NONPROFITS
COMMUNITY IS FOR EVERYONE
What we do:
We support nonprofits to go after their missions…to serve all their constituents, including those from underrepresented populations and diverse socio-cultural locations, more effectively.
~Susan Bro, President, Chairman, and Co-Founder of the Heather Heyer Foundation (mother of Heather Heyer):
“The Power of Difference Survey was so helpful in clarifying my unconscious perspectives as well as my strengths related to each of these seven differences. The end result was a practical and powerful roadmap for my on-going and deepening learning.”
What’s the PDA?
The PDA is a groundbreaking online tool that:
- measures individual’s and group’s unconscious patterns related to race, sexual orientation, religion, gender, disability, class, and culture as described by the Power of Difference Model (see a summary of the PDM below).
- Is asset-based and is a scientifically valid and reliable assessment.
- Identifies areas of strength and specific areas for growth.
- Can be used as a pre and post measurement, strategic plan accountability, and/or as a coaching tool.
Benefits:
- The PDA supports people in becoming aware of how the patterns of the PDM (see below) operate within us, between us, and in our communities, organizations, and society.
- It gives us a kind of “map” of our patterns and our learning edges –without blame and shame!
- This awareness allows us to integrate the assets all three primary patterns for greater effectiveness across differences and greater clarity of purpose.
- From here, meaningful systemic change is engendered.
See the PDA study summary from North Carolina State University:
“Rather than some work of this nature that uses shame and blame to address issues of race, gender, etc., The Sum’s team’s approach honors perceptions of both self and others. Before we can dismantle unjust systems and institutions, we must understand ourselves. This work, does that.”
~ Susan Sherman, Executive Director, Shenandoah National Park Trust, Charlottesville, Virginia
Leave your information below and we’ll contact you to discuss your questions and unique needs.
The Power of Difference Model (PDM) in 4 Points
1. The PDM identifies 3 primary patterns of behavior, thought, feeling, and worldview related to our differences of race, sexual orientation, gender, socio-economic class, religion, disability, and ethnicity. We call these patterns: Sensitivity, Oneness, and Strength
2. Each one has assets and limitations as well a learning edge. The primary learning edge for Sensitivity is Strength, for Strength it’s Oneness, and for Oneness it’s Sensitivity
3. These patterns operate unconsciously within us, between us, in our communities, organizations, and society. They both reproduce and are reproduced from systems embedded with the same patterns. Each appears to conflict with the other two and this tension between them effectively creates and maintains a “dysfunctional balance” within us, in our families, organizations, cultures, and institutions.
4. By becoming aware of these internal patterns and learning to integrate and “leverage” the assets of all three patterns, individuals report greater:
- effectiveness across difference
- flexibility to leverage assets from any or all of the patterns as needed
- recognition of one’s own privilege and how to use it effectively
- impact, generally, across differences as intended
- solidarity across differences
- pride without prejudice
- ability to refuse silence and violence.
- ability, clarity, and courage to withdraw participation in violent aspects of systems
- capacity to catalyze meaningful systemic change w/o effort
- internal stability…less rising and falling on external conditions
- clarity, empowerment, and fulfillment
- ability to hold others accountable to increased internal integration w/o blame or shame
Nonprofit Pricing
Making our services accessible for any nonprofit that envisions The Sum’s work as critical to their mission is a foundational part of our core values. Please let us know how we can make it work for you!
1. Model Introduction:
An hour-long model introduction (online or in person) can be helpful for a community, faculty, staff, department, school board, or administrative group in developing a common conceptual framework and language; learning the patterns of the PDM, and how they play out within individuals, in classrooms, schools, and campuses.
$400 (standard pricing is $600)
2. Group assessment:
A group assessment typically follows a Model Introduction and requires a week or two to allow group members to take the PDA as their schedule allows. The PDA is comprised of 70 Likert scale items and takes about 20 minutes. Then a single, whole-group consultation (online for about an hour) presents the aggregate of all the individual’s scores in order for group members to see where they are as whole, their assets, learning edges, and support needs for growth.
$30 per person to be assessed and included in the group results (standard pricing is $40)
$600 for a group consultation (standard pricing is $900)
3. Individual Assessment/Consultation:
The group consultation can generate interest for a individuals in their personal results. This can take place at the convenience of the individual by scheduling a consultation on The Sum’s calendar. Individual consultations, like the group consultation, take place online and take about an hour. They focus on the gifts, learning edges and support needs and recommendations for the person.
$150 per person for individual consultations minus cost of group participation – so $120 additional (standard pricing is $200)
Note: some organizations cover the cost of individual’s consultations, subsidize the cost, or leave it to individuals to cover the cost)
Contact us to arrange a group or multiple individual PDA’s.