In our world, technology has broken
down barriers to trade and communication and at the same time there are few
guidelines for dealing with difference, in a global context.
How are we creating the space for working across
difference? And what is the mindset that is required to respond to
difference without insulating ourselves in our "own."
A conversation on this theme will be conducted
using a particular methodology called a Hermeneutic Circle. This is an
opportunity to engage with a topic where there are no rights and wrongs; no
rules; no facilitation. The intention of a hermeneutic practice is 'to create
the conditions for understanding to occur'. We'll offer a short historical
and philosophical background to this work - and mostly we'll all be involved
in the dialogue towards understanding/making sense of the topic.
Guest Facilitator:
Steven Segal - of
Macquarie Graduate School of Management has been running
hermeneutic circles for PhD candidates for the past 6 years
|
19 August 2014
‘The Hermeneutic Circle’ with Steven Segal | Monday September 8, 2014 | 5.30pm
11 August 2014
How to make facilitation more effective with Greg Jenkins | August 11, 2014 | 5.30 PM
Outputs from this session on Dropbox:
Facilitation in one form or another is ubiquitous in training rooms, seminar halls, workplaces, boardrooms, community and classrooms. Facilitation experiences range from brainstorming and small group work to complex multi-stakeholder planning.
Facilitation in one form or another is ubiquitous in training rooms, seminar halls, workplaces, boardrooms, community and classrooms. Facilitation experiences range from brainstorming and small group work to complex multi-stakeholder planning.
Facilitation is used by a full range of practitioners from new
to experienced and irregular to regular. Provided minimum standards are met, facilitation
can be a transformational experience. Conversely, a poor facilitation experience
can set back progress indefinitely. Even if the experience is positive and the
facilitator is well received we invariably return to the workplace, community,
boardroom or classroom only to find that nothing has changed.
After 60 years of evolution and variable experiences it’s not
surprising that some people are either skeptical about or have a low
expectation of facilitation.
How good is our practice? Are we up to date with the changes
over the past decade? What are we doing to make our facilitation more effective?
In this session we will explore the following questions:
·
Facilitation
has evolved over at least 6 decades from various sources including the advent
of Brainstorming in 1953. What are the milestones of facilitation from the early
days to now via the content, process and systemic phases and what does it mean
for the effectiveness of our current practice? Are we up to date?
·
We
use the term facilitation to describe a range of different events including meetings,
workshops and conversations. It can be confusing for even the most experienced
amongst us as very different concepts are blended into a single term. How could
we be more effective by better classifying a range of methods to explain what type
of facilitation we are doing and how we can improve?
·
Different
people practice facilitation differently and to varying degrees on a spectrum either
with content as an accompaniment to training, consulting and teaching or
without content in visioning, planning and problem solving etc. How can the
spectrum of facilitation be defined and in knowing our place on the spectrum
make us more effective?
·
Learning
about facilitation, whether a beginner or advanced, via books and courses is a
mixed bag. Even the part time facilitator needs to keep up to date to be
effective. What’s worked and what hasn’t and how can we continue to learn and develop
ourselves as effective facilitation practitioners regardless of how much
facilitation we do?
Guest Facilitator Greg
Jenkins
Greg is has been convener of Sydney Facilitators Network for a
decade. Greg’s practice is based on a systems approach that demystifies
facilitation and makes it accessible to everyone whether regular, irregular,
experienced or inexperienced facilitation practitioners.
4 August 2014
How to Make Facilitation More Effective with Greg Jenkins | Monday August 11, 2014
Outputs from this session: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/tb3cxoa5zgc4l9h/AADdXW7nMeLlQTSlSOKS_S85a?dl=0
Facilitation in one form or another is ubiquitous in training rooms, seminar halls, workplaces, boardrooms, community and classrooms. Facilitation experiences range from brainstorming and small group work to complex multi-stakeholder planning.
Facilitation in one form or another is ubiquitous in training rooms, seminar halls, workplaces, boardrooms, community and classrooms. Facilitation experiences range from brainstorming and small group work to complex multi-stakeholder planning.
Facilitation is used by a full range of practitioners from new
to experienced and irregular to regular. Provided minimum standards are met, facilitation
can be a transformational experience. Conversely, a poor facilitation experience
can set back progress indefinitely. Even if the experience is positive and the
facilitator is well received we invariably return to the workplace, community,
boardroom or classroom only to find that nothing has changed.
After 60 years of evolution and variable experiences it’s not
surprising that some people are either skeptical about or have a low
expectation of facilitation.
How good is our practice? Are we up to date with the changes
over the past decade? What are we doing to make our facilitation more effective?
In this session we will explore the following questions:
·
Facilitation
has evolved over at least 6 decades from various sources including the advent
of Brainstorming in 1953. What are the milestones of facilitation from the early
days to now via the content, process and systemic phases and what does it mean
for the effectiveness of our current practice? Are we up to date?
·
We
use the term facilitation to describe a range of different events including meetings,
workshops and conversations. It can be confusing for even the most experienced
amongst us as very different concepts are blended into a single term. How could
we be more effective by better classifying a range of methods to explain what type
of facilitation we are doing and how we can improve?
·
Different
people practice facilitation differently and to varying degrees on a spectrum either
with content as an accompaniment to training, consulting and teaching or
without content in visioning, planning and problem solving etc. How can the
spectrum of facilitation be defined and in knowing our place on the spectrum
make us more effective?
·
Learning
about facilitation, whether a beginner or advanced, via books and courses is a
mixed bag. Even the part time facilitator needs to keep up to date to be
effective. What’s worked and what hasn’t and how can we continue to learn and develop
ourselves as effective facilitation practitioners regardless of how much
facilitation we do?
Guest Facilitator Greg
Jenkins
Greg is has been convener of Sydney Facilitators Network for a
decade. Greg’s practice is based on a systems approach that demystifies
facilitation and makes it accessible to everyone whether regular, irregular,
experienced or inexperienced facilitation practitioners.
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