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Several
years ago, I was facilitating a workshop at a conference of multi-cultural
organizations in Ontario, to demonstrate some practical tools of
facilitation. I had made a point of sharing my "working assumptions" for
facilitating groups, which include "Everyone has wisdom" and "We
need everyone’s wisdom for the wisest result". About 20
adults, representing a good cross-section of the world, were actively
participating in envisioning what they wanted our multicultural society
to look like, brainstorming and sharing their ideas on cards on the
wall. My youngest son, then about 7 years old, had accompanied me
as it was a Saturday and I hadn’t been able to find child care.
He was quietly playing with his Legos in the back corner. Suddenly
one of the participants said, pointing at my son, "What does
he think? After all, it’s the next generation who will benefit
and continue this!".
I called
out, "Tim,
what do you want our multicultural society to look like in 5 years?" He
thought for a moment, then said, "can I have three colours of
markers?" I said, "Sure" and handed them to him.
He took a card and drew 3 stick figures of different colours dancing
together.
The card went up on the wall
and clustered with all the cards that said that we would be working
and playing together in our multicultural society.
We were
all astounded that a child’s spontaneous, non-verbal contribution could add richness
to the product of the adults, although in retrospect, we shouldn’t
have been surprised.
The word facilitation is
used to mean many different things. Its roots are in the Latin "facil" -
to make easy. A shoehorn that eases a heel into a shoe "facilitates" putting
on your shoe.
There are two common meanings
of the term "facilitation" as a way of working with groups.
On one hand, facilitation is seen as a way of guiding group activity
so that active learning takes place, based on the knowledge
and understanding that individuals bring to the training. On the
other hand, process facilitation draws out a group’s already
existing wisdom to solve a problem or create a solution that
the group needs.
Facilitating
Learning
In facilitating learning,
the trainer has content objectives that s/he wants the group to know
by the end of the session, and/or behaviour they wish the participants
to change. But the trainer starts with an assumption that s/he is
not the only expert in the room. Participants have ideas and knowledge
that are a starting point to build on. The trainer may guide the
group to reflect on past experiences and draw out insight, through
the use of carefully constructed questions that are both respectful
and take people beyond their previous thinking. Occasionally a talk,
a video, or even a story may be the starting point. With experiential
learning, the trainer provides an experience for the group first,
then guides the reflection on that experience. That experience may
be an exercise or activity the group does together.
In such an approach to education,
the job of the teacher may become easier and harder at the same time.
In many ways, guiding the students to build their own knowledge through
reflection relieves the teacher of the burden of knowing all the
answers. However, it also removes the "cookbook" approach
of teaching, where there is simply data to be downloaded from the
text and the teacher into the student. Instead, the teacher becomes
a catalyst to a three-part dialogue (or trialogue) process between
the information, the student, and the teacher. When students and
the teacher reflect together, everyone learns.
Although this kind of facilitated
learning is often referred to as using "adult learning principles",
my experience is that they are true for all ages, and provide for
learning that translates into real-life behaviour and choices.
Wayne Nelson summarized some
of these learning principles in this way:
People
participate at their best when:
They are comfortable
- An attractive, comfortable atmosphere
invites participation.
- Emotional and social comfort help
people participate.
- Modes of involvement that match
people’s unique social style and learning styles, enable
them to engage with ease.
- When people are able to express
their perceptions, feelings and thoughts freely, they are more
likely to become involved.
- Acknowledging, receiving and affirming
people’s ideas allows them to share their deeper thoughts
and feelings.
- When people are emotionally, intellectually
and spiritually stimulated, they participate more readily.
Things make sense to
them.
- Topics related directly to people’s
concerns, interests and hopes for the future stimulate their
engagement.
- If the results will make a positive
impact on their own lives, people are likely to participate
positively.
- People who believe that their contribution
to the discussions will make a positive difference in their
situation and in lives of others participate with creativity.
- When people are able to use their
knowledge and experience to create new meaning, they participate
with creativity and passion.
- When people know they will be involved
in implementing the plans and decisions they make, they participate
with commitment.
In my practice, I find that
the core skill that makes facilitated learning powerful is the capacity
to guide the reflective thinking process that integrates people’s
experience with their real lives. A very helpful process starts with
questions that ask people to recall their observations of their experience,
then questions that get out their immediate reactions, then questions
that probe for meaning, significance, learnings and relevance, and
finally questions that elicit decision and action. At each stage,
the facilitator listens respectfully and actively to the responses.
The Institute of Cultural
Affairs, a global NGO, has been developing and using this process,
which it calls "the Focused Conversation Method", for nearly
50 years with communities, education groups, and organizations.
