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Abundance Learning Event PDF Print E-mail
Written by Website Adminstrator Adminstrator   
Thursday, 22 April 2010 12:07


Workshop

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Thanks for Everyone for Helping Make 

"Discovering Abundance within Scarcity” Learning Event

June 26 – June 28, 2011 in Ashland, WI

A Great Success

 

 

The Discovering Abundance with Scarcity learning event was held in collaboration with the Alliance for Sustainability, several MRCSE Wise Elders, Story Tellers and members ato more deeply explore topics central to creating the conditions for an abundantfuture.  The event was attended by over 350 people and hosting my lively presentations and community converstations.  Below is an overview of the event. Learning opportunites include:

 

 

Day Long Workshops


Sunday June 26th,10:00 to 5:00

at Northland College, Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute, Ashland, WI

John Ikerd and his colleague Lonnie Gamble offered "Authentic Sustainability in Education,Society, and Everyday Life- Beyond Going Green;" David Oates facilitated "Daylighting the Invisible: Revealing What Connects Us;" Jan Sander, Marian Farrior and Erin Schneider presented"Sustainability Leadership through a Social Artistry Approach;" and Margaret Swedish explored "Living Beyond our Ecological Crisis".

MRCSE Planning Session

Monday June 28th, 9:00 – 12:00am

at Northland College, Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute

Twenty four member of MRCSE contributed to a planning session to explore the future of MRCSE.  Several planning subcommittees were formed and are now working to help define specific programatic elements of the collaborative.

 

Community-wide Open Space Session

Monday, June 27th, 1:00 – 5:00pmand Tuesday June 28th, 9:00 – 5:00pm

at Northland College, Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute, Ashland, WI

An open space session was a gathering actively organized, structured and led by the people attending it.

 

Community Social Hour

Monday, June 27th starting at 5:30

at Northland College, Sigurd Olson Environmental Institute, Ashland, WI

 

Pie and Politics

June 28th, gather at 6:30 with speakers at 7:00

at Mt. Ashwabay'sBig TopChautauqua outside Bayfield, WI

This was the 15th year that the Alliance for Sustainability  sponsored this annual, nonpartisan and free summer evening called “Pie & Politics” for everyone who wants to jawbone with humor and passion about how we can make our lives better. In the great American soapbox tradition of the old Chautauquas, several MRCSE wise elderswill gave us new ideas to ponder.

 

 

 

ikerd_0414---webAuthentic Sustainability in Education,Society, and Everyday Life- Beyond Going Green

Hosted by John Ikerd and Lonnie Gamble

 

Register for the Workshop

Date: Sunday, June 26, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Cost: $45, includes a copy of John Ikerd's book Sustainable Capitalism

Sustainability is about meeting the needs of the present without diminishing opportunities for the future. Everything capable of meeting the essential economic needs of both the present and future must be derived from either nature or society. Thus, ecological, social, and economic integrity are inseparable dimensions of authentic sustainability.

Authentic sustainability is deep sustainability; it questions the rightness and goodness of our economic and social relationships with other people and with nature. Our economic and social systems must be radically redesigned and reorganized for authentic sustainability, which means our ways of thinking, working, and living must be radically redesigned and reorganized as well.

This workshop will rely on a collaborative approach to teaching and learning designed to empower and inspire those who seek authentic sustainability. Registrants will be provided a short “thought piece” prior to the workshop to serve as points of departure for facilitated group discussions. Everyone will be expected to collaborate in the learning process.

The morning session will focus on critical differences between authentic sustainability and the concepts currently addressed in most sustainability initiatives, with an emphasis on the economics of sustainability. The afternoon session will be a collaborative learning process focusing on aspects of sustainability of specific interests to those attending the workshop.

Each registrant will receive a copy of Sustainable Capitalism; A Matter of Common Sense by John Ikerd.

