Agents of Change – Détails, épisodes et analyse

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Agents of Change

Agents of Change

Mike Murawski

Business
Education

Fréquence : 1 épisode/73j. Total Éps: 15

Substack
Bringing human-centered change to museums, nonprofits and beyond

agentsofchange.substack.com
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  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - nonProfit

    03/12/2024
    #80
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - nonProfit

    02/12/2024
    #69
  • 🇬🇧 Grande Bretagne - nonProfit

    01/12/2024
    #61
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    30/11/2024
    #48
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    29/11/2024
    #37
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    22/11/2024
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    19/11/2024
    #61
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    18/11/2024
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Can Something as Simple as a Community Garden Save Our Planet?

vendredi 11 octobre 2024Durée 55:28

Hey Changemakers,

First of all, thank you to everyone who is listening to the “Agents of Change” podcast, a unique conversation series focused on the people making change happen across so many different types of work practice and community life. It is always such a joy to speak with people doing good work and focusing their efforts on bringing about positive change in our world. I love sharing these conversations with you.

And I’m excited to announce that “Agents of Change” is now on Apple Podcasts, so it’s even easier to follow along and listen to each new episode in the same place you listen to all your podcasts.

This episode is probably one of my favorite yet, especially since we dive into some powerful aspects of community-based practice and collective action. If you’re inspired by what you hear in this conversation, then you should definitely consider registering for my upcoming Fall Community-Centered Engagement Intensive, a 3-part online workshop focused on building a stronger community-centered practice in your organization. And since this is the final time I’ll be offering this workshop, now is the perfect time to register and be a part of this final cohort.

Onto the Episode…

In this latest episode, I had the privilege of speaking with an inspiring group of changemakers I recently met in Northern Ireland who are working to reimagine the future through small yet powerful projects around community gardening, food, place making, urban planning, and storytelling. My guests for this episode are:

* Bryonie Reid and Gemma Reid, quarto collective

* Craig Sands, Grow Northern Ireland

* Paul Kelly and Gawain Morrison, Brink!

I met these amazing individuals this past June during a memorable visit to Northern Ireland and the city of Belfast, where I visited the Brink! site and A Growing Story project—a community garden space for growing food, bringing people together, and reimaging the future of Belfast.

I was in Belfast, in part, to lead a workshop hosted by the National Lottery Heritage Fund on “Expanding Community Participation in Heritage Spaces.” We spent the second part of my workshop at the Brink! site, where I encouraged people to practice their sense of imagination and create some powerful “what if” questions to encourage more radical practice when it comes to community engagement. During my visit, I was also able to attend some of the Brink! community programming during the opening weekend (which also coincided with Summer Solstice).

Seeing this space in action was truly fantastic!

Through this episode’s conversation, we explore the theme of change across a variety of contexts, including how small, community-led actions can ripple out in powerful ways, and how reconnecting with nature can reshape how we think about our future. And ultimately, can something as simple as a community garden save our planet?

This episode centers around the Brink! site and A Growing Story project which has reclaimed a derelict urban space in downtown Belfast, turning that site into a community garden and urban green space. This space does more than grow food—it cultivates relationships, sparks conversations, and challenges us to rethink how we live in and interact with our cities. In a world often dominated by big development projects and corporate-driven change, these initiatives are a reminder that real transformation can start small, and grow organically from the ground up.

I’ve shared several photos of the site here in this post, so you can get a better sense of the place and how it operates within urban Belfast.

At the heart of this episode’s conversation is another powerful question: What should our cities do? How can we shape our urban environments in ways that prioritize community, sustainability, and well-being over profit and expansion?

This is about more than planting gardens—it’s about growing relationships, cultivating human connection, and developing common strategies to tackle the massive, daunting problem of climate change. We discuss how working together in a shared space, and doing something as simple as gardening, can shift perspectives on what it means to live in a city, what it means to rebuild our relationship with nature, and what it means to reconnect with ourselves (and each other) as human beings.

Key Themes and Questions

* How can small, community-led projects challenge the way cities are developed?In a time when urban spaces are often handed over to commercial interests, what happens when communities claim space for themselves and decide to grow something different?

* What is the connection between food, community, and climate action?We talk about the significance of growing food in the heart of a city and how reconnecting with the earth helps us rethink our relationship to sustainability, food systems, and the environment.

* What does collective action look like in practice?We explore how these projects are built on the power of “doing” rather than talking—how working side by side in a garden fosters collaboration, empathy, and a shared vision for the future.

* How can cities balance the need for development with the need for green, community spaces?As Belfast undergoes continued urban change, what role can green spaces play in building a healthier, more connected city?

