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Find out
what is expected to happen
Scribing may be made a lot easier if you can
find out how what is expected to happen and how
the Radiant
Room space will be used. Are the
participants doing a Report
Out which is expected to use up five panels? Will there be a
group discussion or synthesis following? Is there a guest speaker
who plans to talk for fifteen minutes, half an hour, an hour? Consult
the Strawdog
and ask the Facilitator
what he or she expects to happen.
Placement
on the wall
Don't work too low on the wall. Participants
in the back rows can't see past other's heads.
Mind Maps
Mind Mapping is an excellent
and highly recommended way to lay out your scribing. Mind Mapping
begins with a central starting point around which major topics are
arranged. It's a much more flexible way to record information than
the bullet point list, because new ideas can be added as they emerge,
regardless of the order in which they come up. Mind Maps are also
more fun to draw, leaving lots of space to decorate and emphasize
through color and drawing. They're more fun to look at, too. For
more information on Mind Mapping, see Tony & Barry Buzan's excellent
book The
Mind Map Book. Other books and links on this fantastic creativity
tool are listed on the Resources
page.
GLOSSARY
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