Randy,
I first read Walk Out Walk On at the ToP annual meeting in Sacramento in January 2012 when it was the subject of a charting exercise over 4 mornings. What I find interesting is that the 4 steps of Accelerate 77 is not something that came DIRECTLY from her book (we were promoting these four steps for most of 2011). Rather, it is an example of INDIRECT wisdom garnered from kindred spirits. These are the words, phrases, and insights that become a reinforcing piece of our "image" or the world. The important matter is our operating image, not the source of the messages that created it. I heard Wheatley talk at the annual conference of the International Association of Facilitator (IAF) in April of 2010. She was probably then in the thick of writing Walk Out Walk On. While I can't remember anything specific she said, I'm sure her presentation made a deep impression on me that eventually
influenced the creation of Accelerate 77.
I have a clearer memory about the "collegium" on Accelerate 77 when we solidified our four steps for inclusion in a printed program description for potential supporters. The 4 steps were simply pulled out of our collective wisdom about what we were trying to do and why. One of our volunteers, Vito Greco, was the most articulate that morning that led us to our collective "ah-ha" on Identify, Connect, Engage, and Accelerate. It is shocking to see how close our four steps are with Wheatley's. Maybe "fascinating" is a better word. I'm referring to the relatively UNCONSCIOUS relationship between them.
I'm reminded of that quote that says something like "you know you are successful in playing a catalytic role when people with whom you've worked accomplish something and they say 'we did this
ourselves!'"
Terry
The ICA-USA's Accelerate 77 program draws from a process articulated in Walk Out Walk
On. Wheatley and Frieze posit that everything that needs to happen in local community is already underway and there's no need to spend time initiating anything new. What is needed is to (their 4-step process) identify, connect, nurture and expand what is already going on. (ICA called step 4 "accelerate.") By so doing, the isolated efforts emerge into networks of relationships which evolve into communities of practice, and these communities of practice, over time, change the world.