* How do personal transformations happen through collective work?Everyone shares how being part of these projects has reshaped their own views on activism, community, and what it means to create lasting change in their local environment.

This conversations reminds us that even though the problems we face may seem insurmountable, there is power in collective action and people coming together to make change happen.

Whether you’re passionate about community participation, urban design, climate action, or just curious about how small acts of community care can have big impacts, this episode will leave you with ideas, inspiration, and perhaps a new perspective on how change can happen.

I want to express my sincere gratitude to Gemma, Bryonie, Craig, Paul, and Gawain for welcoming me into this community space, sharing their practice with me, and taking the time to have this podcast conversation with me. I truly look forward to staying connected, and learning more from their inspiring work.

Enjoy the episode!

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Tackling Solvable Problems in Organizational Culture

lundi 9 septembre 2024Durée 34:11

Hey Changemakers,

I am so excited to keep this conversation series going here at Agents of Change, as it gives me an opportunity to bring in the insights and perspectives of some incredible thinkers doing the work of making change happen in museums and nonprofits.

And I want to extend my enormous thanks to those who have stepped up to become paid subscribers of the Agents of Change community — you are helping to support this work, grow this incredible change community, and help make positive change happen in organizations across the U.S. and beyond. I am so grateful for your support!

For today’s conversation, I am so excited to be joined again by Rebecca Shulman to talk about organizational culture in museums and research she is has been conducting with museum directors to help institutions work to improve workplace culture. Our previous conversation on this series revolved around the specific issue of workplace burnout, so I recommend you check out that episode, too.

Rebecca is a museum educator, evaluator, and strategic planner doing her work through Museum Questions Consulting.  Rebecca has served as the Director of the Peoria Playhouse Children’s Museum, Head of Education at the Noguchi Museum, and Senior Manager in the Learning Through Art Program at the Guggenheim Museum, and she writes at Museum Questions, where, by the way, you can find more about all things “organizational culture” that we’ll be talking about today.

In this episode, the conversation revolves around understanding and transforming organizational culture, especially museums. Rebecca shares insights from her research on identifying solvable problems within museums and how addressing these issues can lead to meaningful change.

Our discussion highlights the importance of doing the work now to build a better future, with a focus on practical steps to improve internal culture and foster growth. The conversation also points listeners to resources, including Rebecca's research report to help you dive deeper into the findings and strategies discussed.

Key questions raised in the episode include:

* What are the most pressing solvable problems within organizations today?

* How can organizations effectively address these issues to shift their culture in a positive direction?

* And why is it so important to focus on these changes now, rather than later?

Rebecca concludes our conversation by sharing more about her new Culture Shift professional development program that kicks off this fall.

Culture Shift is a dedicated, small group space for museum leaders who are committed to the real work of changing organizational culture. Over the course of eight 90-minute virtual sessions, the group will discuss both theory and practical tips for meaningful change. Each participant will be asked to conduct an internal assessment of their museum’s culture, and to design, implement, and evaluate strategies for shifting the needle and making lasting change. 

You can find all the details about Culture Shift here at Museum Questions.

I want to extend a heartfelt thank you to Rebecca for sharing her insights on organizational culture. Her research and practical approach to identifying solvable problems offer so much hope for positive transformation, not just in museums but in all types of organizations. I truly appreciate her time and expertise, and I know you will find this discussion as thought-provoking and inspiring as I did.

Thank you again, Rebecca—I look forward to continuing these important conversations in the future!

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Join me! Nature As Self Care: A Restorative Hands On Workshop

mercredi 20 avril 2022Durée 09:28

Hello Agents of Change Community!

I am very excited to share something with you that I’ve been working on for a while!

On Tuesday, May 24, from 5-6:30 pm Pacific time (8-9:30 Eastern), I am going to be running a special online workshop with my Super Nature Adventures partner and co-creator Bryna Campbell focusing on nature, wellness, and self-care. 

If you've been following me in any capacity—especially my Instagram or Twitter accounts—you probably know by now that connecting with nature is something incredibly meaningful to me. In fact, it’s the major reason I started working on Super Nature Adventures and have been focusing much of my energies there since leaving my museum job.

And as I opened up about in my previous post “It’s Been Two Years Since…,” this mode of care has been a core tool for helping my spouse and I manage the ups and downs of the past couple years. I have grown my own practice of spending time outdoors through daily walks, regular hikes in nearby parks, and even gardening. 

Immersing oneself in the natural environment can be one of the most powerful and effective strategies for care and healing.  Through these experiences, we also build a deeper connection between ourselves and the natural world. 

