of dialogues, learnings, and suggestions soon after dialogues have taken place is extremely useful.
Interns: Yes! An intern presented herself to us midway through the year, and for the short time she was with us, work proceeded at a much more disciplined and orderly pace. Since she was the only one not responsible for coordinating dialogues, she could effectively coordinate information-sharing. She also enjoyed dialogues as a participant and honed her own facilitation skills by observation.
Informal gatherings for dialoguers: Yes! We found a certain number of people who simply could never schedule a one-on-one dialogue or group dialogue, but who managed to show up to our informal Activist Dialogue Project Brunches. This was also a place where staff, board, facilitators, project participants and other activists could gather, blow off steam about unbearably repetitive mistakes in the movement, enjoy each other's company, and boost morale.
Celebrate! In our case this was a matter of a "Last Brunch" in which a diverse set of activists from age 20 (actually the youngest was 3 years old) to 70-something shared their political awakenings. It was quite fascinating and lively, but small. For other or future Dialogue Projects, we could imagine a larger celebration in which all the participants in a particular Dialogue Project could be invited to meet each other after a year-long series of one-on-one, group, and informal gatherings.
BEFORE YOU ENLIST AND AFTER YOU SAY NO: AFSC's counter-recruitment training manual
By Daniel Hunter and Hannah Strange
Get this 239-page training manual with over eighty handouts, articles, and tools on organizing, strategy, and how to do counter-recruitment. Most of the tools in the workshop can be easily adapted for other movements -- many of which are brand new tools.