An Example
One summer nearly 30 years
ago, I was teaching a pre-school group at a summer camp. I had the
four-year-olds recite the familiar nursery rhyme, "Little Miss
Muffet". Then we had a brief conversation on the rhyme, roughly
as follows:
- "What
words don’t you understand?" (tuffet, curds and
whey, which I explained)
- "Who were the characters?" (Little
Miss Muffet, the spider)
- "What happened first? Then...Then...?"
- "What did Miss Muffet do when
she was frightened?"
Reflective Questions
- "Where
have you experienced something like this?"
One
child said that his mother made him eat cottage cheese, and he
hated it. Several children had stories of scary surprises, and
their reactions.
Interpretive Questions
Then I asked,
- "What is this story all about?"
One
little girl thought for a second, then her eyes lit up. "This is about ... when
you get scared, you can decide if you’re going to run away,
or not!"
Decisional Questions
She finished up with "Next
time I will decide by myself what to do!"
I was astounded. This tiny
child had seen far below the surface of this rhyme to a meaning that
had relevance to her own life. Her capacity to abstract meaning,
or to access a higher level of thinking, was empowered by the step-by-step
thinking process of the Focused Conversation method.
This method facilitates learning,
as it starts with the obvious and most easily accessed information
and moves step by step through to higher levels of thinking, thus
extending students’ capacity to think abstractly.
The following conversation
on an experiential learning exercise is taken from "The Art
of Focused Conversation for Schools". It could be adapted to
follow any group experience, such as a ropes course, or a cultural
encounter.
Reflecting
on a Group Experience
Situation
A group of young people has participated
in an unusual kinesthetic experience called "The Dance
of Peace." Some were reluctant participants; others were
deeply moved. After lunch, the trainer is leading the group
in a debriefing of their experience.
Rational Aim
- To clarify what we did.
- To discover common motifs and themes.
- To identify the cultural origins
of dance patterns.
Experiential Aim
- To experience the wonder of each
culture’s contribution, and to feel the exhilaration
of the dance.
Opening
Think back to the dancing we did
this morning.
Objective Questions
- What movements do you remember?
- What did the movement look like?
- What dances did we do?
- What sounds do you recall? What
instruments were used?
Reflective Questions
- How did you feel as you were dancing?
- At what point did you feel unsure,
confused, or embarrassed?
- At what point did you feel excited,
deeply moved, or peaceful?
- When did you really "get into
it"?
- Where have you seen or experienced
something similar?
- What did this remind you of?
Interpretive Questions
- What was going on in this dance?
- Why do you think the creator of
these dances created them?
- What were they trying to express
of communicate?
- What kind of experiences were they
trying to provide for people? What can we learn from these
dances?
- How were you changed by this experience?
Decisional Questions
- To whom would you like to teach
these dances?
- Where would you like to see them
used again?
- Whom do you wish had been here
this morning?
Closing
When we started, I felt silly.
After it was over, I thought, "This was fantastic."
When the facilitator crafts the questions
carefully in advance, imagining what kind of responses the group
will give to them, this reflective process will work well for any
age group. Respectful questioning and listening are skills that can
be nurtured and practiced by professional and volunteers alike.
Facilitation at its best
is the art of drawing out ordinary, everyday people’s wisdom.
Then it helps a group acknowledge and understand differences and
see the deeper patterns of similarity. That allows the group to create
consensus and results that are wiser than any one person would have
come up with alone.
This facilitation is "process" facilitation,
which I believe is absolutely critical to building respectful understanding.
In this kind of facilitation, the facilitator has no agenda except
that which the group wants and needs. It is not training, though
learning will also occur. The facilitator’s role is to guide
the way the group shares ideas, listens, and processes information,
so that the group comes up with the decision or result that it needs.
The best facilitator is nearly invisible – the group believes
it has accomplished its objectives by itself, and surely it has.
But the facilitator has brought the tools, process, and presence
to inspire the best from the group. A group without an assigned facilitator
may well be able to manage its dialogue to come up with a well-thought-through
consensus. But not every group can do that, and I know of no group
who can do that well all of the time.
I believe this kind of facilitation
has its roots in traditional consensus creation that emerged from
small groups of people in different cultures. Many discovered that
if they sat around a fire, or in a circle, and created opportunities
for everyone to speak and really listen, that they could make difficult
decisions that everyone was committed to supporting. Some of us facilitate
naturally, others of us yearn for it in difficult group sessions
without knowing exactly what is missing.
In the last few hundred years,
we have fallen into a pattern of seeing the world as dualistic: there
is us and them, government and opposition, good and bad, right and
wrong, black and white, "my way or the highway" etc. When
we see the world that way, our pattern of responding leads to argument,
and to either winning or losing. Defense or attack result, and we
get locked into our own pre-conceived positions.