In this way, as author M. Amos Clifford writes in his Guide to Forest Bathing:

"we come to relate to our shared earth in a fundamentally different way."

When we connect in slow and intimate ways, engage our senses, and get in touch with our creative side, we are restoring connections that have been interrupted though the culture of stress and overwork.

In our Nature as Self Care workshop, we will guide you through a series of exercises designed to help you slow down and connect to nature in ways that can help create calm, reduce stress, and combat burnout.

You’ll learn more about how and why these exercises can be effective, and be introduced to some basic philosophies and research behind nature and self-care.

And in true Super Nature Adventures fashion, you’ll also receive an illustrated handout with additional prompts, activities, and resources to help you adapt these strategies for your own daily life.

We encourage everyone who signs up to to bring an object from nature with them (such as a plant, leaf, cone, flower, or even just a beloved house plant) for some of the activities, and to have some pencils, markers, or crayons as well as paper or a notebook for journaling and drawing.

NOTE: The cost to register is $25. Spaces are limited. We have decided to keep the workshop small because we envision this space as intimate and conversational to explore these ideas, practices, and activities together.

As part of my process of bringing together my work for museums & nonprofits with my work in nature education, place-based learning, and design, Agents of Change is partnering with Super Nature Adventures to offer this workshop. It draws on our work with Super Nature Adventures, as well as my experiences running workshops on forest bathing, creating change from within, and from the chapter in my book Museums as Agents of Change on healing and care. 

We are opening these tickets up first to the Agents of Change community as well as those who currently subscribe to Super Nature Adventures packets, so if you are interested, it's a good idea to nab your ticket soon, before we share this event more widely.

“We don’t have to scale mountains or ride rapids to benefit from being outside. Being outside for a few minutes, looking at a tree, and observing the light filtering through leaves can regulate your nervous system and allow you to be more present.” -Laura van Dernoot Lipsky, founder of the Trauma Stewardship Institute



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Relationships are everything

jeudi 24 février 2022Durée 07:49

Greetings Changemakers!

I’m so excited to share some new strategies and tools today in this post, as well as a brand new project that I’m piloting that builds on the ideas I share through this newsletter.

I am often asked about the single most important thing we can do to make real, meaningful change happen within institutions such as museums. And I always think back to these words from writer and activist adrienne maree brown from her pivotal book Emergent Strategy

“Relationships are everything.”

This concept of deep relational work has grounded my own practice for many years. It has been central to my writing about how museums and nonprofits can be more human-centered and community-centered. When we focus on people and take the time to engage in meaningful, slow, and intentional processes of building and sustaining relationships, we can shape a better future for the institutions, organizations, and communities we work in. 

In their book The Relationship Is the Project, a collective of community-based artists and activists from Australia really tackle this idea through their own practice. 

“It seems simple to say that ‘the relationship is the project,’” writes cultural consultant Jade Lillie, “but it’s often the thing that gets lost amongst the deadlines, egos, lack of experience, shame, bias, time, external expectations and our busy lives.” 

We are doing our best work when we’re developing and nurturing our relationships—it’s as simple as that.

But how can we keep this focus on relationships front and center in our practice?  How can we stay grounded in a more people-centered approach to our work, and not let it get lost amidst everything we are trying to balance? 

It begins with reimagining our work and simply bringing a focus to the human connections around us.

Mapping and Growing Our Relationships

Shining some light on these human connections was at the center of a series of mini-workshops I facilitated recently for the Museum Division Preconference of the National Art Education Association. Each of these workshops brought together a very small group of museum educators for a fast-paced session focused on our work as changemakers. 

We discussed our varying comfort levels with change, and then I introduced one of my favorite strategies for building support for change: Mapping Relationships

“Relational mapping,” as it is often called, is a form of rethinking our working structures.

It’s an exercise that helps us to reframe the way we think about our work to go beyond the traditional organizational charts. It pushes us to notice the connections, relationships, and communities we have formed with other people, regardless of the rigid reporting structures and silos within our organizations. 

When we work to move away from our emphasis on traditional org charts based in oppressive hierarchies and power inequities, and instead focus on the human relationships we have in our work, we can begin to transform institutions and the existing power dynamics. 

In the voice note available at the top of this post, I walk you through the exercise step by step.

Listen to the voice note, give the Mapping Relationships exercise a try, and share your experience with me and the Agents of Change community in the comments.

Here are some questions to think about as you work through it on your own. 

* What does it feel like to map out the relationships and human connections in your work?