 

About the Workshop Facilitators:

John Ikerd is a Professor Emeritus of Agricultural Economics at the University of Missouri, Columbia. John received his BS, MS, and Ph.D. degrees in agricultural economics from the University of Missouri. He spent thirty years in various professorial positions at North Carolina State University, Oklahoma State University, University of Georgia, and the University of Missouri before retiring in early 2000. Since retiring, he spends most of his time writing and speaking on issues related to sustainability. Ikerd is author of Sustainable Capitalism, A Return to Common Sense, Small Farms are Real Farms, Crisis and Opportunity: Sustainability in American Agriculture and A Revolution of the Middle, http://sites.google.com/site/revolutionofthemiddle/. A more complete bibliography and wide selection of writings are available at http://web.missouri.edu/~ikerdj/ or http://www.johnikerd.com.

 

Lonnie Gamble is a founding faculty member in the four-year Sustainable Living program at Maharishi University of Management in Fairfield, Iowa. His interests include renewable energy, food and agriculture, sustainable economics, alternatives to economic globalism, permaculture design, and sustainability and the built environment. He has been involved in founding a number of for-profit and non-profit sustainability ventures, including Abundance Ecovillage and the Sustainable Living coalition. In 2009, he and John Ikerd developed and taught an undergraduate Sustainable Economics course at Maharishi University of Management. He has been teaching, developing sustainability curriculum, and mentoring students at a variety of venues since 1996.

 


David OatsDaylighting the Invisible: Revealing What Connects Us

 

Hosted by David Oates


Date: Sunday, June 26, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Cost: $45, includes a copy of David Oates' book What We Love Will Save Us

Nature shows us an unstoppable renewing creativity. We need to recognize it, loveit, and use it. It can empower our creative life as writers, teachers, activists and citizens. Daylighting the Invisible, hosted by David Oates, is the three part hands-on workshop designed to help each of us "daylight" the hidden connections lying beneath the surface, rediscover nature as a creative process of emerging patterns, and find heart and hope in the regenerative force of nature’s constant resurrection. During this workshop participants will learn to better notice detail through the connection to place and to uncover creativity by allowing patterning not planning and process not control – lessons only learned in communion with nature. Throughout the workshop, participants will apply their learning to new or existing writing, teaching, or restoration projects. As part of the workshop participants will receive a copy of David’s latest book What We Love Will Save Us (Kelson Books 2009) and a compilation of other provocative reading materials.

About the Workshop Facilitator:

David Oates writes about nature and urban life from Portland, Oregon. He is a poet and the author of City Limits: Walking Portland's Boundary (Oregon State 2006), and Paradise Wild: Reimagining American Nature (Oregon State 2003). He regularly hosts Wild Writers Seminars and teaches writing at Clark College (Washington) and at Marylhurst University (Oregon). As a writer and educator, David is continuously looking for ways to convey the new story of our environmental moment. His current work explores Resurrection Biology—biology+spirituality+practical hopefulness and gittin-to-work! David sees Resurrection Biology as the joyous, determined environmentalism that will respond to the damaged world of the coming century. He has designed this workshop to help others join the movement.


marian-and-erin_edited-1Sustainability Leadership through a Social Artistry Approach
Hosted by Jan Sanders, Marian Farrior, and Erin Scheinder

Date: Sunday, June 26, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Cost: $45, includes course resources

 

In this workshop, we will introduce participants to the field of Social Artistry focusing on how social artistry can be applied to your sustainability projects. Participants will learn about the Social Artistry model and principles and how they have been applied to community development projects around the world. Participants will also experience some Social Artistry practices in self awareness and management, nature awareness, deep listening, basics of storytelling and cultivating mythic imagination, transformational leadership, and applications to project planning.

 

"Social Artistry helped inform my approaches at work and in the community. I believe it is already made me more mindful and present in my interactions as well as my day to day life," University of Wisconsin-Madison Social Artistry Study Group Participant.

 

Social Artistry is an emerging discipline in leadership development. Social Artistry taps inherent human capacities for greater imagination, compassion, and resolve. The discipline integrates science and intellectual development, using multiple styles of thinking, expanding skills for contemporary leadership challenges, and applying these skills to complex social issues. The Social Artist is trained to be aware of four levels of understanding and consciousness, and to consider each of them when approaching any situation or condition. These levels include: the physical/sensory realm, the psychological/historic realm, the mythic/symbolic realm, and the integral/unitive realm.

We look forward to journeying with you as we inspire, engage, reflect and manifest our ability to create change in ourselves and our communities.

