Difference between revisions of "Fishbowl"
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**'''Open fishbowl''': The initial participants seat in the inner circle and participate to the discussion for the whole last of it. Any member of the audience can, at any time, occupy the empty chair and join the fishbowl. After he/she did a comment or asked a question and received an answer he/she should leave the chair empty, so that someone esle can occupy it. If no chair is free and someone wants to join the discussion he can stay behind one of the participants until the chair is left free. | **'''Open fishbowl''': The initial participants seat in the inner circle and participate to the discussion for the whole last of it. Any member of the audience can, at any time, occupy the empty chair and join the fishbowl. After he/she did a comment or asked a question and received an answer he/she should leave the chair empty, so that someone esle can occupy it. If no chair is free and someone wants to join the discussion he can stay behind one of the participants until the chair is left free. | ||
**'''Closed fishbowl''': The initial participants speak for some time. When time runs out, they leave the fishbowl and a new group from the audience enters the fishbowl. This continues until many audience members have spent some time in the fishbowl. Once the final group has concluded, the facilitator closes the fishbowl. | **'''Closed fishbowl''': The initial participants speak for some time. When time runs out, they leave the fishbowl and a new group from the audience enters the fishbowl. This continues until many audience members have spent some time in the fishbowl. Once the final group has concluded, the facilitator closes the fishbowl. | ||
− | + | : In both cases there is an important rule to follow, no-one from the audience can express his/her opinion. In the case of the open fishbowl they have to occupy an empty chair, in the close ones they have to wait the change of participants. If someone doesn't follow the rule, the facilitator should immediately remind all the participants about it. | |
'''After the Meeting''' | '''After the Meeting''' |
Revision as of 14:18, 1 October 2008
FISHBOWL |
A training tool used to break barriers and overcome anxiety in a group. It can be really useful when a common ground on a controversal issue has to be found. It is a facilitative tool in which participants learn from each other by forming an inner circle where they discuss a topic while the remaining participants listen and observe, having the possibility to say their opinion following precise roules. The purpose is to actively listen to the experiences and perspectives of a specific group of people, giving an opportunity for dialogue in a multicultural environment. Fishbowl discussions helps to observe group process and roles. It is also designed to help people listen to each other, enhancing relationships between people, communication, reflection, community building, and interpersonal development. [1] |
Organizing a Fishbowl |
Step by StepBefore the Meeting
During the Meeting
After the Meeting
Facilitator's RoleThe facilitator plays three main roles: Leadership role
Referee role
Neutral role
Job Aid |
References
- ↑ www.mhhe.com (18 August 2008), www.bonner.org (18 August 2008), www.mainesupportnetwork.org ((18 August 2008), www.trainingforchange.org (18 August 2008), en.wikipedia.org (18 August 2008), www.change-management-tollbook.com (19 September 2008)
- ↑ www.work911.com (18 August 2008), www.trainingforchange.org (18 August 2008), en.wikipedia.org (18 August 2008), www.mindtools.com (18 August 2008), www.daretoshare.ch (18 August 2008)