Title: Facilitating meetings for active participation
1Facilitating meetings for active participation
- EMIF workshopBrussels, March 17, 2010,
1230-500PM - Ib Ravn, Ph.D., Associate Professor Aarhus
University, Denmark, www.dpu.dk/fv
21. Todays program
- 1230 How to design meetings that inspire and
involve participants? Presentation, reflection
and demonstration - 145 Break
- 200 Lessons learnt so far
- 230 Designing your own meeting
- 315 Break
- 330 Presenting your meetings designs and
facilitating discussion of them - 500 End
32. The problem Meetingstreat participants as
recipients
-
- As it is Drawbacks
- One-way People two-way
- Passivity Use it or lose it
- Q and A Silence, or Im clever, too!
- Debates Many tangents. Success is random
- Workshops So many mini-conferences
- Panels Congestion on One-Way Street
43. The transfer model of teaching
54. The conference as a forum for human
co-flourishing
- People have potentials, interests and projects
- We want to learn and flourish
- We go to conferences to get inspired by others
and grow
65. Design principles for learning meetings
Blah Blah
1. Concise presentations
???
2. Active interpretation
3. Self-formulation
4. Networking and knowledge sharing
5. Competent facilitation
76. The design principles (for your own reading)
- Concise presentations. Fewer, shorter, more
provocative. - Active interpretation. There must be processes
that help participants actively relate what they
hear to their own experience. Time to digest,
think and talk. - Self-formulation. There must be opportunities in
pairs and small groups for everyone to talk about
the personal interests and projects that brought
them to the conference in the first place. - Networking and knowledge sharing. Facilitated
activities that help the participants discover
each other as resources. - Competent facilitation. The facilitator must
create a safe and trusting space where people
will go along with the new learning processes.
87. What was interesting ?
-
- In my presentation, what did you find
interesting? - Jot down a few things (2 minutes)
- Share them with your neighbor (6-8 minutes)
- Lets hear some of them, and your questions and
comments
98. Techniques (with page numbers)
- Semicircular seating(?) so everyone can see and
take part (17) - Meet people warms up the room, creates trust
(58) - Ask a few delegates whats nice about beeing here
(60) - Concise presentation, cut in two helps attention
(64) - What was interesting? focus on the
constructive (24) - Silent reflection and notetaking clarifies
thoughts (70) - Minimeetings pair and share, ideas are tested
(72) - Take inspirations helps people inspire each
other (76) - Always a bit of QA otherwise people feel cheated
109. More techniques that activate participants
- Separate colleagues after lunch people perk up
(58) - Question cards easier for timid folks to
contribute (68) - Start your future, here, now use todays
material (86) - Take-aways Reflection, minimeetings, sharing, at
the end - Facilitate all presentations dont let the
presenter (60) - Use a script blow-by-blow, for internal use, ?
program (46) 10.00 Welcome 10.10 Meet
people 10.20 Presentation, etc.
1110. Task Design a meeting
- Design a 2-4 hour meeting using a few techniques
- Write a script (6-10 lines/elements)
- Print large and legibly on flip chart. Hang it on
wall - Take a break at _______ and be back by _______
12 11. Your role as a facilitator
- You host the event, helping everyones
participate optimally - Explain your role to speakers, so they let you
- Introduce speaker, including length of
presentation - Finish speaker and elicit applause
- Do a technique, or take questions for speaker
- If questions and debate move along spontaneously,
fine. But stay up front, for easy intervention - Check bad questions. Refer them to later, if
necessary - Finish when the time is up, even if more
questions - Conclude by thanking the presenter elicit
applause again
13 12. Running a participative technique
- Dont speak until you have everyones attention
100 - Be friendly, calm and firm as you ask delegates
to do X and Y - Never ask if the delegates would like to do it.
Assume they will do what they are asked to - Help the delegates do it in practice (pair up,
find paper, etc.) - Accept without comment if someone chooses not to
do it unless it disturbs other people - Say Thank you afterwards and little else. Dont
apologize if the process did not seem a success.
Move on.
1413. Todays basic ideas
- Meetings need techniques/processes that involve
particpants - Active participants learn more, have more fun
come back - A script details all processes
- A facilitator hosts the meeting and helps
everyone be their best
1514. More about facilitating meetings
- Steen Elsborg and Ib Ravn Learning Meetings and
Conferences in Practice. Copenhagen Peoples
Press, 2007. - Various papers (The Learning Conference and
Creating Learning at Conferences Through
Participant Involvement) www.dpu.dk/om/ibr,
click Publikationer - About our group, Facilitating Knowledge
Processes www.dpu.dk/fv, and minor texts of
ours at fac-vid.squarespace.com - My blog on facilitation www.ibravn.blogspot.com
- The Learning Meeting Module A web-based tool.
www.ims.dk - International Association of Facilitators
www.iaf-world.org