Well, everyone was wearing lanyards with their nametags anyways. Take a few volunteers, clip on some blank paper, and some tape, give participants their cards and viola - your interactive activity works, gets even more people involved, and not a sticky blue mark on any wall.
Not optimal you might say, but you never know when you are working in a space with apparently precious walls, the famous carpeted walls, or even no walls for that matter (how nice would it be to do your session under a big tree?) Give a good workshop designer a parameter in advance and with a little creative thinking they'll design for it. Everything is possible...
This is a great idea and one, I will use if I come across this situation again. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteI could imagine that the human flipchart could also be closely observing what is posted on him/her, and provide insights/observations regarding gaps, concentration, links. After all, there is a sense of ownership that comes with being 'used' - ownership over the contents that one now wears. Could be interesting to harness that as part of the role - thereby using the flipchart's physical and mental capabilities.
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