CLTV - Measuring and Sustaining Participatory Politics Success - Feb. 5, 2015
1 2015-09-29T19:55:09-07:00 Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890 610 2 Webinar 1 from the Measuring and Sustaining Participatory Politics Success Webinar and Twitter Chat series. February 5, 2015. plain 2015-12-01T01:01:33-08:00 YouTube 2015-02-05T19:04:41.000Z AZYiPLnTpi8 TheCLAlliancevideos Diana Lee 0c994d7f9dc5ee78dc93d8c823c300c060b9c890This page is referenced by:
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Measuring and Sustaining Participatory Politics Success webinar and twitter chat
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Measuring and Sustaining Participatory Politics Success, the first webinar of the By Any Media Necessary: Scaffolding & Sustaining Participatory Politics webinar and twitter chat series, was held on February 5, 2015 and hosted on the Connected Learning website. Zachary Cáceres (Startup Cities Institute and MPC Creative Learning Community), Ilse Escobar (Miguel Contreras Foundation), and Paul DeGeorge (Harry Potter Alliance) joined moderator Henry Jenkins to explore questions such as when big moments or events have come and gone, how do you keep energy and interest levels high? And how do you know whether your efforts have been “successful?”
The participants discussed the following framing questions during the webinar:- Describe what you see as the most successful political action you have ever taken. What happened and what made it a success in your eyes?
- How do you personally define/conceptualize success for your work/issue/organization?
- Is it important to measure success? How do you measure success in your work? Who do you measure success for? Why measure success?
- How do we move past numbers when setting goals? Which numbers are important?
- Is there an endpoint?
- When big moments or events have come and gone, how do you keep energy and interest levels high?
- And how do you know whether your efforts have been 'successful'?
- Once you achieve/reach the point of success, how do you prepare new goals?
Drawing from themes that emerged from the first webinar, the MAPP team created a list of follow-up questions to be discussed in a corresponding twitter chat the following week on February 12. Led by Jon Barilone from the Connected Learning Alliance, with support from MAPP team members Alexandra Margolin, Raffi Sarkissian, Diana Lee, and Ritesh Mehta, participants used #ByAnyMedia to discuss questions such as:- How do you move beyond numbers to measure civics success? What metrics do *you* use?
- How do you show that minor/singular successes (campaign, events, etc.) are part of a larger success story?
- When measuring success how do you balance what you DID versus what EFFECT you had?
- How can entertainment fandom serve as a catalyst to become active in civic politics?
- Lack of technical knowledge can be an involvement barrier. How do you make specialized info accessible?
- Knowing your community's history can give you power/language to act. How do you use history in your work?
- How do you keep up morale after setbacks or failures?
- When a campaign like #NotInHarrysName can take 4 years, how do you decide when a campaign ends?
- Civics/social justice work is never done. After achieving your goal(s), how do you start setting new ones?