Let’s Talk About It

A conversational wellbeing toolkit co-created as part of the CCW Climate Advocates programme at UAL. Through a deck of reflective question cards and facilitated dialogue sessions, the project created spaces for students and staff to explore identity, belonging, wellbeing, and difficult conversations, fostering connection, psychological safety, and collective care across the university.

Let’s Talk About It is a conversation-based wellbeing toolkit developed through the CCW Climate Advocates programme at the University of the Arts London. Designed to strengthen connection, resilience, and belonging across learning and working environments, the project uses a deck of carefully curated question cards to support meaningful dialogue around identity, culture, wellbeing, and community.

Developed through student-led climate advocacy and tested through workshops and public events, the toolkit combines reflective prompts with trauma-informed facilitation to create psychologically safe spaces for discussion. Participants are invited to engage with challenging topics at their own pace, building confidence in navigating difficult conversations while fostering empathy and understanding across differences.    

The project explores how design can be used as a tool for collective wellbeing, transforming conversation into a practice of care. By encouraging active listening, reflection, and shared learning, Let’s Talk About It demonstrates how small, intentional interventions can strengthen community resilience and cultivate more connected educational environments.

Role: Co-Designer & Facilitator

Organisation: CCW Climate Advocates, University of the Arts London

Methods: Toolkit Design • Workshop Facilitation • Participatory Design • Dialogue Methods • Wellbeing Design

Themes: Care • Belonging • Community • Wellbeing • Dialogue • Participation

Outputs: Conversation Toolkit • Workshops • Community Engagement Sessions

Year: 2025

This is collaborative project by Camberwell Chelsea and Wimbledon College of Art, Climate Advocates 2024/2025

Previous
Previous

Re:Vive

Next
Next

Circular Communities