* What are some ways this practice might help you identify and develop new connections and relationships?

* What impact might this focus on relationships have on your work? What about your organization’s broader work with local communities?

As you leave your comment, read and respond to those of others. Let’s learn together and strengthen our collective practice.

One final inspiring thought from adrienne maree brown:

“in community, our potential is truly realized. what we have to offer to each other is not merely critique, anger, commentary, ownership and false power. we have the capacity to hold each other, serve each other, heal each other, create for and with each other, forgive each other, and liberate ourselves and each other.”

We can all actively work to be in deeper relationship with others, be more vulnerable, and treat each other as the full, complete, and complex human beings we are.

Resources

Here are just a few resources for those interested in extending their learning and growth when it comes to relational work. Let me know if you find these useful.

“The Relationship Work of Systems Change,” Stanford Social Innovation Review

* In this recent article, Katherine Milligan, Juanita Zerda, and John Kania of Collective Change Lab write about various key aspects of relational work for collective impact. In it, they state: “Sometimes we lose sight of a simple truth about systems: They are made up of people.” 

Emergent Strategy, by adrienne maree brown

* For me, this has been an essential resource when it comes to social justice practice and community organizing work. Inspired by Octavia Butler's explorations of our human relationship to change, brown’s book is a radical self-help, society-help, and planet-help guide designed to shape the futures we want to live.

The Relationship Is the Project, edited by Jade Lillie, Kate Larsen, Cara Kirkwood, and Jax Jacki Brown

* This collection of essays and case studies by a group of Australian artists, curators, and cultural activists offers a great set of strategies for community-engaged practitioners in the arts. And I could not pass up a book with a title like this.

in relationship with others, adrienne maree brown

* This short piece by brown offers some inspiring insights into the value of relationships and what beloved community means. She begins with these words: “the most important personal and political skill to develop is how to be in relationship to others.” Yes!



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Is feeling alone part of being an advocate for change?

mardi 8 février 2022Durée 08:43

Through all the conversations I have with people about change, one issue that comes up again and again is the feeling of being alone in our work to advocate for change. Many of the comments on previous posts here in this publication suggest that many people feel isolated, alone, disconnected from others, and even singled out as they push for necessary change and institutional transformation.

Last year, during a workshop and presentation I led for about 300 people, I asked (through a poll) if people ever felt alone in their role as a changemaker, and 90% said “yes.” Even this week, I asked the same question to a smaller group of museum/nonprofit professionals, and nearly two-thirds said that they have felt alone when advocating for change in their organization. A vast majority of us feel a bit untethered when doing the important work of making change happen. We frequently feel like we just don’t have the colleagues and leaders who share our purpose and values as we struggle to make positive changes in our organizations and workplaces.

Some New Ways to Define Loneliness

In a 2021 essay in Harvard Magazine entitled “The Loneliness Pandemic,” author Jacob Sweet shares that social psychologists commonly define loneliness as “the gap between the social connections you would like to have and those you feel you experience”—a definition that made me pause and think about all the times I have felt lonely, wishing that there were more people around me supporting the same changes I wanted to see happen. The essay also highlights some of the research on loneliness and health, including one study which shows that being lonely has the same health risks as smoking 15 cigarettes a day (yikes!).

Our feelings of loneliness and isolation have certainly been accentuated through the pandemic as we live through lockdowns and quarantines, and as our work moved online to platforms like Zoom. We’ve all experienced so much distancing, and it’s certainly going to take some time to feel connected (truly connected) again.

In his recent book Together: The Healing Power of Human Connection in a Sometimes Lonely World, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy defines several forms of loneliness, including collective loneliness, or “the hunger for a network or community of people who share our sense of purpose.” Throughout the pandemic, so many of us have been reflecting on our values, what matters most to us, and what type of work aligns most closely with our personal values—and so many people (in nonprofits, museums, and many sectors) have changed the type of work we do to connect with others around a shared purpose.

Building Our Relationships with Others

As we dive deeper into our relationship with change, I think we should also be reflecting on our relationships with others.

How can we work to build connections with others as we advocate for meaningful change within our organizations? How can we lean in to forming communities of changemakers? For me, this is so much of what this Agents of Change publication is about—bringing people together, learning from each other, and equipping ourselves with the tools we need to fight for positive change. I’m leading several workshops later this week called “POWER UP for Change,” and they are not only designed to offer strategies to better advocate for change, but they are also about bringing together small groups of changemakers to be champions for each other.

None of us are alone in this work!

We know that others are doing this work, and we’ve got to be intentional about reaching out, finding them, and recognizing our collective work together.

