Re: [OSLIST] mental meanderings - you got me going Julie (long)Totally... 
beautiful.
Thanks for being you.
wk
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Chris Weaver 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2002 1:30 PM
  Subject: Re: mental meanderings - you got me going Julie (long)


  Hey Winston!


    Did you mention a book in another message or is Julie "inviting" you to one?

    It's Julie, being the muse!
     
    A few things which I am curious about ..
     
    "...group sizes have maximums (average ratio of 1:7)"
     
    Why do you set maximums?

    Each instructor/mentor sets his/her maximum.  We experiment.  We debrief 
each day, and there is often a discussion of a sense of critical mass for 
different activities and ages.  For example, Jerry teaches "stage combat" 
(choreography of fights).  His maximum for 7th graders is six - that's the 
number he can watch and keep safe.  But if it's 9th graders, he will take 
eight.  Maximums for climbing tower, ropes course, woodworking depend on tools 
and equipment.  The simple question is, How large a group provides the best 
learning experience?  For most of our workshops the answer falls between six 
and ten.  Instructor/mentors often report how bad it feels when a group grows 
beyond their capacity to be fully responsive (and yes, this happens at 
one-third the size of the average school classroom).

    "...participants stay with the session they choose, and do not move between 
them".
     
    Why? Is this required by the facility? the setting? 

    Partly the facility.  Our groups are spread across many acres of forest, 
and it's out of my comfort zone as the director for children to be traveling 
without an adult.  In addition, many of our workshops have a cycle to them, 
with important safety instructions delivered to the whole group in the first 
part (technical climbing, etc), so it doesn't make sense for kids to join in 
the middle.  Other groups engage in a lot of trust-building over their 
90-minute workshop, and develop a strong group identity, and the consistency 
helps.  

    It would be interesting, however, to try the process with a full law of 2 
feet, and design workshops that would work well in free-flow, and see how it 
goes.
     
    "..We have met in a circle three times already in the day as as a whole"
     
    When? morning/opening, plus..

    ...plus a reflection circle following each session.  Our 
methodology-du-jour for the first reflection circle has two parts: 1)  I invite 
them to pair up with someone who was in a different workshop.  Each partner 
takes one minute to tell "something interesting" that happened in their first 
session.  With a hundred teenagers the sound of fifty simultaneous animated 
conversations if fabulous, like a river.  2)  Then it's a stick-in-the-middle 
circle of "compliments and appreciations."  As I am walking the circle, I say, 
"If someone impressed you with something they did, something creative, or 
funny, or useful, or skillful, or brave, then walk in and compliment them.  And 
an appreciation is a thank you.  Maybe you have someone to thank.  If so, come 
on it and tell the group."  Especially for the teenagers, this explicit 
invitation to notice and recognize one another is effective in establishing 
openness, trust, and humor for the rest of the day.

    Second circle is usually, "so, what happened?"  Or, in the marvelous words 
of someone on this list, "Who are we now?"
     
    Chris
     
     


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