
As a facilitator what can you do to get people to register the interesting information about each other that will start to connect them at a personal level, allowing you to move the group towards more and more powerful, creative, potentially intense and exciting discussions? People need to feel comfortable with the other group members for that; it can be a bit risky in the group process sense. How can you catalyze that process?
There are of course many ways to do this. What we did last week, with a small group of people who will be working together for two years on a project at a distance, was to give them a team quiz.
No one said that you had to listen the first time, maybe some of them did not. However, the next morning after their introductions on Day 1, they received a pop quiz about the team to complete titled, "Were You Listening?" Match the person to their musical instrument (who played the bassoon, the piano, the guitar?) Who studied philosophy in university? Which two people do not speak Portuguese (because almost everyone else in this group does)? Who coined a well-known conservation term? Who started their career in the civil service? Ten multiple choice questions captured some of the interesting things about this new team, taken from the things that they had said about themselves in the previous day's introductions.
If they did not pick it up the first time, then this was the second opportunity to absorb the information. And this time, going through the answers of the quiz and discussing them further, everyone was listening.
Hi,
ReplyDeleteIll be apprecative if you could add RSS feeds to this blog. that way, we could get immediate updates and enjoy more valuable learning on right time
You should be able subscribe to the blog just by giving http://welearnsomething.com/ as the URL for the RSS feed in your blog reader (such as Google Reader).
ReplyDeleteAisha
ReplyDeleteI'll start using this exercise in my sessions. Listening can be so challenging. I do an exercise called the Listening Lounge where two participants are requested to sit face to face and one would talk about a subject which is challenging to the other participant. The latter is requested to listen only. Very often, interruption comes into play. Listening can be so challenging as times...