North America

Stanford d.school's Positive Deviance for Educators Project

Stanford d.school's Positive Deviance for Educators Project

The Stanford d.school’s K12 Lab is focused on obliterating opportunity gaps in K-12 education by helping schools apply a design thinking approach to messy, complex, systemic problems that impact their students. When former d.school fellow Marc Chun was introduced to positive deviance and discovered a process intuitive and ripe for application across under-resourced K-12 schools struggling with systemic problems. The Positive Deviance for Educators project was born.

Using Positive Deviance to Grow Educational Success in Hawaii’s Immigrant Groups

Using Positive Deviance to Grow Educational Success in Hawaii’s Immigrant Groups

Using the PD approach, the Family Center of an NGO in Hawaii decided to focus on the strengths, assets, and resourcefulness of the Native Micronesian families and launched the Sundays Project, turning the educational tide. As a result, Native Micronesian families are now deeply engaged in, and contributing to, their children’s academic success.

Enabling People with Mental Illness to Overcome Social Isolation Using Positive Deviance

Enabling People with Mental Illness to Overcome Social Isolation Using Positive Deviance

A PD strategy was applied in two mental health service settings to the problem of social isolation of people with mental illness. It provided a catalyst for people struggling with mental illness to self-organize, support each other, and learn from socially active peers about how to connect in a meaningful way with their communities.

Recidivism through a New Lens: Feeding Positive Deviance Data into Local Programs

Recidivism through a New Lens: Feeding Positive Deviance Data into Local Programs

Representatives from the Western District of Texas’ probation office and federal court, with help of representatives from The University of Texas at El Paso decided to ask a PD question: Are there any individuals who have recently completed their terms of supervised release or are on their way to completion (within 12 months) despite the demographic, situational, and dispositional odds against them?