Let’s Share with Each Other

As part of this process of building our relationships with others, I invite you to share your responses to the following questions with the Agents of Change community:

* How can each of us work to build connection and community as we work toward making change happen?

* What is one small, practical step you might take right now to begin a more intentional process of building relationships with others as you advocate for change?

* What is one way you might already be powerfully connecting with others and advancing collective action around change?

Leave a comment here, responding with as few or as many thoughts, questions, and ideas as you’d like to share. Yes, short responses are very welcome – and so are long ones. And I’ll share my gratitude in advance for your honesty and vulnerability (both superpowers we need more of in this world).

Please consider reading each other’s comments and have an exchange via this platform. After all, I don’t see “Agents of Change” as just another passive monologue, but rather a more dynamic dialogue where we can be in conversation and connection with each other.  That’s how we learn together and strengthen our collective practice.

One final thought from Murthy’s book Together. In it, he writes:

“being connected to others gives us a stake in more than our own interests. It expands those interests to include our whole community and thus increases our motivation to work together.”

We can all be agents of change, even in these lonely and challenging moments, and we can do this work together!



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Reflecting on Our Relationship with Change

lundi 10 janvier 2022Durée 09:19

Uncertainty and change are here to stay, that’s just a fact of life. So I’m always interested in exploring our relationship with these forces and giving ourselves some space and kindness to unpack that relationship.

For this issue of the newsletter, I ‘m experimenting with a new format – a voice note. I am hoping it helps to bring that extra feeling of human connection to this newsletter that I don’t think we get from just reading text on a screen. The voice note is not an audio version of this writing; it’s kind of a companion to this text. So I invite you to read this post and listen to the short voice note. You can access the voice note by hitting the play button at the top of this post.

Let’s Breathe Together

I don’t know about you, but as I make my way through transitions and changes in life or work, I just feel the weight of everything pushing down on me. Whenever I feel like this, I try my best to remember to just breathe and connect with how my body feels as I breathe. It’s a simple yet powerful human strategy for all of us changemakers.

Years ago, I heard visionary dance activist Shamell Bell talk about how the word ‘conspire’ actually means ‘to breathe together.’ With a group of museum professionals and nonprofit leaders, she led us through some very simple breathing exercises – and I remember how good it felt to connect with my own breath and to breathe with others. This has resonated with me ever since.

Let’s all just take a moment here, and breathe together. Connect with what it feels like for the air to come into our lungs – and then slowly exhale and feel the air leaving our lungs.  Our breathe is life-giving and, yet we tend to just let it happen in the background. What happens if we bring it to the foreground more often, and simply feel the movement and rhythms of our breathing?

Our Relationship with Change

I have been spending time these past few weeks diving into Octavia Butler's Parable of the Sower and at the same time listening to Octavia's Parables, a phenomenal podcast hosted by adrienne maree brown and Toshi Reagon. While a dystopian novel about the future might sound like grim reading, I assure you it is not. Not only does Butler bring forth a shining vision of hope and change, but brown and Reagon’s podcast places Butler’s writings in a context for those intending to change the world through activism and community organizing work.

The podcast goes through Butler’s novels chapter by chapter, providing insights and key questions that bring additional layers of meaning to the writing (which, by the way, is already jam-packed full of some powerful meaning). I have found this to be the perfect pairing during uncertain times, allowing me to more fully engage with the complexities and challenges of the present moment and my own role (as an individual and as part of collective efforts) in proactively shaping the future.

Early in the podcast, adrienne maree brown poses the question: “What is your relationship with change?” Are we comfortable with change? Or not? In what ways are we changing the world around us, and how are we changing in response (even in the smallest ways)?

With everything always changing around us so rapidly, it can feel quite challenging to then be an advocate and agent for change in any aspect of your work or life. Right? Why on earth would we want more change? This is why I think it can be so important to hold space for our relationship to change, and be kind to ourselves as we navigate our struggles with change.

Let’s Share with Each Other

As part of this process of envisioning change, I invite you to share your responses to one or more of these questions with the “Agents of Change” community. These questions are also perfect for self-reflection as well as for sparking a conversation among your team or with people at all levels of your organization:

* What is your relationship with change – right now, in this moment?

* What are you struggling with the most?

* What change might be challenging or difficult?

* What changes are bringing you joy?

* What are you most proud of right now?

Leave a comment here, responding with as few or as many thoughts, questions, and ideas as you’d like to share. Yes, short responses are very welcome – and so are long ones. And I’ll share my gratitude in advance for your honesty and vulnerability (both superpowers we need more of in this world).

