How Not to be Colonizers in the Metaverse
The route to avoiding colonizing the Metaverse must be centered on exploration, imagination, and new ways of being. How can we collectively ensure that we create a more inclusive and loving social order in the Metaverse?
How the Black Next Story Creates Schools for the Future
All public spaces, especially schools and places of learning, need to reemerge as public healing spaces. As we emerge from the pandemic, public lynchings, and gun violence, we need to remember that there is still a great need for schools to become places where a multiethnic, multiracial, multigenerational democracy is taught and modeled in practice.
How the Metaverse Helps Heal the Challenges of Our Time
Explore how technologies like the Metaverse can help us make visible and heal the contradictions and tensions of real human experiences.
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, It Will Be Played
228 Accelerator collaborated with founder of House of Legends, Andre Zarate, to create a series of banned book readings in the Metaverse. The goal is to provide a safe space for people to read, appreciate, exist, and love banned books, an act of resistance that honors LGBTQ+ identities as human.
Introducing the Latest Framework for equityXdesign
In this working reprise of equityXdesign 3.0, 228 Accelerator’s Founder, Caroline Hill, explores how designs for equity must become designs that heal, restore, and repair.
Learnings from the Design to Heal: Virtual Conference
228 Accelerator’s first Design to Heal: Virtual Conference imagined a world where web3.0 technologies are used to design healing, equitable learning systems. Read the top three learnings from the conference.
Opening Remarks from the Design to Heal: Virtual Conference
For 228 Accelerator’s first Design to Heal: Virtual Conference, we hope to emerge as a learning community that allows itself to learn together, work together, and design together.
Equity, Independence, and Web 3.0
Designs for equity must be designed equitably. Explore how the Metaverse and Web 3.0 technologies can play an instrumental role in prototyping new relationships that help us learn more about the requisites needed to scale and design equitable systems.
The New EquityXdesign Framework: Part One
EquityXdesign, our framework for re-designing systems that foster racism and inequality, was published approximately 2 weeks after the 2016 election at a time when the equity discourse in the education ecosystem was taking center stage.
Healing While Black and White, Part III: Scaling the Next Story
As a continuation of the Healing While Black and White series, we are sharing the third part of a moving conversation between two women—one black, and one white.
Healing While Black and White, Part II: Writing the Next Story
“Oh, this is not just about work.” The proliferation of race and equity training in the workplace has created the opportunity to see the lines that govern our private lives in public. But when the commitment to equity work is not just about professional development but getting better at the personal job of becoming a better human, the relationship between the powerful and the powerless holds the greatest potential for change. This is the foundation of a love ethic.
Healing While Black and White: Part One
To honor the last day of Black History Month and the beginning of Women’s History Month, we are publicly sharing a moving conversation between two women—one black, and one white.
With their permission and care, these two women, Courtney Bell and Angela Bond, tell the story of how they became each other’s “people”—experiencing a sense of belonging to one another. Their bond has created a becoming in their personal lives, as well the life of their shared organization.
We’ve Designed a New Style of Virtual Learning: the Xdesign Experience
We’re excited to introduce our newest offering, the Xdesign Experience: Accountability in Reconciliation. Unlike our courses, which are self-paced, this new experience is a hybrid online course that combines audio playlists, weekly Hatha yoga classes, and live monthly design sessions to create a more immersive learning journey.
Case Study: KIPP Metro Atlanta, Atlanta Georgia
While COVID-19 shaped our lives in the foreground, 2020 reminded us of another chronic pandemic—white supremacy—and its impact on our relationships.
We need to look at the schools and leaders that are using an equitable design lens to respond to the impact of both pandemics, and study how they have impacted the student and family experience.
Black Next-Story Month
The stories of the past are important. They remind us of our superhuman capacities to transcend our limits in the face of insurmountable obstacles. These stories feed us a healing soup of triumph, self determination, greatness, and brilliance. We retell stories of our humanity; an important practice in a society designed to dehumanize.
Staying Grounded and Designing for the Future
Today, as our coalition grows and becomes more diverse, we need new roadmaps and tools that are grounded in the wisdom of the past, that are oriented toward a radically inclusive future, and that keep us focused, informed, action-oriented, and courageous during this time. Read more and download a tool to help you continue to Speak the Future and Design the Future in your thoughts, designs, and actions.
I took a month to become trained as a yoga teacher. Here’s what I learned about race and equity. (Part 2)
My process — sticking to what I knew, even as I became aware of its wrongness — had kept me from growth. But my habits and the stories I told myself didn’t allow me to acknowledge it until that moment. When the teacher said, “That is what you should feel,” I realized that I hadn’t felt that sensation of stretching, uncovering, and discovering a new pathway in that part of my body since the beginning of my practice. I realized that I had discovered something new and different.
I took a month to become trained as a yoga teacher. Here’s what I learned about race and equity. (Part 1)
In my work, I often ask people to “trust the process” — and to trust me, the designer of it. However, it has been a long time since I was a learner, and I forgot what it meant to truly trust a process until I took a month to become trained as a yoga teacher. Never have I had an experience that created simultaneous physical, emotional, and mental challenges. With these challenges, it became clear to me what “trusting the process” really means in practice — and how it can help us create a more just world.
A New Value Proposition for the Public School
We need a new value proposition for the public school system. What purpose must it serve, in the face of three pandemics, that can bring our communities and our country back together? What has to be true of the public school system to convince the most privileged of us of its merits and the most oppressed of us its virtue so we all can learn together? What version of the world are we creating?
Does Injustice Begin in Schools?
In more ways than one, it’s a time of reckoning for American education.
Just as the COVID crisis has forced us to re-consider the very structures of learning in the US, citizens have taken to the streets in frustration with systemic power relationships.