Join a community of changemakers and social impact storytellers.

Equity-Centered Storytelling

Dates: Our next cohort is launching in the second week of January 2024.

Registration: Please visit our course enrollment page.

Tuition: $600*

This two-month virtual cohort program offers an introduction to five equity-centered storytelling frameworks: Healing-Centered Engagement (Ginwright, 2022), Encoding/Decoding (Hall, 1993), the Storytelling Project Model (Bell, 2010), Asset-Based inquiry and storytelling (Coopenrider, 1980; Brown, et. al, 2005; Shorters, 2019; Ortega, 2019), and Critical Hope (Duncan-Andrade, 2009).

*Workshops - This is a blended learning program. The online course is completed on your own time. Virtual workshops are optional and opportunities to network with other cohort participants.

**Cost - This fee covers access to a comprehensive self-guided course and five virtual workshops.

Storytelling for Changemakers

Dates: Our next cohort is launching in the second week of September 2023.

Registration: Please visit our course enrollment page.

Tuition: $600*

This two-month online cohort program is for anyone who wants to learn how to identify, craft, and share stories to inspire action. Whether you are interested in developing your own story, crafting a story for a project, or learning storytelling activities to facilitate workshops, this comprehensive online cohort program is ideal for you.

*Workshops - This is a blended learning program. The online course is completed on your own time. Weekly workshops are optional and opportunities to network with other cohort participants.

**Cost - This fee covers access to a comprehensive self-guided course and five virtual workshops.

The Cohort Experience

  • The core of the program consists of virtual workshops, dialogues, and story circles where participants collaborate, network, and build community with a cohort of peers.

  • Participants will have access to the self-paced online course: Equity-Centered Storytelling

  • Access community and coaching sessions to refine your equity-centered storytelling skills.

  • Participate in reflective dialogues to explore stories about your identity, values, and leadership journey as a changemaker.

  • Participants will have opportunities to contribute their unique voices and experiences towards informing the future vision of the program.

“To overcome the most urgent challenges of our time, we need our most effective form of human communication: storytelling.”

- Philip Deng, 2020 Storytellers Cohort

Meet The Storytellers Cohort Alumni

  • Jaleesa Trapp (she/her)

    Jaleesa is a Ph.D. student in the lifelong kindergarten research group at the MIT Media Lab. Her current research focus is exploring the different ways youth of color interact with computers and technology, in an effort to design playful technologies with and for them.

  • Makshya Tolbert (she/they)

    Makshya is a poet living in the spaces between black memory and ecological possibility. She has recently published poetry in Narrative Magazine, Ran Off With The Star Bassoon, Alluvia Magazine, and The Night Heron Barks. She has poetry and essays forthcoming in Emergence Magazine and Art Papers.

  • Sage Ke’alohilani Quiamno (she/her)

    Sage is an award-winning entrepreneur, speaker, and changemaker. As co-founder of Future For Us, a platform dedicated to advancing women of color through community, culture, and career development, Sage has galvanized a nationwide movement to build a future of work through diversity, equity, and inclusion.

  • Philip Deng (he/him)

    Philip has spent most of his 13-year career in the nonprofit sector, much of it abroad, and he continues to be most passionate about issues affecting the wellbeing of people and the planet. Philip is currently the founder and CEO of Grantable, an online marketplace for grant services.

  • Abari Charles (she/her)

    Abari is a South Sudanese-American, refugee rights advocate, social entrepreneur, and life-long learner. Abari is the founder of Niolette, a B corps focused on giving back to South Sudanese refugees. Through her various work, Abari believes that great work can be done with unity, passion, and planning.

  • Iván Ramirez

    Iván Ramirez (he/him/el)

    Iván Ramirez is the Director of Digital Experiences at Revolución Educativa Kansas City (RevED KC). A trusted community member and advocate. Ivan joins LEC as Director of Digital Experience. Ivan is passionate about developing the leadership capacity of underrepresented students. Ivan is driven by his passion for building accessible and equitable education for all students.

  • Melanie Kong (she/her)

    Melanie Kong is a high school STEM Educator from Seattle, WA. She is passionate about empowering teachers and students to solve problems in their communities and leads professional development for project-based learning, design thinking, and engineering education. She is co-founder and CEO of Floop, a feedback platform that helps teachers give feedback to students.

  • Merivet Lombera (she/her)

    Merivet is a Yakima resident, a first-generation college graduate, and a strong community and social services professional with a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology and Communication from Central Washington University. Merivet is skilled in nonprofit organizations, youth program development, and community outreach, with a demonstrated history of working in the non-profit sector.

  • Lish Olson (she/they)

    Lish has worked in youth development since she was a teenager, working at summer camps and after-school care programs. During high school, they became invested in creating opportunities for students to engage in meaningful conversation. Lish works facilitating a program that educates young people about the global water crisis and sustainable development practices.

  • Va’eomatoka “Toka” Valu (he/him)

    Va’eomatoka “Toka” Valu was born and raised in the South Pacific Islands of Tonga and migrated to the United States with his late mother in 1997. As an artist, his practice focuses on uplifting Pasifika cultural wisdom. Toka serves the Pasifika Community as Director of Communications & Arts Development at the Pacific Islander Community Association of Washington.

  • Kilam T.A. (he/him)

    Born of Nigerian descent, Kilam T.A. is a Seattle native whose work merges his pragmatic thinking with a more energetic attitude with hints of hip-hop and pop culture influences. While many poems come off like a lecture, or someone airing out their grievances, Kilam’s poetry is a relationship. His work grapples with the harsh realities of the world with caution, ferocity and honesty.

  • Anne Bannister (she/her)

    Anne is a creative lead and video producer at the Charles Butt Foundation, a philanthropy dedicated to strengthening public education in Texas. She crafts stories that give a voice to Texas students, teachers, and school leaders. She believes in the connective and transformative power of storytelling in building a more equitable world.