Please consider reading each other’s comments and have an exchange via this platform. After all, I don’t see “Agents of Change” as just another passive monologue, but rather a more dynamic dialogue where we can be in conversation and connection with each other.  That’s how we learn together, build relationships, and strengthen our collective practice. We can all be agents of change, even in difficult and challenging moments, and we can do this together!

I close this message with the opening words of Chapter 1, which adrienne maree brown has tattooed on her left arm:

"All that you touch You Change. All that you Change Changes you. The only lasting truth Is Change. God Is Change."



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Embracing a Purposeful Life in Retirement

mercredi 4 septembre 2024Durée 32:14

Hey Changemakers,

I am so excited to return to this series of conversations here at Agents of Change, after a bit of a break this summer. I always love this series, since it gives me an opportunity to bring in the insights and perspectives of some incredible thinkers doing the work of making change happen in museums and nonprofits.

Today, I am so thrilled to be joined by Margaret Kadoyama, a true shining light in the museum field. Margaret is the author of the pivotal book Museums Involving Communities: Authentic Connections that deeply examines the museum-community relationship, which as you know is something dear to my heart.

Margaret has more than 40 years of experience working in community involvement, program assessment, and program development for museums and cultural organizations, including teaching in the Museum Studies program at John F Kennedy University for 21 years. She has always been passionate about making museums more accessible, inclusive, and relevant to their communities.

For me, Margaret’s work and writing has been vital when it comes to museums and community engagement, and I cite her writings in my own book, Museum as Agents of Change. So I jumped at this opportunity to be in conversation with her as part of this series.

Our conversation hit on some key topics surround the career and life journey, including:

* Applying our personal core values beyond our career, and thinking about how our values apply to life after work.

* Transitioning from a career to retirement, including both the emotional challenges and practical steps involved in this complex transition.

* Embracing self-reflection for a meaningful retirement, and exploring how self-reflection can help us prepare for and find purpose during retirement (and any of the major life and career changes that happen).

* Valuing intergenerational knowledge and learning, and how we can do better when it comes to building bridges and creating deeper respect across generations.

In addition to diving into these important topics, Margaret shares her personal insights on navigating the transition into retirement, offering advice for others facing similar changes:

* Identify what is most important to you as you begin transitioning into retirement, or really at any major transition in your career or life. This provides you with that purposeful grounding.

* Reflect on what makes your days feel good: Think about what makes you happy and what brings you joy, and create more opportunities for those things to happen.

* Be willing to try something new. Even as we age and tend to appreciate the comfort of what we already know, we need to leave our comfort zones and try new things.

I am so extremely grateful for Margaret taking the time to share her personal reflections with the Agents of Change community. I hope you can take away valuable insights on how to approach retirement with a mindset of reflection and purpose, transforming this — and any life transition — into an opportunity for personal growth and fulfillment.

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Building a More Community-Centered Practice

jeudi 4 avril 2024Durée 25:16

Hey Changemakers,

I am so excited to continue this series of conversations here at Agents of Change, which gives me an opportunity to bring in the insights and perspectives of some incredible thinkers doing the work of making change happen.

For this episode, I am joined by Stacey Garcia, an educator, leader, gatherer, and connector, currently serving as the Program Manager in Methodology and Practice with the International Coalition of Sites of Conscience.  Stacey has worked internationally in nonprofits, museums, and foundations to facilitate transformative changes toward social justice – most recently, as the Engagement Officer at the Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County.  And prior to that, as Director of Community Engagement at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art & History, where I first met Stacey and had the fortunate opportunity to see first-hand her incredible work connecting the museum with its communities.

For me, Stacey has been a leading voice and changemaker when it comes to museums and community engagement, and her work has influenced and informed much of my own practice. So I am so thrilled to be able to share this conversation.

I connected with Stacey in advance of my workshop that kicks off on April 10th on “Community-Centered Engagement,” and it was fantastic to be able to speak with her about her own insights and core practices when it comes to being more community-centered.

Our conversation hit on some key questions, including:

* How do we define community?

* What does it mean for a museum or organization to be “community-centered”?

* Who benefits from the work your organization is doing? And how can we center reciprocity and mutual power?

* How can we rethink some of the traditional structures and processes of museums that might not lend themselves to authentic partnership work?

* How can we begin to build a more community-centered practice one step at a time?

In addition to diving into these burning questions, Stacey also shared some closing thoughts on how we can begin to build meaningful community connections:

* IDENTIFY ONE PARTNER: Begin by identifying one partner you want to work with, and start there.

