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Meeting Facilitation Andrew M. Sachs Coordinator, Public Disputes Program Dispute Settlement Center, Carrboro, NC Wednesday, February 11, 2015: 10:00 –

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Presentation on theme: "Meeting Facilitation Andrew M. Sachs Coordinator, Public Disputes Program Dispute Settlement Center, Carrboro, NC Wednesday, February 11, 2015: 10:00 –"— Presentation transcript:

1 Meeting Facilitation Andrew M. Sachs Coordinator, Public Disputes Program Dispute Settlement Center, Carrboro, NC Wednesday, February 11, 2015: 10:00 – 11:00 am For more information: asachs@disputesettlement.org/(919) 929-8800 ext. 23

2 Webinar Desired Outcomes Understanding of facilitator’s role Insights into tools and techniques Awareness of additional resources

3 Webinar Outline Section I Facilitator’s Role Process vs. Content Facilitator Tool: The Opening Statement Section II Five Goals for a Good Meeting Facilitator Tools: Preventions and Interventions Section III Facilitator Tools: Desired Outcome, Agenda & Ground Rules Section IV Additional Resources Q&A

4 Facilitator’s Role

5 Facilitator’s Opening Statement

6 Explain role Engage group in reaching consensus on outcomes, agenda and ground rules Get permission to intervene Invite feedback on performance

7 Section II: Five Goals for a Good Meeting

8 Five Goals for a Good Meeting  Participants concentrate on one subject at a time.  Participants follow a clear and agreed upon process.  Conversation is open to all group members and balanced among them.  Roles are clearly defined and agreed upon.  Participants’ feelings and ideas are taken into consideration.

9 Participants Concentrate on One Subject at a Time

10 Plan Advance agenda Opening Statement Ground Rule: “Stick to the agreed upon topics.” Use flip charts Listen reflectively Announce shifts in conversation Point it out when someone’s off topic Use a “parking lot” Help the group revise the agenda

11 Participants Follow a Clear and Agreed Upon Process

12 Put methods on the agenda Opening Statement Post agenda on flip chart Announce shifts in process Ground Rules: “Stick to the agreed upon tasks”/”Decide by consensus.” Explicit post-meeting steps Point it out if the group’s off process Remind group of process agreements Is the agreed-upon process still useful? Try another approach

13 Conversation is Open to All Group Members and Balanced Among Them

14 Open & Balanced Conversation Room set up Ground rules: "Listen attentively," "One speaker at a time," "Share the floor.“ Thank group members for contributing ideas Establish a queue

15 Open & Balanced Conversation Ask group members to react to ideas Encourage quieter group members to participate Ask the more talkative to give others a chance Float a trial balloon

16 Roles Clearly Defined and Agreed Upon

17 Roles Defined & Agreed Upon Convener Group Member Observer Flip-Chart Recorder Chairperson or Group Leader Resource Person Facilitator

18 Roles Defined & Agreed Upon Meeting Planning: – Who’ll be attending? – How will key roles be filled? – What will people in those roles do/not do? Ground rules Roles in the meeting follow-up Evaluate performance

19 Roles Defined & Agreed Upon Orient new members Rotate some roles Point it out Clarify prior agreements Revise definitions and assignments

20 Participants’ Feelings & Ideas are Taken into Consideration

21 Facilitator’s demeanor Plan for peoples’ needs Room conditions “Disagree respectfully“ Write ideas & feelings on flip charts Reflective listening

22 Participants’ Feelings & Ideas are Taken into Consideration Don’t minimize or try to fix strong feelings. Listen and watch for signs of discomfort. Say what you think is going on. Invite group to deal with trust, respect, etc. Call for breaks or caucuses.

23 Section III Desired Outcome, Agenda, & Ground Rules

24 Desired Outcomes Awareness of each group member’s perspective on an issue. Shared understanding of the current situation. A list of concerns about a situation. A goal for making a change to a situation. Options for solving a problem. Consensus on a solution to a problem. A plan for implementing a solution.

25 The Agenda Meeting start and end times. Topics to be covered in that time. Activities to be used for each topic: – Presentation – Discussion – Brainstorming – Evaluation – Decision Making Time budgets for those activities.

26 The Agenda Formats for each activity – Full group – Break outs – Panel – Pairs Who will fill key roles for each agenda item: Presenters, Panelists, Discussion Participants, Invited Resource Persons, Decision Makers, etc.

27 Ground Rules Begin and adjourn on time. One speaker at a time. Stick to the tasks and topics on the agreed- upon agenda. Listen attentively. Share the floor. Honor our agreements about confidentiality. It is OK to disagree...please do so respectfully. Decide together.

28 Good Books for Facilitators Facilitator's Guide to Participatory Decision-Making. Sam Kaner, and others. New Society Publishers, Philadelphia, PA (1996). How to Make Collaboration Work. David Straus. Berrett- Koehler Publishers, Inc., San Francisco, CA (2002). How to Make Meetings Work. Michael Doyle and David Straus. Jove Press, New York (1976). The Skilled Facilitator: A Comprehensive Resource for Consultants, Facilitators, Managers, Trainers, and Coaches. Roger Schwarz. Jossey-Bass Publishers, San Francisco, CA. (2002, second edition).

29 Online Resources for Facilitators Appreciative Inquiry, http://appreciativeinquiry.case.edu/ Future Search, http://www.futuresearch.net/index.cfm Interaction Associates Ideas, http://www.interactionassociates.com National Coalition for Dialogue & Deliberation, http://ncdd.org/ Open Space Technology, http://www.co-intelligence.org/P- Openspace.html Problem Solving Techniques, http://www.mindtools.com/pages/main/newMN_TMC.htm Study Circles, http://www.co-intelligence.org/P-studycircles.html Using Online Tools to Engage and Be Engaged by the Public, http://www.businessofgovernment.org/report/using-online-tools-engage- public Visualization in Participatory Programmes http://portals.wi.wur.nl/files/docs/ppme/VIPP_Unicef.pdf

30 Conclusion/Q&A


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