Difference between revisions of "Six Thinking Hats"
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{{Tool|Conducting a Six Thinking Hats Session| | {{Tool|Conducting a Six Thinking Hats Session| | ||
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== '''Step by Step'''== | == '''Step by Step'''== |
Revision as of 11:31, 24 March 2009
Hat color | Direction of thinking |
---|---|
White Hat | Objective, neutral thinking related to facts, numbers, information. |
Red Hat | Emotional, includes feelings, suspicions and intuitions. |
Black Hat | Negative, critic, seeks for risks elements and things that could represent a problem. |
Yellow Hat | Positive and optimistic, seeks the good elements. |
Green Hat | Creative, seeks alternative. |
Blue Hat | Facilitator's hat, Thinking about thinking (meta-thinking). The blue thinker’s role is to control what thinking is necessary to scout the subject. |
All the participants should be “wearing” the same hat at the same time and brainstorm all together the same issue. Everyone should express his/her own personal opinion from each of the six perspectives, not allowing someone to skip a point of view that they don’t usually use. [1] |
Conducting a Six Thinking Hats Session |
Step by Step
Practical Tips
Job AidsConducting a Six Thinking Hats Session |
References
- ↑ www.12manage.com (21 January 2009), members.optusnet.com.au (21 January 2009), www.mindtools.com (21 January 2009), Tools for Knowledge and Learning, Ben Ramalingam, 2006.
- ↑ www.12manage.com (21 January 2009), members.optusnet.com.au (21 January 2009), www.mindtools.com (21 January 2009), Tools for Knowledge and Learning, Ben Ramalingam, 2006, The Six Thinking Hats, Ingenious People Knowledge.