* GET TO KNOW THEM: Show up at their events, in their spaces, or experiences that are important to them. What are their strengths? What matters to them? Get to know your partners as human beings, and start by simply building a relationship (before you jump into any project).

I am so grateful for Stacey taking the time to share her work and practice with the Agents of Change community. I hope you find this conversation as meaningful as I did, and can take-away several key learnings and questions to bring to your own organization.

Get Started Now - Community-Centered Engagement workshop starts April 10

If you listened to this conversation with Stacey and you were interested in getting started in this work, then check out my “Community-Centered Engagement” Spring Intensive that begins on April 10th.

Through this 3-part virtual workshop, we will dive deeper into key aspects of community involvement, community partnerships, and audience engagement strategies at your organization. During this series of interactive, discussion-based online workshops (held on Zoom), we are going to:

* learn about a needs-based approach to community involvement and participation

* examine models of community involvement, audience participation, and co-creation, understanding how these models can help guide a community-centered practice

* engage in group working sessions geared to applying community-centered strategies to your organization

* develop strategies and actions that can be implemented as part of your institution’s ongoing planning and programming

One of my goals for this Spring Intensive is to create an online community where we can get to know each other and learn from one another, so the registration is capped at around 20. And there are still a few spots left!

I’m really excited to launch this workshop and bring together an incredible group for this first-ever Community-Centered Engagement Intensive.

If you are thinking about joining but have scheduling conflicts, or if you have any other questions at all, please don’t hesitate to contact me at murawski27@gmail.com

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

Life After Layoff

mardi 26 mars 2024Durée 35:27

Hey Changemakers,

I am excited to continue this series of conversations here at Agents of Change, which gives me an opportunity to bring in the insights and perspectives of some incredible thinkers doing the work of making change happen.

This episode is a little different.

Four years ago, just a week after the pandemic shut down most museums across the country, I joined the ranks of thousands of museum workers who were laid off from their jobs. I wrote a deeper reflection on my experience a couple years ago, in which I explore my own journey of healing, repair, radical forgiveness, and ultimately giving myself permission to move on.

And like so many people who have experienced any type of layoff, I still find myself thinking a lot about that experience and what I have learned (and keep learning) from it. So it was really good to connect with someone and have a shared conversation about our layoff experiences.

For this episode, I am joined by Joe Imholte, a leader in the field of museums with a career that now spans 30 years. Joe is currently the Executive Vice President at the Bakken Museum, a science, technology, and humanities museum in Minneapolis. Joe experienced his own layoff the year prior to the pandemic, leaving an institution he’d been with for many years. He reached out to me about sitting down for this conversation, and I gladly accepted. We both felt that we had more to share and open up about life after layoff.

And I should add that I’m familiar with Joe and the Bakken Museum for a couple reasons – first, they have been one of the few museums to carry “Museums Are Not Neutral” mugs in their gift shop. And second, Joe has been part of the team at the Bakken leading their efforts around pay equity.  I’ll let Joe share more about his own background and work as we dive into the conversation.

This conversation is vulnerable and honest, and we hit on some commonalities of our experiences that we wanted to share.

First and foremost, we talk about how isolating it can feel to be laid off. The process itself is very distancing, and we can feel alone for so many reasons. But experiencing a layoff is not uncommon (as unfortunate as that is). Especially these past several years, so many of us have exited our jobs for various reasons, and it can be helpful to realize this and connect with others who have shared this experience.

Joe and I both share what it was like, not just to leave an institution, but to lose the community we had been so connected with for so long. These are the colleagues we’d worked with closely every day for years, and suddenly that connection is severed. It is an experience and feeling that I’ve not heard others talk about or write about, so I am glad we opened up about it here.

Finally, we discuss our own challenges with returning to our previous institutions—how hard it can be to walk through that door, reconnect with old colleagues, and even remember what it smells like in the buildings we used to work in. For me, this has been one of the most difficult things about being laid off, and I still struggle with making those return visits.

As we conclude our conversation, we both answered the question, “What would you tell someone who been laid off recently or might be in this transition right now?”

Joe reminds us that we’re not alone, and that we all have some form of a support network to connect with, whether that be family or friends. Reach out and find those connections. And I would say to remember that we are not are jobs, and that our identities are far greater than what we do at work and where we work.

These moments have a lot to teach us when we’re ready to listen (even if if it takes us a while to get to that place).

I am so grateful for this time speaking with Joe, and sharing these human experiences. We both hope that you find this conversation meaningful in some way.

Upcoming Workshops: Filling Up Fast!

