Today, I’m talking to Rosie Sulton & Barbara Best, directors of a new initiative called Peer Coaching for Writers.
Watch a recording here. This audio/video version is available for a few weeks. Missed it? Check out the podcast version above or on your favorite podcast platform.
For more info, go here. Or email Rosie and Barbara directly: rosie@convu.com / barbara@convu.com
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Rosie Sultan is an award-winning novelist, educator, and founder of Peer Coaching for Writers & Artists. Trained through the Harvard University Peer Coaching Initiative, where she served as Principal, facilitator, coach, and coachee, she brings evidence-based listening practices to creative communities. Unlike traditional workshops focused on critique, peer coaching asks: What’s challenging in your writing life? What’s getting in the way? Through presence and deep listening, writers turn isolation into connection and sustain creative momentum together. Rosie is the author of Helen Keller in Love (Viking/Penguin), praised by The Washington Post. Her essays appear in The New York Times and elsewhere. She helps writers discover that the bravest work comes when we feel supported, not judged.
Barbara Best is Executive Director of Convu—where listening happens—and a trained peer coaching facilitator using Harvard University’s peer coaching methodology. Her participation in a Harvard-based peer coaching program deepened her understanding of how structured peer support cultivates dialogue and leadership development. Barbara is a key collaborator in bringing peer coaching to writers. She leads a vibrant community at Convu centered on deep listening and peer coaching across schools, workplaces, and organizations. Previously Executive Director of the Harvard Kennedy School Center for Public Leadership and Texas Executive Director of the Children’s Defense Fund, Barbara holds an EdLD from Harvard and centers the transformative potential of peer relationships in all her work.
Photo by Danilo Acosta on Unsplash