Wednesday, June 30, 2004

Tip #29: Debrief exercises

It is important to have individuals or group representatives report out their specific results or general conclusions when they have completed an exercise. Otherwise, they will not have any sense of closure.

Draw out the correct or more complete answers from the group, so that when you tell them the correct answer, it will simply validate what they have identified. Remember that we want to build their confidence in their own competence!

To ensure variety in report out methods, here are a few to draw from:

  1. Thumbs up if you agree, thumbs down if you don't.

  2. Can someone tell us the answer to question x? [call for a volunteer.] Then ask the participants who agree with that answer to raise their hands ΓΈ and after that, ask the participants who disagree to raise their hands. Call on a representative from each "side" for his or her response and underlying rationale. Ask the group to identify the correct response, or tell them yourself.

  3. Have one table group report their answer. Ask if any other groups have something different or something to add.

  4. If more than one table group worked on the same case study, alternate between them in answering the different questions relating to the case study.

  5. Move from one table group to another to answer different questions.

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