Interactivity Foundation

Civic Sweet Sixteen: A Podcast Interview with Jessica Friedrichs

Exploring Civic Passions

Dear collaborative discussion friends,

This week we are highlighting Activity 5.1 Identifying Your Civic Passion, designed to help discussion participants figure out which civic topics are of greatest concern to them as individuals and as a group. This activity uses a playful, competitive model to get groups thinking and deciding together.

Interview with Jessica Friedrichs

https://cdn.interactivityfoundation.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/JesF_CivicSweetSixteen_InterviewEdited.mp3?_=1

You can hit the play button above to listen to Jessica Friedrichs, Assistant Professor & Director of Undergraduate Social Work Field Education at Carlow University, describe how to implement this activity. This is one of many activities in the Civic Collaboration Module.

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This week’s activity:

Activity 5.1 – Identifying Your Civic Passion


Introducing the Civic Sweet Sixteen Brackets

This activity provides an opportunity for participants to reflect on which civic issues are most important to them individually and how they might negotiate or advocate for these issues within a larger group. Through discussion, small groups will complete a “Civic Topics Sweet Sixteen Competition” which allows for a playful but serious reflection on which topics are most important to them as individuals and as a group, and why.

Getting Started: Seed the Brackets

Participants write down civic issues that matter most to them. Each person should try to come up with at least 3-5 topics. If possible, generate this list in advance on a digital platform. Generate at least 16 topics. You may want to consolidate or combine issues where appropriate.

Next, individuals vote for their top issues. Use a rank choice voting method so that participants can vote for their top choices. For example, if doing this in-person, give each participant a marker or sticker and allow them to distribute 5 points across their top issues. They can give 1 point to 5 different topics or 5 points to a single topic. They can distribute their points however they like. Or, use a digital platform like RankIt to determine the Top 16 Civic Topics.

Load or seed the Sweet Sixteen Bracket. In true tournament form, be sure to have the topic that ranks most important to the group (#1) to face off against the topic that ranks #16. You should continue to load the bracket accordingly #2 vs. #15, #3 vs. #14, #4 vs. #13, and so on.

Next: Begin the Civic Tournament

In small groups (3-4 people), play the Sweet Sixteen Civic Tournament. Discuss the various competitions or face-offs. As a group, decide which topic will win and continue in the tournament.

Helpful prompts might include:

Tip: Participants almost always want more time during this activity. You can limit time to force a quicker deliberation and create more space for a full group debriefing about the experience (focus on process). Or, you can allocate more time for the competition to allow for deeper small group discussion and exploration of shared concerns (identifying a common topic of concern). Think about your goal as the facilitator to determine which outcome is more important for your group.

Last: Debrief about the Process

Return to a full group. Each group shares their final “winning” civic issue. Discuss:

You can find detailed instructions, reflection questions, and additional resources in the full description of Activity 5.1 Identifying Your Civic Passion. It has been successfully used by student facilitators to identify the themes for campus-wide discussions. It has also been used by student teams to identify their shared capstone project, service projects, and community outreach efforts. Let us know how you use this activity to encourage deeper discussion and group decision-making.


If you try out this activity, please share with us what you think:

Rate Activity 5.1

We hope this toolkit activity offers a fun way for discussion groups to explore what they care about and make shared decisions together. In our upcoming newsletter we will be highlighting another playful activity that helps to encourage bold imagination about futures we want to create (and how to get there).


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Looking forward to collaborating with you this year,

Shannon Wheatley Hartman & the Collaborative Discussion Team

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