Title: MINDFUL MEDIATION:
1MINDFUL MEDIATION
-
- CONVERSATIONS THAT PROMOTE
- SELF-DIRECTEDNESS
21. The success of an intervention depends on
the inner condition of the intervener.Bill
OBrien
- 2. While it causes considerable anguish for us,
no one can compel others to learn. The gates of
learning can only be unlocked from the inside. We
cannot open that gate either by admonition,
argument or emotional appeal. - Marilyn Ferguson
- PAIRS DISCUSS AND SHARE
- What possible meanings and implications for your
work do you derive from these quotes? -
3MINDFUL MEDIATION
4What did you observe about the mediators
behavior the planners thinking?
_____________Cognitive CoachingSM is
Observing Mediation Mediator Planner
5A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Is alert to the mediational momentusually when a
colleague is faced with a problem, a complex
task, dilemma, discrepancy, or conflict. Often,
the colleague exhibits tension and anxiety, the
resolution of which is not immediately apparent.
6A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Facilitates the mental processes of others as
they understand more completely their own
challenges, monitor their own strategies, make
their own decisions, and generate their own
creative capacities.
7A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Invites the colleague to reflect on and learn
from the problem-resolving process to find
applications in future challenges.
8A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Helps others become continuous self-directed
learners.
9A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Maintains faith in the human capacity for
continuing intellectual, social, and emotional
growth.
10A MEDIATOR IS ONE WHO
- Possesses a belief in his or her own capacity to
serve as an empowering catalyst for others
growth.
11PROPOSITIONS OF MINDFUL MEDIATION
All Behavior
is produced by
Thought Perception
is
Teaching
Constant Decision Making
To learn something new
Engagement Alteration in Thought
requires
Humans
continue
To Grow Cognitively
MM
Mediates
12Mindful Mediation Process
Observable Behaviors
Enhanced Performance
MediatorsStrategies
Internal Thinking Processes
13MINDFUL MEDIATION IS UNIQUE
A Mindful Mediator is concerned with the mental
processes
14THINK - PAIR - SHARE
How do these concepts about mediation match your
understanding and relate to your
personal experience?
15 MEDIATION is
..a dynamic interpersonal interaction between
two persons one who is engaged and participating
and the other who is experienced and intentioned
and who interposes him/herself between the client
and the external sources of stimulation and
response.
16ORto put it another way
An individual (0)
encounters
A response (R)
A stimulus, problem or event (S)
and produces
17In A Mediated Learning Experience
A skillful person intervenes (M)
An individual (0)
encounters
A more thought-full response (R)
A stimulus, problem or event (S)
and produces
18MEDIATED LEARNING
- An experience
- A learning experience
- A mediated learning experience
- A self-mediated learning experience
19MANY EXPERIENCES IN LIFE ARE MIND-LESS.
They are un-conscious and do not necessarily
accumulate to produce a behavioral change.
20A LEARNING EXPERIENCE IS ONE THAT PRODUCES
SOME CHANGE IN BEHAVIOR. (Could be positive
or negative).
21A MEDIATED LEARNING EXPERIENCE IS.
WHEN A PERSON IS ENGAGED ON A TASK OR TRYING TO
RESOLVE A PROBLEM..
22MEDIATION
..AND YOU INTRVENE IN SUCH A SKILLFUL AND
INTENTIONED WAY AS TO CAUSE THE PERSON TO THINK
MORE CLEARLY
23MEDIATION
AND TO REFLECT ON, CONSTRUCT MEANING FROM, AND
APPLY THEIR LEARNINGS BEYOND THIS CONTEXT
24MEDIATION
.. SO THAT YOU BUILD THEIR CAPACITY FOR
SELF-MEDIATION IN FUTURE SUCH SITUATIONS.
25MEDIATED LEARNING A Recap
- An experience
- A learning experience
- A mediated learning experience
26A SELF-MEDIATED LEARNING EXPERIENCE IS
when you deliberately draw upon your own
resources as you manage, monitor and modify your
own behavior in difficult situations.
27MINDFUL MEDIATION
- IN TABLE GROUPS
- What intrigues you?
- In what situations might you apply mindful
mediation? - What questions are you raising?
- What skills/knowledge/habits would you need to
enhance your capacities as a mediator?
28SELF-DIRECTEDNESS
- Self-managing
- Self-monitoring
- Self-modifying
29SELF-MANAGING
30SELF-MANAGING
- Knowing the significance of and being
- inclined to approach tasks with clarity of
- outcomes, a strategic plan, and necessary data,
and drawing from past experiences, anticipating
success - indicators, and creating alternatives for
accomplishment.
31SELF-MONITORING
- Being aware of
- our own and others
- use of thinking skills, strategies and
dispositions and their effects on others and on
the environment.
32SELF-MONITORING
- Having sufficient self-knowledge about
- what works, establishing conscious metacognitive
strategies to alert the perceptions for
in-the-moment indicators of whether the strategic
plan is working or not and to assist in the
decision-making processes of altering the plan
and choosing the right actions and strategies.
