Every year for the past 5 years we’ve released a big update to the Safe Zone Project on our birthday as a present from us to you. This year, when we were chatting about what we would create and release as part of our “Birthday Update,” we realized a lot of things that might be useful to share with the community.
Here’s the short version: We aren’t releasing anything (yet) for our birthday. Instead, we’re sharing the why behind that decision.
The conversation below was copied from an SZP Slack channel, where SZP co-creators Meg Bolger & Sam Killermann were revisiting potential ideas for the release. We decided to share it with you (lightly edited — some capitalization, grammar, etc.) so you can see what we’re talking about, and what we’re thinking about:
Meg:
As we were talking the other day the biggest difference between this year and years prior is that we’re not facilitating the SZ curriculum as a service anymore. So it’s hard to have a pulse on what changes are needed, what’s coming up in workshops, etc.
sK:
Meg:
But it does make the whole “we do a big update every year” harder to make good on. Definitely one of those “good problems to have”.
sK:
We used to test every change we were considering making tons of times before we put it down in writing (I’m thinking of DOs/DONTs, Queer Umbrella, etc.) to make sure it was something that would work in most settings, with most groups.
There are still (small) things we know we wanna improve in the curriculum, but we’re going to have to rely on community input/feedback for any big overhauls or improvements.
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
Our perpetual struggle!
Honestly, if I was an outsider looking in I would definitely assume that people email us on a regular basis with their thoughts and feedback, especially considering just the volume of people who touch the site. But one thing that has been just as consistent as the flow of people every year has been the amount of feedback we get which is…supa tiny.
sK:
Meg:
And it was super useful to boot.
sK:
So we were thinking we could use the birthday release to do a big “Want to give us a gift? Give us the gift of constructive feedback if you’ve been using our curriculum and have something to share!”
Meg:
Which I was really excited about. Because feedback would be such a gift because (as we said before/earlier) we’re not facilitating the curriculum anymore, so feedback is the touchpoint that we have to the people who are actively facilitating.
But one of the things that came up was what type of feedback would be likely to receive and could we use it to actually change the curriculum,
sK:
Meg:
The ones we came up with I think were like people encouraging us to change the curriculum so that it reflected more of the social justice dogma, facilitators struggling to respond to those pressures, big changes or additions people would want to see reflected in the curriculum… there might have been a few more.
sK:
Meg:
And as we were laying all this out we saw a few categories of likely feedback (a) feedback that we would be likely to get but that we’ve already considered (b) feedback that would be big changes we wouldn’t want to implement without testing first (c) feedback that relates to social justice dogma in some way.
The A & B we can’t make good on. And the big thing with the SJD feedback is that we realized it would probably be more useful to ask about that specifically right?
sK:
But just focusing on the feedback part, if we had to guess what percentage would be A and what would be B, we assumed they’d both be small, and even if it was all A or all B, there wouldn’t be a whole lot we could do with that feedback at this point.
And it started to feel like we might be wasting our Birthday celebration to send 20K+ emails to people for — what would likely amount to — little to no real benefit for the curriculum, the SZP, and all of the people using our resources. And! Most important! The participants in the rooms of the people facilitating using our curriculum.
We realized that we wouldn’t be following the advice we give in Train-the-Trainers: only ask for feedback that you’re going to utilize.
Meg:
Do you wanna go into that part or want to go somewhere else?
sK:
Meg:
We definitely anticipated some SJD stuff coming up in our last few train-the-trainers but I think one of the most clear examples that I remember was from someone who was in their like 40s/50s in rural MI, so I think it’s probably safe to assume if it’s popping up there it has the potential to pop up everywhere.
sK:
For me, it feels like a lot to bring up within the SZP context, because we know how overwhelming the challenge feels for so many people to simply facilitate a safe zone training.
They’re freaked out, nervous, worried they’ll say the wrong thing, or don’t know all the vocab, etc.
So us saying, “Also! Make sure you don’t reinforce dogmatic ways of doing social justice, this amorphous but pervasive trend we’re noticing in tons of activism spaces that you probably don’t even have a name for but are definitely feeling pressured by.” feels like a bit of a leap.
Meg:
Yeah we didn’t really get into that the other day but it’s true. It’s probably one of the first things we’re discussing bring into the SZP that would possible feel like increasing the difficulty, imitation, etc. people feel around facilitating SZ workshops, not less. Our whole site is basically dedicated to the “you can do this, you got this,” and this would be one of the first things that might decrease that feeling rather than increase it.
Which makes it really different from things we’ve done in the past and is definitely off-putting. Even tho, to be clear, I think it’s really important, it’s just really different (and not in fun ways).
sK:
Meg:
We talked about creating a kinda short write up sharing some thoughts from the audit with folks.
Did we talk about doing those for the birthday release? Or just that we could share we would be doing them?
sK:
Meg:
Which would be a big thing to announce, at least for us it would be really committing to a new direction. Which I was about to say would feel like a really “political” move, as if our site isn’t super political already. As we always pointed out in train-the-trainers. It’s in 🏳️🌈 for a reason.
sK:
The tricky thing about SJD is that it’s primarily controversial within the social justice / LGBTQ+ equity / progressive movement, whereas everything else we do is less controversial amongst our peers (but super political/controversial amongst more moderate-to-conservative people).
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
We talked about doing a 5.1 update, and how that wouldn’t likely feel like a good enough reason to send an email.
We talked about how we aren’t quite ready to release the Spanish-translation curriculum, because we need a few more things translated.
What else?
sK:
And the Spanish-translation curriculum has been held up by the feedback thing.
Dang — I’m just realizing how hilariously connected this all is.
Meg:
I definitely know how consciously stuck I’ve been feeling by SJD stuff in making new content. I can’t even imagine how it affects me on an unconscious level.
sK:
And we probably wouldn’t have talked about all this stuff if not for the birthday release, which we’ve always loved as an annual deadline that pushes us to be creative and make new things (the good part of the pressure we feel, that we’ve 100% created for ourselves).
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
I think one of the things that’s interesting is how many good ideas, or ideas that seem good right off the bat, when we talk through often have huge pitfalls. Its really cool in lots of ways, though from the outside it looks like nothing has changed.
sK:
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
So since our conversation, I haven’t had any new ideas. I think it feels more clear to me that doing the SJD audit and with it a ‘some of this stuff is 6 years old now, does it still make sense’ overhaul would be a really good idea. Something worth doing.
But in both cases I don’t feel clear that that is necessary to send as an announcement to the list. Which is what we’ve done every year. So while there is part of me that wants to have something to send out, another part thinks it’s okay not to.
And that maybe it’s okay to send a big update after the audit. Even if it’s not on our birthday.
sK:
Meg:
sK:
Meg:
I think also it is likely that the audit will have impact on the curriculum and would be cool to be able to update folks on that too.
sK:
I really like that idea. Should we publish anything on the site about any of these plans?
Meg:
Plus there is part of me that is always excited about the annual blog post 😉
sK:
sK:
Meg:
I say as is. You?
sK:
sK:
Meg:
sK:
sK:
Meg:
So not sure this is relevant information but I copied and pasted this convo and it’s about 2500 words (including all the “sK 1 minute ago”) things
Meg:
sK:
sK:
Meg: