Timeline
An Ashoka team came to us with an interest in providing their in-person event attendees with an easy-to-navigate page which listed all of the parts of their event (including session title, room location, timing, and description -- including photos if desired!). And we said: well, right now we don't have that. But with your help we can create one.
And so collaboratively we did. AND in the process of creating it, we realized these could be helpful for any person trying to convey historical events (for example: "History of Social Innovation in East Africa") as well. A win-win collaboration.
The Timeline page section features several ways to list out your events with a choice of background color. And it also allows you to add in speakers for each session for events (or featured people if conveying key historical events).
To edit a timeline, you will need to first define what time period you want the timeline to show up in (aka, will they be days, years, months, etc.). Then after, decide whether you'd like to add a simple timeline (which allows you to showcase as many events on one day as possible) or a timeline group (which allows you to "group" the events into time periods -- like "Morning sessions" for all morning sessions).
Once you make those decisions, it is a matter of adding in the information into the correct fields. Truthfully, this is one of our most complex page sections to edit. So feel free to reach out to us if you may need help and we'll reach right back!
Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
Morning Sessions
Description of the session (can also add photos!)
Lennon Flowers
Ashoka Fellow, United States
“Two days after my mom died, I did my first read-through as Puck in a student production of A Midsummer Night’s Dream. No one in the cast ever found out.”
Lennon was raised in North Carolina by parents who instilled in her the importance of hard work and living authentically. But her dreams of studying theater and someday performing under bright lights were cut short when, in her senior year of high school, her mom was diagnosed with terminal cancer. Lennon lived what Parker Palmer calls a “divided life,” frequently returning home on weekends and excelling at college 30 minutes down the road during the week… and all along working hard to keep these two worlds from colliding, or collapsing.
When her mother died in her senior year of college, Lennon threw herself into work. In college she had become “hooked on building things” with friends and learned through personal experience (selling people on ideas, raising funds, leading civic organizations on campus) and from model changemakers (like the late Nobel Prize-winner, Wangari Maathai). She was a fast fit at Ashoka, where she was part of the global Venture team in 2008 and the AshokaU team launching the Changemaker Campus initiative. When Lennon moved to LA in 2010, she joined GOOD/Corps, an innovative media and social impact agency that worked with groups ranging from Pepsi to ABC News to The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. It was here that she met her (would be) co-founder Carla. It had been three years since her mom died when she and Carla realized they had something in common: Carla had lost her dad just six months earlier. For the first time, loss became a conversation-starter, rather than a conversation-killer. Carla convened the first dinner party, before it became “The Dinner Party,” on her back deck later that year. Dinners have been happening ever since. At one point, Lennon recalls, when “we realized this was no longer just our story, I hit a point where I couldn’t not give this a shot.” So, at the end of 2013 and with the help of her mom’s life insurance money, she launched The Dinner Party full-time.
Description of the session (can also add photos!)
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Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
hjh lkh Description of the historical moment (can include photos!). In this example, you won't use start / end time.
Fellow Map
In response to a need by the Venture and Fellowship team around the world to more dynamically showcase our Fellows, the Web Team created the Fellow Map: a map that pinpoints Fellows around the world.
For all the visuals, this component is actually one of the easiest to edit. All you have to do is start typing the name of the Fellow into the custom fellow profile area.
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