Remove Blended Remove Georgia Remove Roles
article thumbnail

The 5 Best Social Impact Games of 2010

NTEN

The game creators systematically distributed physical coded bonds in halves to residents in both affluent and lower income neighborhoods in the Macon, Georgia area. 3 People Power People Power puts you in the role of a movement leader trying to fight oppression through non-violent revolution. Everyone wins!

Impact 88
article thumbnail

Enhancing Donor Engagement: 6 Essential Communication Strategies

The Modern Nonprofit

When it comes to printed materials, like newsletters or brochures, consider serif fonts like Times New Roman or Georgia, which are easier on the eyes for longer passages of text. Each tactic plays a vital role in strengthening your relationships with donors and ensuring their continued support.

professionals

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Hack the Museum Camp Part 2: Making Magic, Reality TV, and Risk as a Red Herring

Museum 2.0

I''m not going to write too much about the process here--please check out Paul Orselli''s blog post for his perspective as a counselor, Sarah Margusen''s Pinterest board for her perspective as a camper, or Georgia Perry''s article for the Santa Cruz Weekly, which provides an outsider''s view on the process.

Museum 49
article thumbnail

Demand for natural gas power is growing, threatening progress on climate change

Fast Company Tech

But industry decision-makers are also turning to natural gas for what they say is a cheap and reliable source of power, raising the prospect that gas-fired power will play a bigger role and for a longer period of time than even they had anticipated. And thats not all. investor-owned electric companies.

Change 76
article thumbnail

What ‘The Social Dilemma’ misunderstands about social networks

The Verge

Blending talking-head interviews with some well known Silicon Valley apostates and fictional, after-school special-style dramatizations of what happens when Johnny and Janey scroll through feeds all day, the film presents itself as an urgent warning about our modern condition. Georgia Wells, Aaron Tilley and John D. Industry. ?