The values yardstick
Every module after this one teaches mechanics — framing the question, running the room, counting the poll, sealing the record. This module is about the standard all of that answers to. A group does not decide well by gathering more data or by averaging more opinions; it decides well by reasoning against its own stated values, in its own circumstances. By the end you can surface a group's values from its own words — nobody writes them for it — hold two of them in tension without flattening either, and test a finished decision with one question: does this honour what we said we stand for? The worksheet at the end is the yardstick; it joins the kit you fill in the capstone.
What makes a decision good
Ask what makes a group decision good and most answers reach for size: a bigger majority, a wider survey, more evidence. All three help; none is the standard. More data narrows uncertainty about facts — it cannot tell a group what it owes its members or its neighbours. A wider majority tells you the decision was popular, not that it was right for this group. And there is a way of answering that produces answers to nobody's question in particular: ask what most groups in this position would do. Averaged assumptions give stale answers, because the average group does not exist and did not make your promises.
The standard that remains is the group's own: the values it has stated, applied to the circumstances it is actually in. The legitimacy test for any decision is one sentence — does this decision honour what we said we stand for? Not "did enough of us want it", and not "would a sensible group somewhere do this", but: measured against our own words, does it hold?
Key points
- Data settles questions of fact. Values settle what the group owes — no quantity of the first substitutes for the second.
- An answer averaged from groups-in-general is an answer to no group's question in particular.
- The yardstick is set before the proposal, for the same reason Module 1 fixes the decision rule before the argument: a standard chosen after positions are known is a weapon, not a standard.
Whose values — and who may write them
The values must be the group's own. That sounds obvious, and it is broken constantly: every time a facilitator opens with a drafted values statement for the room to nod at, every time a template offers a menu of community values to tick, every time a survey ranks "what matters most" into a league table. Each of those puts someone else's words where the group's should be — and a yardstick nobody recognises as their own measures nothing.
The discipline in this course is working from the floor. Three moves are allowed, and only three: extract — lift a value from something members have actually said, and keep their wording; juxtapose — set two of their statements side by side and ask "both of these are ours; how do they sit together?"; ask — put a question the group answers itself. What is never allowed: writing a value for the group, ranking its values for it, or grading how well it lives up to them. Whoever holds the pen — a chairperson, a keen new member, a facilitator, an AI — the rule is the same: they may hold the mirror; they may not paint the portrait.
Village Assembly practises this same discipline under the name value-constitution: a standing record of the group's stated values, built from members' own words, which its facilitator can quote from and ask about but never add to. The practice is older than any software — it is what a careful chairperson has always done with a charter and a minute-book — and this module teaches the practice, not the product.
Articulating the values: three places to look
A group that has never written its values down still has them. They live in three places, and surfacing them is mostly transcription:
The three sources
- The founding purpose. The charter, the constitution, the kaupapa, the notice that called the first meeting. Quote the exact words — founding documents are usually blunter and better than anyone remembers.
- Past decisions. What the group actually did when it had to choose is a value with a date on it. "We turned down the sponsorship in 2023" says more than any mission statement.
- This deliberation's own reasoning. The position-and-reasoning format of Module 2 is a values mine: the reason under a position is usually a value in work clothes. When Elena argues tenure, Fernside is hearing one of its values state itself.
State them plainly. A value on the sheet is a sentence a member actually said, or one every member would recognise as theirs — attributed, dated, in ordinary words. "We grow for the street" is a value. "Fernside empowers sustainable community synergies" is a brand exercise, and no one can be held to it.
Hold the tension; never average it. Two values pulling against each other is not a failure of the sheet — it is the sheet working. The worst response is to merge them into something blander that nobody said, so the words stop meaning anything and the disagreement goes underground. Write both, attribute both, and let the deliberation do its work in the open. Disagreement about values is legitimate; it is preserved, not dissolved.
Discussion topics
- What did your group's founding document actually say it was for? When did anyone last read it aloud?
- Name one past decision of your group that expresses a value nobody has ever written down. What would the sentence be — and whose name would go beside it?
Judging the decision against the yardstick
The sheet earns its keep at two moments. During deliberation, it lets the room see which value each argument is standing on — and a proposal that serves one value while straining another should say so in its own text. Amendments are how a proposal negotiates with a value it strains. After the count, it is the legitimacy test: for each value on the sheet, the decision either honours it, trades it off and names the trade, or passes over it in silence. Silence is the failure mode. A named trade-off is a decision; an unnamed one is a wound that reopens.
Key points
- The test is not "did every value win" — values in tension guarantee some cannot — but "was every value weighed, and every trade named".
- A decision that quietly violates a stated value does not retire the value. It retires the sheet: members stop believing the words, and the next deliberation starts from cynicism.
- The sunset date (Module 1) is where a strained value gets its rehearing — with a season's real numbers instead of predictions.
The Values Worksheet
One page, two parts. Part A is the standing yardstick: filled in from the three sources, dated, kept with the group's records, and revised only by the group itself. Part B is run against each proposal before its poll closes. Nobody grades either part — no chairperson, no facilitator, no software. The sheet asks; the group answers.
Part A — the yardstick
| The value, in our own words | Whose words, and where from | What it commits us to |
|---|---|---|
| e.g. "We grow for the street, not just the plot-holder." | Charter, clause 2 — read aloud at every AGM | Surplus and shared beds serve the neighbourhood first |
Part B — judge the decision against these
| Check | Ask |
|---|---|
| Weighed | For each value in Part A: does this proposal honour it, trade it off, or pass over it in silence? No silences. |
| Named | Is every trade-off stated in the proposal's own text or the record — not discovered later by whoever paid it? |
| Heard | Has everyone whose value is strained given a position with reasoning (Module 2), not just a vote? |
| Preserved | Does the dissenting value travel with the decision, verbatim and attributed (Module 4) — not averaged into "mixed feedback"? |
| The sentence | Can the group say, in one sentence, how this decision honours what it said it stands for — and where it knowingly paid? |
Self-check
1. Where do the values on the worksheet come from?
Extract, juxtapose, ask — never author, rank, or grade. A drafted statement, a ticked menu, or an inferred score all put someone else's words where the group's should be, and a yardstick nobody recognises as their own measures nothing.
2. VA-2026-014 was adopted 12 in favour, 2 aside, 2 objecting. What makes the decision legitimate?
The same tally with Elena's and Ruth's values passed over in silence would be arithmetic, not legitimacy. Data established the shortfall but could not say what Fernside owed anyone about it, and two members left the poll unhappy — recorded, attributed, and still members. The test is the sentence: does this honour what we said we stand for?
3. Two of your group's stated values pull against each other. What does this method do with them?
Tension between values is the sheet working, not failing. Merging produces a sentence nobody said; ranking retires a value some members still hold; refereeing hands the group's identity to whoever holds the pen. Disagreement about values is legitimate and preserved — the tension is what the deliberation is for.