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 Team-building arrow Ankle Walk


Ankle Walk   PDF  Print  E-mail 
GOAL:
  • to deepen skills in team work and communication.

TIME: 45-75 minutes

HOW IT'S DONE:

Here's a challenging exercise for practicing making decisions and communication.

We've used it successfully in a number of settings -- US, Thailand, Sierra Leone, Canada -- and with groups of six people to over seventy! It's best for a middle-sized group -- around 15-25 people.

In this adventure-based learning activity the challenge is fairly simple: to walk as a group from one place to another. The twist: the group must walk all in one line together with their feet touching their neighbors' feet the whole time.

Explain the set-up for participants, where people need to start and where people need to end up. Also tell them that if their feet do not stay together the whole time, they need to return to the start – then have them go for it!

During the running of the exercise, you may choose to be very strict in implementing the rule about returning to the beginning or you may be very relaxed: it depends on the state of the group and how much challenge it can handle.

You can debrief this activity for problem-solving, communication and group decision-making. (For example, there is no rule that participants cannot get in a circle to discuss strategy, but participants may instead stay in a line. How did participants handle that challenge?)

As with all adventure-based learning activities (ABLs), it is great to connect their current experience with past experiences completing other ABLs. What patterns are developing? What lessons that were learned are working? What additional lessons does the group need to learn?

WHERE TOOL COMES FROM:

Tool description written by Daniel Hunter, Training for Change (3241 Columbus Avenue, S, Minneapolis, MN 55407): www.TrainingForChange.org • peacelearn@igc.org

This tool comes out of the field of adventure-based learning activities. For more, see Project Adventure's material in Quicksilver: Adventure Games, Initiative Problems, Trust Activities and a Guide to Effective Leadership, by Karl Rohnke and Steve Butter (Kendall/Hunt Publishing Company, reprint 1996).




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[Before You Enlist And After You Say No]

BEFORE YOU ENLIST AND AFTER YOU SAY NO:
AFSC's counter-recruitment training manual

By Daniel Hunter and Hannah Strange

Get this 239-page training manual with over eighty handouts, articles, and tools on organizing, strategy, and how to do counter-recruitment. Most of the tools in the workshop can be easily adapted for other movements -- many of which are brand new tools.

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You can also send a check to: Training for Change
3241 Columbus Avenue
Minneapolis, MN 55407

 


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