91桃色

Skip to Content

Hundreds Share Ideas at 鈥楢 Community Table鈥

Back to Article Listing

Author(s)

Lorne Fultonberg

Writer

Lorne Fultonberg
Writer"

Lorne.Fultonberg@du.edu

Writer"

303 871-2660

Justin Beach

104 tables span the globe in 91桃色鈥檚 second such event

News  •

One day, Oliver Martinez-Reyes sees himself making a difference as a CEO, leading meetings in a boardroom. On April 10,听the second-year student at the Daniels College of Business got some practice, bringing his peers around a table at the college鈥檚 Schneider Board Room and brainstorming ways to improve their world at

鈥淚 think the ideas we generate in this conversation will be like none other,鈥 Martinez-Reyes said. 鈥淲e all come from different backgrounds, we all have different stories, and I鈥檓 just really excited that they鈥檒l be connecting with others with similar interests or ideas or even ideas they haven't been exposed to.鈥

For the second consecutive year, the 91桃色 and its Center for Community Engagement to advance Scholarship and Learning (CCESL) spread that conversational spirit across the globe. In 104听locations across eight states over the course of the day, groups of 8鈥12 met over a meal and brainstormed ways to increase economic opportunity in their communities. Local businesses Caf茅 180, Comal, Maddie鈥檚 Restaurant, Osage Caf茅 and Sun Valley Kitchen partnered with CCESL to provide snack boxes to participants.

Their meetings could be anywhere鈥攁 coffee shop, a restaurant, a spot on campus鈥攁nd could include anybody. The only requirement was an interest in tackling their community鈥檚 grand challenges, including expanding access to education, improving infrastructure, fulfilling employment rights and decreasing poverty.

A Community Table

"A Community Table is important for so many reasons," said Katie Kleinhesselink, the 91桃色 Grand Challenges program manager.听"It provides a space for folks to get together, share food and have an intentional conversation about the things that matter to them. I know that I walked away from the conversations I had feeling really connected, energized, and optimistic. These sorts of experiences matter more than ever in the polarized climate we鈥檙e navigating today."

Denver City Councilman Paul Kashmann hosted a table at Maddie鈥檚 Restaurant, just west of campus. He compared the setting to a Thanksgiving dinner, with folks sitting around and talking about the subject of the day.

鈥淭he more voices we get to participate, the more ideas are going to come forward and the more of a buy-in people are going to have to the solutions we come up with,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e hear from experts all the time, but it's the everyday citizen听that I think really comes up with the solutions.鈥

Meanwhile, inside a Sturm Hall classroom, students, staff and alumni from the College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences munched on falafel from Jerusalem Caf茅. Their discussion spanned such topics as air quality, debt from student loans and high tuition costs.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 important to have opportunities like these,鈥 said Nicholas Bass, a third-year student. 鈥淚 don't think the point of college is to have your beliefs affirmed. I think it鈥檚 to have them challenged.鈥

His friend, third-year student Sydney Plaskett, agreed: 鈥淕oing to an event knowing your ideas and opinions will be heard is one of the best outcomes of these tables.鈥

A Community Table

The ideas generated at last year鈥檚 event are already on the path to action. Following those discussions, CCESL created four Collective Impact Cohorts. Composed of members of the University and Denver communities, these groups work across disciplines in the areas defined at last year鈥檚 tables. With up to $100,000 in support from , the cohorts will spend two years creating measurable change.

But it all starts at the table, said Bridget Abraham, who works at Western Union. 鈥淲hat we鈥檝e learned in the business community is a diverse conversation often leads to the best ideas,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think universities have a unique opportunity where they have a lot of students and a real footprint in the community and a real vested interest in growing those students and bringing forth ideas.鈥

For a student like Martinez-Reyes, who as a was already committed to engaging the community on social issues, A Community Table is the perfect forum to form the connections that support a stronger future.

鈥淭his format of actually bringing people together to have that conversation mitigates a lot of things and actually creates that innovation and creativity I see when people start engaging in dialogue,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he energy is indescribable.鈥

Related Articles