One Small Step
conversations across political divides:
Take One Small step
Americans say they鈥檙e exhausted by political polarization and looking for a way out.
In response to the current culture of contempt, is an effort to help mend the fraying fabric of our nation鈥攐ne conversation at a time.
As a follow up to StoryCorps founder Dave Isay鈥檚 visit to Western Michigan University in late March, Kalamazoo was a recording site for One Small Step interviews between local citizens holding opposing political perspectives.
StoryCorps is a national non-profit founded in 2003 with a mission to record, preserve, and share the stories of Americans from all backgrounds and beliefs that launched One Small Step in 2021 to bring strangers together for a 50-minute conversation about their lives, not politics. Each conversation is moderated by a trained facilitator and with participant permission, interviews are archived at the Library of Congress. A very small number of interviews are edited into short audio and animated stories that showcase the impact of the program.
One Small Step is based on contact theory, which states that a meaningful interaction between people with opposing views can help turn 鈥渢hems鈥 into 鈥渦s-es鈥. The conversations help remind Americans from across the political spectrum that we all have a patriotic duty to listen to people with whom we disagree and to have the courage to see the humanity in others. To date, 2,000 people in 40 states across the country have recorded a OSS interview.
We Talk, the University鈥檚 civil discourse initiative, partnered with the and StoryCorps, to bring OSS to campus and the Kalamazoo community.