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The processing of this activity can include an additional dimension of depth if you break participants into small groups,asking each group to go through the entire process. After doing so, each group can share their work, and a conversation about the different resultscan emerge. This can also lead to a discussion about how people participated in the small groups. Did somebody try to take the lead? Was anyone's voicesilenced? What did people in the group do to ensure that everyone's voice was heard? If working in smaller groups, you can also refer to Course 2 (Module 1)on "How it Works" to set up the structure for cooperative learning groups right from the start.
Reflection
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Assignment 5: Collaborative Approach to Addressing Conflict in Schools
Strategies for Choosing and Using Activities and Exercises for Intergroup Learning
You're developing a diversity workshop or facilitating an intergroup dialogue and looking for ways to engage yourparticipants. This document lays out eight strategies for effectively selecting and incorporating activities and exercises into yourprogramming efforts.
A Guide to Setting Ground Rules
Ground rules or community norms can help your program or class run more smoothly. This guide describes commonly used ground rulesand strategies for naming and enforcing them.
Building Comfort
Getting Started: Respect Exercise
Introduces the first crucial step in discussing multicultural issues: building a community of respect. Participantsdiscuss how they perceive respect, building the foundation of later activities.
Knowing the Community: Ethnicity Exercise
Continues community building. Participants introduce themselves by sharing information on their ethnicity andbackground, highlighting the similarity and diversity among members of the group.
Works toward bringing the stories of individuals to the fore in the multicultural experience. Participants write and sharestories about their names and nicknames, what they mean, why they were given them, and how they relate to them.
Sharing Ourselves:Who I Am Poems
Begins active introspective process while continuing to provide opportunities for individuals to make connectionswith each other. Participants write short poems, starting each line with "I am...," encouraging them to describe in their own words who they are andwhat's important to their identity.
PDF files below:
Strategies for Choosing and Using Activities and Exercises for Intergroup Learning
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