The Brick Team Exercise
This exercise can be used as a warm-up for project and other planning processes. It can also be used in team building.
This exercise can be used as a warm-up for project and other planning processes. It can also be used in team building.
Organize the day's meeting by co-creating and assigning roles among participants.
Open your workshop / session / meeting with a visual check-in that enables people to be there as who they are and what's on their mind:
Encourage team reflection in a fun and expressive way!
One person speaks gibberish and the other interprets
Because a checklist is a focusing object, it demands that the team discuss the order and importance of certain tasks. Team members are likely to have different perspectives on these things, and the checklist is a means to bring these issues to the surface and work with them.
This is a modification of an interactive lecture activity that is transformed into a textra game. This activity can be inserted after participants finish reading a handout. It involves a poster preparation contest that taps into the listeners' linguistic and visual intelligences.
While it is admirable to share our gratitude and good feelings with others, we rarely stop to think about what giving others our gratitude can do for us. As it turns out, it does quite a lot for our brains, resilience, and mental well-being.
Players share things they're afraid of, and others who don't have that fear symbolically "take" that fear away.
Co-development is a methodology of collective intelligence. It is a development approach for professionals in which participants learn from each other and consolidate their practice. The brainstorming realized, individually and with the group, is favored by a structured exercise of consultation in relation to the issues experienced by the group members.
Participants throw an invisible ball to one another through their computer screen, paying attention to how it changes as it gets passed around.