Training for Change. George Lakey, director; Daniel Hunter, program director.  Helping groups stand up for justice, peace, and the environment through strategic non-violence.

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Glossary of
direct education
terminology
sociogram: an exercise in which participants arrange their bodies to show something about themselves or to stimulate a new awareness. For example, participants are asked to range themselves along a line that shows how long they've been active with a particular cause. See also "spectrum."
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Home arrow Tools arrow Making Better Trainings arrow Closing Circles


Closing Circles   PDF  Print  E-mail 

Affirmation Circle
Stand in a circle. Each person gets a chance to share something they have appreciated about the person to their right. Then the person to their left affirms. (In this way, people give an affirmation and then get an affirmation: so they're not thinking of something to say while they're getting an affirmation.) Give people a minute to think of something and then, starting with the facilitator, go completely around the circle.

Postcard
Stand in a circle. Give a minute for everyone to come up with a picture of a postcard to describe their learning for that day. Go around and share their picture that would be on their postcard.

Closing Word
Go around the circle with each person saying one word (or phrase) representing: something they learned today; or the attitude they hope to bring tomorrow; or something they appreciated about themselves that day; or some way that they shined today; or some area of learning they hope to learn tomorrow.

Song
Close with a song you know and can easily teach. Call and response songs are great (where the facilitator calls out a line and the participants respond with the same line), since they take less time to learn and so people tend not to get into the "performance" of it as much.

Lifting the world together
Stand in a circle. Announce: "I have terrible news. The sky has fallen down! It lies before us: there is the sun, and the moon, and there are the clouds. We need to carefully lift the sky in place. To do that, we need to lift it up from the ground all together – we cannot have pieces sliding off because we're uneven." Demonstrate raising the sky from your knees, up above your head, to tossing it into the air. Explain that the sky sticks better when you yell: so as you toss it into the air you all need to yell really loud. (Note physical abilities and height and being sensitive to those.)

Massage Backs*
Stand up in a circle. Face left. Everyone rub back of person in front. Then switch, turn around, and rub back of person on other side.

Pass the Electrical Pulse*
Stand in a circle holding hands. Leader squeezes hand on one side in a simple pattern. The person receiving the squeeze then squeezes the hand of the next person in the same pattern. The pattern (pulse) gets passed around the circle. Once it is well started on its way, first person sends a different pattern in the other direction. Try to make them cross, whenever they meet.

Items marked *** reprinted with permission from Alternatives to Violence Project's Manual Basic Course (Revised 2002). For more dynamicas and other nonviolence training tools: Alternatives to Violence Project (AVP) • PO Box 152 • Blauvelt, NY USA 10913 • (661) 886-1076 • avp@avpusa.org • http://www.avpusa.org/




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[In the Tiger's Mouth]
IN THE TIGER'S MOUTH
by Katrina Shields

Katrina Shields guides you through the big issues that show up in activism: how to avoid burn-out, network, create stable groups, as well as how to approach listeners with bad news that they may not want to hear. The guide includes exercises that encourage discovery and growth, both for individuals and groups.

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Training for Change     3241 Columbus Avenue, South Minneapolis, MN 55407 USA     peacelearn@igc.org     ph:612-827-7323