 

"We are living in a time of global system transition. We are in a condition of interactive change that affects every aspect of life. But many current leaders live out of a limited vision, using too little human resourcefulness. Leadership needs to be reinvigorated to meet the challenges we face."
Dr. Jean Houston, International Institute for Social Artistry

 

About the Workshop Facilitators:

Janet Sanders, founder of PEOPLEnergy, an organizational and community development consultancy that serves a diversity of clients from corporations to non-profits and government Agencies. She also teaches Social Artistry™ programs internationally. She combines Social Artistry™ leadership curriculum with development themes, including HIV/AIDS, governance, community development and indigenous wisdom. Jan brings extensive expertise as a facilitator, program designer, project manager and trainer with 20 years international experience with the Institute of Cultural Affairs where she helped pioneer methods of wholistic community development, including twelve consulting assignments with United Nations Development Program.
 Contact Jan at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 

Marian Farrior is the Earth Partnership Field Manager at University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Arboretum, where she teaches how to lead and implement ecological restorations. Her passion is co-creating and apprenticing with nature and helping people connect with their ecosystems. She is also a consultant for environmental and sustainability organizations, is on the advisory team for MRSCE, and the design team for Madison Area Network for Innovation and Collaboration (UW MANIAC). She has taught workshops in Permaculture, Forest Gardening, Patterns in Nature, and Spiral Gardens. She attended the Social Artistry Leadership Institute in 2009 and Train the Trainers in 2011. She has a B.A. in Anthropology, a M.S. in Sustainable Systems, and extensive training in Permaculture, all of which she applies to her projects. Contact Marian at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 

Erin Schneider facilitates abundance for orchards and communities. She balances her career as an organic farmer and co-owner of Hilltop Community Farm, LLC a small-scale diversified CSA farm and market garden, and as a Fellow and Facilitator with the UW Madison Office of Human Resource Development. Currently, she is developing Just Fruit: Food Systems Development, a multi-faceted business that includes teaching and facilitating groups for food sovereignty, designing orchard and agroforestry systems, co-designing international grower exchanges, and conducting research on assessing the sustainability of growing uncommon yet marketable fruits in Wisconsin. She is also working with on launching the Abundance Project and, in addition to Social Artistry, helps coordinate the efforts of UW MANIAC, MRSCE, and the Wisconsin Local Food Network. Contact Erin at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

 


 

margie-smLiving Beyond our Ecological Crisis

Hosted by Margaret Swedish
Date: Sunday, June 26, 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.
Cost: $45, includes course resources
By now it is clear that we are facing irreversible ecological changes across the planet. Many of them are human caused, a combination of factors that include global warming and climate change, biodiversity and habitat loss, depletion of groundwater and aquifers, population growth that is putting great stresses on the planet’s ecosystems, looming scarcities of arable land, food, water, and energy.
While many of these trends can not be reversed, they can be slowed or mitigated. Ecosystems still hold. If the planet were allowed the chance, it would begin on its own the process of regeneration, renewal, and healing of ecosystems.
How will we humans, how will THIS community, this collaborative and its members, live through the crisis? What would a life in sync with the planet’s living systems look like? How practically do we begin to create such a life?
Without a vision of where we want to go, it is hard to create the path to get there. MRCSE includes culture workers, artists, educators, practitioners from many fields, experiences, and vantage points. The vision must comprise of vast web of interconnected threads in which each person’s gifts, each community’s gifts, have a place in this new creation. In this workshop, we will lay out the challenge of the crisis, share our dreams and values for a life beyond the crisis, and begin articulating together a path that can move us towards that new life.
About the Workshop Facilitator:
Margaret Swedish is the author of “Living Beyond the ‘End of the World:’ A Spirituality of Hope” and MRCSE Wise Elder. She is the founder of Spirituality and Ecological Hope a project sponsored by the Center for New Creation. This project focuses on the moral, ethical, and spiritual implications for U.S. society of the ecological crises of our times and seeks to articulate a ‘spirituality’ (values, framework of meaning) for a new way of life that can support the earth community as it goes through a time of great upheaval, recreating the relationship between the human and the ecosystems of the planet in a mutually life-enhancing manner.



Last Updated on Monday, 29 August 2011 20:46
 

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