If we look at the world as
a multi-faceted reality, like a diamond with many facets, we find
ourselves looking to polish and illuminate many perspectives to find
the wisest solution to a problem. The "what if we tried a third
(or another) way of looking at this" question allows us to bypass
argument about right and wrong positions. An even more radical way
of processing differences looks for the synthesis of quite unique
ideas to create a larger picture out of diverse pieces of the puzzle.
Both of these ways of creating consensus contribute to real peace
as they don’t gloss over differences, but rather build on them
as creative stepping stones to solutions and understanding.
The group process facilitator
believes that the group has all the wisdom it needs to solve its
own problems. It is important to have as many stakeholders represented
as possible to make sure every angle of insight can contribute to
the solution. Often this means examining all our categories of people
who are "the enemy" or "can’t participate" for
one reason or another.
I recall a facilitated consultation
nearly 30 years ago in an Egyptian village to plan its community
development project. Men and women; non-literate village residents,
highly educated urban Egyptians, and non-Arabic-speaking consultants
from a range of different cultures sat down in the same room (well,
a tent) to pool their wisdom. Each of us had different ideas of what
was possible or even necessary. Each of us had our reservations about
what the others could contribute. All together we brainstormed our
ideas, clustered them to see the patterns, and named what we had
come up with. The villagers’ passionate visions were augmented
by "expert" ideas. The abstractions and overly technical
visions of the "experts" were made realistic by the villagers’ grounded
ideas. The plan was "owned" by everyone present. Twenty
years later, when I visited the project again, I could see how the
village people and the outsiders had worked together to transform
the community, and were still motivated and moving forward.
Often I talk about facilitation
as a relationship. "Facilitation is to conflict resolution as
health promotion is to medical healing". Facilitation often
prevents conflict, as it can be an intervention before a conflict
exists or becomes entrenched. It honours all the perspectives and
all the people to come up with a satisfactory solution. In the same
way, facilitation can be a tool for healing conflict that has already
begun.
The culture of participation
which facilitation supports has the capacity to transform how we
treat each other, the feeling of having been heard and respected.
One of the most often repeated comments I hear after a facilitated
event is, "I thought I was the only one who had those ideas!
I know now I’m not alone!"
Facilitating group participation
also increases shared ownership and responsibility for decisions.
If I participate in contributing to the naming of a problem and also
to creating the solution to it, then I am already a part of the solution.
What
competencies does a group process facilitator demonstrate?
The International Association
of Facilitators has been engaged over the last decade in research
to develop a set of competencies for process facilitation. In 1996,
Brian Stanfield and I pulled together the research to that point,
and Brian wrote an article for ICA Canada, "The Magic of the
Facilitator", summarizing the core competencies. Although the
IAF has refined the competencies since to develop a measurable set
of indicators that are used for its international certification program,
the article provides a fine introduction to understanding the competencies
of a facilitator.
So whether you are building
on the wisdom and experience of a group to extend their learning,
or to create a product that they need, try spending most of the time
asking the participants what they think. I have discovered a paradoxical
truth recently: if you ask people for their wisdom and really listen,
they think you are wise. And there’s even an extension
of that: if you ask people for their wisdom and really listen, you
all get more wise.
Brief Bibliography
Nelson, Jo, The Art of Focused
Conversation for Schools: Over 100 Ways to Guide Clear Thinking and
Promote Learning, Canadian Institute of Cultural Affairs and New
Society Publishers, 2001
Nelson, Wayne, "Meetings
that Work" Training Manual, Canadian Institute of Cultural Affairs,
2000
Stanfield, Brian, The Art
of Focused Conversation: 100 Ways to Access Group Wisdom in the Workplace,
Canadian Institute of Cultural Affairs and New Society Publishers,
1999
Jo Nelson is a professional
facilitator with ICA Associates, Inc. in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
She has lived and facilitated in 6 nations, and delights in facilitating
groups in languages she doesn’t understand! Ms.
Nelson holds a B.A. degree in education and anthropology from the
University of Iowa. Her professional background includes 35 years
in facilitating large and small groups, and four years on the executive
of the International Association of Facilitators (IAF). She holds
the Certified Professional Facilitator (CPF) designation of the IAF
and the Certified ToP Facilitator (CTF) designation from ICA. She
is also the author of "The Art of Focused Conversation for Schools:
Over 100 Ways to Guide Clear Thinking and Promote Learning".
This
article was first written for Interspectives, A Journal on Transcultural
Education, Volume 19 – 2002-2003, published by CISV, Children’s
International Summer Villages. Their webste is http://cisv.org .