Thurs March 8 Friday March 9 Sat March 10
Time Description
11:30am Doors open for lunch (Fisher Pavilion) 
12:00pm Plenary
Performance: Daemond Arrindell
Keynote: Annie Leonard
Panel: The Power of Movements 
Nikki Davis, Marc Freedman, Rodrigo Garcia, Annie Leonard, Michelle Nunn, Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, and Eric Liu (moderator).
1:45pm Workshops, Session I 
3:00pm Doors open (Fisher Pavilion)
The public is invited to attend this free afternoon session
3:30pm Plenary 
Panel: Next Generation Voices
Nadia Khawaja, Danielle Kim, Matthew Fulle, Samson Lim, and Heather Smith (moderator).
4:30pm U.S. Naturalization Ceremony
Keynote:
Gerda Weissmann Klein
National Anthem: Pator Patrinell Wright
  Presenters and schedule are subject to change.
Noon Performance by Daemond Arrindell

Keynote
Annie Leonard
When Annie Leonard created The Story of Stuff Project— a platform of super-viral animated films about our patterns of consumption and consumer behavior— she launched a worldwide phenomenon that has changed the very nature of advocacy and storytelling. In this inspiring keynote address, she shows us how she and her team cracked open the public imagination and how they are using their platform now to empower citizens in new ways and on new issues.

Panel: The Power of Movements
This rich conversation brings together catalysts of some of the country's most dynamic emerging movements: Nikki Davis and Rodrigo Garcia of the new movement to organize and support returning veterans; Michelle Nunn, champion of community and national service champion and head of the Points of Light Foundation; Marc Freedman, creator of the Purpose Prize and of the Encore movement to mobilize Baby Boomers for pro-social work in their next act of life; Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner, tireless founder of MomsRising, the millions-strong advocacy network; and Annie Leonard of the Story of Stuff. Together they will explore how to start and sustain successful movements in this moment of cultural and political ferment.

1:45pm Workshops, Session I
1:45pm Andrea Brenneke, Restorative Circles

Experience Restorative Circles – the restorative justice practice that empowers communities to engage conflicts that would otherwise divide them, increases mutual understanding, provides safety, ensures accountability, and enables effective collective problem solving. The Restorative Circle process, developed in Brazil by Dominic Barter, provides the foundation for restorative justice systems in families, organizations, schools, court systems, and communities around the world. In this workshop, you will learn the elements, principles and structure of the Restorative Circle process, engage in exercises to experience parts of the practice, engage a real conflict in a semi-simulated circle, and explore the value of introducing these practices in your own communities.

1:45pm Mary Gordon, Empathic Classrooms - Empathic Societies

Mary Gordon, educator and voice for more compassion and empathy in even the most hard-bitten political and civic contexts, is a treasure. Get a hands-on training in her unique, experiential approach to teaching empathy to citizens of all ages.

1:45pm Rick Jackson and Estrus Tucker, Healing the Heart of Democracy

This inspiring workshop is presented by Rick Jackson and Estrus Tucker, Center for Courage & Renewal. In this workshop we’ll actively explore “Five Habits of the Heart” we need to revitalize our democracy. We’ll discover practices and processes to form these habits in the everyday venues of our lives. Author/activist Parker Palmer, whose work is the wellspring of this workshop, writes: “For those of us who want to see democracy survive and thrive—and we are legion—the heart is where everything begins: that grounded place in each of us where we can overcome fear, rediscover that we are members of one another, and embrace the conflicts that threaten democracy...”

1:45pm David Korten, To Change the Future: Break the Silence, End the Isolation, and Change the Story

In this workshop, we’ll reflect with best-selling author and global activist David Korten on the power of our defining cultural stories to hold society captive to the status quo or to unleash our individual and collective capacity for transformational system change. We’ll explore practical strategies for changing the human course by replacing destructive stories with liberating stories and share insights on how a focus on changing a prevailing story might be a key to success in our work as citizen activists.

1:45pm Paul Loeb, Keep On Keeping On

An antidote to powerlessness and despair, this session is designed for budding social activists, veteran organizers, and anyone who wants to live by their convictions and make a difference over the long haul. We will discuss how to keep on in the difficult work of change, tell your story powerfully, avoid burnout, draw in new participants and sustain engaged commitment. We will look at commonalities of successful social movements and focus on sharing participant's own stories of effective action, including how you and other participants have gotten past the inevitable obstacles.

3:30pm Afternoon events are free & open to the public.
3:30pm

Panel: Next Generation Voices & Talking Circles
A Guiding Lights Weekend favorite, this panel brings together leading young people from across the country to share their ideas and inspiration for the future of civic engagement. Heather Smith CEO of Rock the Vote moderates a session in which these young leaders speak— but also lead the adults in the room in learning and reflection, with Nadia Khawaja Co-Founder & CEO of Jolkona; Danielle Kim, Program Manager WA Bus; Matthew Fulle, Seattle Youth Commissioner; and Samson Lim, founder & CEO of Scholarship Junkies.

4:30pm

U.S. Naturalization Ceremony
For the first time at Guiding Lights Weekend, there will be a ceremony to mark the naturalization of a group of new Americans. The keynote speaker will be Gerda Weissmann Klein, author and Holocaust survivor who founded Citizenship Counts. Music by Pastor Patrinell Wright