33SELF-MODIFYING
34SELF-MODIFYING
- Reflecting on, evaluating, analyzing,
- and constructing meaning from
- experience and making a commitment
- to apply the learning to future activities,
tasks, and challenges.
35THINK - PAIR - SHARE
- Self-managing
- Self-monitoring
- Self-modifying
- DISCUSSION How do these descriptions compare to
what you know about self-directed individuals?
36BUILDING YOUR IDENTITY AND CAPACITY AS A MEDIATOR
37BUILDING AND MAINTAINING TRUST
38- Your organization functions and grows through
conversations - The quality of those conversations determines how
smart your organization is. - David Perkins,
- King Arthurs Round Table
- 2002 N.Y. Wiley
39Relational Trust in Schools
- School Professional - Parent Relations
- Teacher - Principal Relations
-
- Teacher - Teacher Relations
- Teacher - Student
- Bryk, A. Snyder B. (2002) Trust in Schools
A core Resource for Improvement NY, Russell
Sage Foundation
40FACTORS THAT SUSTAIN TRUST
- Consistency in personal beliefs. Organizational
goals, work performance, competence and
even-handedness. - Integrity resulting from telling the truth and
keeping promises. - Authenticityaccepting responsibility for ones
actions and not distorting the truth to shift
blame on another.
41COMMUNICATING MEANING
42RAPPORT
- Rapport Phenomena with mammals
- Work of Jane
- Goodall and
- Diane Fossey
- Applicable across
- all cultures
43 RAPPORT
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51LEARNING TO LISTEN WITH SKILL AND EMPATHY
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56Pausing
- Using wait-time before responding
- to or asking a question allows time
- for more complex thinking, enhances dialogue and
improves decision making.
57Paraphrasing
- Lets others know that you are
- listening, that you understand
- or are trying to understand
- them and that you care.
58Probing
- Increases the clarity and precision of the
group's thinking by refining understandings,
terminology - and interpretations.
59THINKING AND COMMUNICATING WITH CLARITY AND
PRECISION
- GENERALIZATIONS
- DELETIONS
- DISTORTIONS
SURFACE LANGUAGE
DEEP STRUCTURE LANGUAGE
60Paying attention to self and others
- Awareness of what you are saying, how it is said
and how others are responding attending to
learning styles being sensitive to your own and
others' emotions. -
61Listener Use the Pause, Paraphrase Probe
sequence
Speaker Finish this sentence AS I REFLECT
ON THIS PAST SCHOOL YEAR, I AM MOST PROUD
OF
62- WHAT METACOGNITIVE STRATEGIES DID YOU EMPLOY TO
MONITOR AND MANAGE YOUR LISTENING SKILLS?
63Listener Use the Pause, Paraphrase Probe
sequence
Speaker Finish this sentence AS I
ANTICIPATE THIS NEXT SCHOOL YEAR, IM MOST
EXCITED ABOUT.
64- What values are you
- expressing when you listen
- to one another so intently?
65QUESTIONING WITH INTENTION
66Questioning with Intention
- In three pairs (Pp 4-5)
- Examine the questions intended to mediate
- Self-Managing
- Self-Monitoring
- Self-Modifying
- What are you noticing about the questions in your
set?
67Questioning with Intention
- Pairs form into sextets
- What are you noticing about the attributes of
mediational questions?
68PLURALS
"What are some of your goals?
"What ideas do you have?"
"What outcomes do you seek?"
"What alternatives are you considering?
69TENTATIVENESS
What might be some factors that would cause?
In what other ways could you solve this
problem?
"What hunches do you have that may explain this
situation?
70Invitational Stems
- As you recall.
- As you anticipate.
- As you envision
- Given what you know about.
71PRESUPPOSITIONS Hidden meanings below the
surface of language.
- For example
- Even Mary could get a passing grade in that
class. -
72 LIMITING PRESUPPOSITIONS
- DO YOU HAVE AN OBJECTIVE?
- WHY WERE YOU UNSUCCESSFUL?
- IF ONLY YOU HAD LISTENED.
73 EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
- WHAT ARE SOME OF THE GOALS THAT YOU HAVE IN MIND
FOR THIS MEETING?
74 EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
- AS YOU CONSIDER YOUR ALTERNATIVES WHAT
- SEEMS MOST PROMISING?
75 EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
- WHAT PERSONAL LEARNINGS OR INSIGHTS WILL YOU
CARRY FORWARD TO FUTURE SITUATIONS?
76Applying what youve learned about listening,
share with a partner.
What are you learning about the process of
mediation?
What are you learning about yourself as a
mediator?
77- Explain what you are learning to others
- Isolate and practice verbal and non-verbal
- listening skills.
- Design and pose questions intended to
- mediate the self-directedness of others.
Collect evidence of their effectiveness.