Collaborative Curiosity & The Unstuck Protocol
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Collaborative Curiosity & The Unstuck Protocol

A community workshop. Prevent small misperceptions from becoming problems that need solving.

By Jennie DunKley

Date and time

Saturday, May 24 · 9:30am - 3pm EDT

Location

Unity Church of North Easton

9 Main Street Easton, MA 02356

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 5 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 5 hours 30 minutes
  • Free venue parking

Workshop Description:
Whenever we perceive something as inaccurate, unexpected, or unjust, we get stuck. We freeze, flee, or fight – sometimes a little, other times, a lot. Being stuck is not a problem; it’s an opportunity. It’s an in-the-moment chance to resolve our initial perception and prevent a glitch from growing into a cycle of bigger and bigger problems – a practice for addressing stress before it becomes distress - a way to prevent misperceptions from becoming problems that need solving.

This transformative approach to universal inclusion empowers person-first, whole-community collaboration. Collaborative Curiosity pushes beyond the WHY we need inclusive living and learning environments; it’s a novel, no-cost practice for HOW TO make meaningful inclusion less stressful and more seamless.
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Join Us and Learn HOW TO:

  • Respond to a raised eyebrow.
  • Think about maladaptive behavior as ineffective communication.
  • Reduce the need for discipline.
  • Increase the effectiveness of evidence-based methodologies.
  • Translate the foreign language of evaluations.
  • Shift from merely trauma-sensitive to neuroceptive-responsive environments.
  • Combine input and information to create holistic and integrated IEPs that...
  • maximize independent generalization beyond the schoolhouse.

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Who Should Attend:

  • K-12+ general and special educators, administrators and support staff
  • Parents & young adults
  • Related service providers
  • Business and community leaders
  • Civil and disability rights advocates and attorneys

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A minimum suggested donation of $25 will cover the building fee and refreshments. You can preorder a lunch for $15, or bring your own. Please consider making an additional contribution to compensate our amazing neurodiverse staff and help Jennie spread this work.

Please let us know if you require any accommodations and food restrictions.

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Why This Workshop:
We can’t count on Federal protections and states may not have the ability or the willingness to step up. If you think our systems are inefficient and expensive now, the combined economic, medical, social, educational and judicial costs without safety nets will be exponentially greater than anyone can imagine. Even if we turn the tide on the haphazard dissembling of Federal services, civil rights and safety nets, it will take decades to recover. Regardless of what side of the red-blue line your heart is, the shifting of resources to combat and defend the dissembling is taking away from maintenance, preventative interventions, and restructuring – which surely will create additional costs later.

Now more than ever, we must develop and implement more effective ways to double down on providing supports at the first sign of academic, communication, adaptive, and social gaps. Preventing emerging gaps from widening is the most efficient tool for improving outcomes and reducing the need for those safety nets. The best and simplest way to reduce the cost of intensive, expensive services is to decrease the need for them. The benefits of this nonpartisan approach are applicable regardless of what happens in kitchens, school board meetings, legislatures, executive offices and courts.

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About Your Lead Presenter, Jennie DunKley, the Creater of Collaborative Curiosity

Jennie has been a special education advocate and consultant for over 25 years representing hundreds of families, attending over a thousand IEP meetings. She served as past chair and is a current representative to the Massachusetts Special Education Advisory Panel (SEAP). She was a core stakeholder contributor for DESE’s IEP Improvement Project and on the SpedEx Advisory Committee (a DESE-funded alternate resolution program). A long-time, past Board member of SPaN, she founded the School Fair, Same Side of the Table forum, and co-founded of the Family Grant and IEP Clinic programs. In 2012, Jennie designed and coordinated the implementation of a transition program at the Ivy Street School. She is a member of COPAA's Government Relations and Social Racial Equity Committees.

A long-time senior trainer for The Federation, she also presents locally and nationally on numerous aspects of the special education process for advocates, parent groups, service providers, families and school staff – always promoting a steadfast focus on the “I” in every IEP. She was a co-instructor for COPAA’s SEAT 3.0 “The Business of Advocacy” and created and taught “Autism and the Law” for AANE’s Massachusetts Professional Educator Autism Endorsement.

Her training includes advanced programs at William & Mary Law (ISEA) and Suffolk Law Schools, the COPAA and OSEP-developed Special Education Advocacy Training (SEAT 2008) with a practicum at the Disability Law Center, the Federation of Children with Special Needs (FCSN) Parent Training Institute, and Wrightslaw.

Jennie's latest work, Collaborative Curiosity, the Unstuck Protocol & the Special Education Process, represents the culmination of insights gathered in her years as a special education consultant and from her prior career in crisis management, marketing and communications. This reimagined practice is being delivered in multiple venues to advocacy, related-service and parent groups, and as PD for school staff.

Jennie is a Special Education Surrogate Parent and an enormously proud parent of a young adult on the autism spectrum – her contributor, co-presenter and the student voice of Collaborative Curiosity, Sam DunKley.

Frequently asked questions

Where is parking?

Parking is located behind the church, on one side of the driveway and on the street.

Is Unity Church wheelchair-accessible?

Yes. The entrance to the event is in the back of the building.

Who is this workshop for?

This workshop is perfect for... K-12+ general and special educators, administrators and support staff Parents & young adults Related service providers Business and community leaders Civil and disability rights advocates and attorneys

Will food and refreshments be served?

Yes. We will provide coffee and some snacks in the morning. Lunch can be pre-ordered for $15 with your ticket at check out. You are welcome to brown bag it. Please let us know if you require additional accommodations and food restrictions.

Organized by

Jennie is a seasoned special education advocate and consultant with over 25 years of experience, having represented hundreds of families and participated in more than a thousand IEP meetings. A nationally recognized trainer and speaker, she has developed innovative practices like *Collaborative Curiosity*—a reimagined universal inclusion approach informed by her extensive advocacy work and her experience as a proud parent of a neurodivergent young adult.