I have two big workshops coming up in April, and I’d love have you as a part of them. Community-Centered Engagement,” starts on April 10, and it already three-fourths filled, so I encourage you to register soon.

This workshop is an in-depth three-part online intensive designed to help you build a stronger community-centered practice and advocate for more meaningful community involvement and partnerships at your organization.

Meanwhile, the next Making Change Happen” work is happening very soon — next week on Wednesday, April 3!

We had our first “Making Change Happen workshop last week and we had such meaningful conversations about our comfort with change, the different kinds of challenges we have in larger vs smaller organizations, and ways to combat negative stories we might tell ourselves. I’m really looking forward to exploring these themes again next week.

I’d love to have you join us for this fun, engaging workshop that explores how to be an effective changemaker in your work. And as a reminder, all students should register with the code STUDENT for a discount.

Did you know that Agents of Change has a paid subscription option? Paid subscribing gives you access to additional posts. It’s also a way to support the work it takes to create this Substack (thank you!!).

And if you are curious to know more about some of the different kinds of services I do - including the creative work I do with nature and place-based arts nonprofits, have a look at my project page and services page.

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

From Passion to Fatigue: Navigating Workplace Burnout

vendredi 23 février 2024Durée 18:20

Hey Changemakers,

I am so excited to continue this new series of conversations here at Agents of Change, which gives me an opportunity to bring in the insights and perspectives of some incredible thinkers doing the work of making change happen.

Don’t miss our first conversation in this series with Alex Hatcher where we talk all about the importance of developing and living organizational values.

For this episode, I am joined by Rebecca Shulman, a museum educator, evaluator, and strategic planner doing her work through Museum Questions Consulting.  Rebecca has served as the Director of the Peoria Playhouse Children’s Museum, Head of Education at the Noguchi Museum, and Senior Manager in the Learning Through Art Program at the Guggenheim Museum in New York.  She also wrote the book Looking at Art in the Classroom.

I first connected with Rebecca many years ago through our mutual work as museum educators, and also through our connection as museum bloggers (Rebecca writes Museum Questions, which she started over 10 years ago!). Yet it is her current dive into museum worker burnout that brings us into conversation for this episode.

If addressing workplace burnout is something you’re interested in learning more about, check out my previous posts here at Agents of Change related to this important issue:

* “Why We Need to Talk about Burnout”

* “You Can’t Do Everything Everywhere All at Once”

* “Join the ‘Slow the F*ck Down’ Movement”

Rebecca’s recent post “What Is Burnout?” on Museum Questions does an excellent job of pulling together some of the important research and resources around burnout and museum workplace culture, including the work of Christina Maslach. She cites Maslach’s research and writings on burnout, and include her list of six causes of burnout: Unsustainable workload, perceived lack of control, insufficient rewards for effort, lack of a supportive community, lack of fairness, and mismatched values and skills.

Our conversation hit on some key ideas, including:

* Workplace burnout is an issue of organizational culture

* One of the major causes of burnout isn’t workload, but rather lack of staff engagement

* Leaders have a role to play in addressing burnout by working with their staff to set clear goals, aligned values, and a sense of direction.

In addition to diving into these vital topics, Rebecca also shared some closing thoughts on how we can take action steps right now to address burnout:

* BE TRANSPARENT: Try to be open and transparent about the details of your feeling of burnout with your manager, and consider asking for help when it comes to solving workload issues. Is there a way to streamline these tasks, or better prioritize them?

* TALK & PROBLEM SOLVE TOGETHER: Overall, Rebecca highlights the need for us to simply talk with each other more about burnout, and work together to find solutions.

I am thrilled I could reconnect with Rebecca, and get her thoughts on workplace burnout. I am grateful she could take the time to share her work and practice with the Agents of Change community.

If you want to connect with Rebecca Shulman and learn more about her work, here is the best way to do that:

* Museum Questions

Share Your Story

Do you have a story about burnout in the museum workplace?

Please consider sharing your story with Rebecca (use this link). She is looking for personal stories which illustrate any of the six causes of burnout (see above or Rebecca’s blog post), OR something your museum is doing that is a positive example of limiting workload, offering employees control, rewarding individuals for effort, supporting staff, demonstrating fairness, or aligning staff and institutional values and skills.

Did you know that Agents of Change has a paid subscription option? Paid subscribing gives you access to additional posts. It’s also a way to support the work it takes to create this Substack (thank you!!).

And if you are curious to know more about some of the different kinds of services I do - including the creative work I do with nature and place-based arts nonprofits, have a look at my project page and services page.

Agents of Change is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.



This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit agentsofchange.substack.com/subscribe

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