capturing results and analysis. surprising patterns can emerge
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Capturing results and analysis
Creative Futures - Moston ValeExisting Assets ordered by E.A.S.E.L.
37
9
57
29
15
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
Category of E.A.S.E.L.
Nu
mb
er
of
Ide
as
Economics
Activities
Social Capital
Elements andSettlements
Landscapes
Surprising patterns can emerge
Big Society and the Environment
Number of Ideas by Branch
0 50 100 150 200
Political
Environment
Affects All
Environment (built)
Landscape and Ecology
Blank
Activities
Social
Economics
Barriers
Opportunities
Solutions
Big Society and the Environment
Total Ideas by colour
-
190
241
180
- 50 100 150 200 250 300
Solutions
Barriers
Opportunities
Surprising emergent themesNumber of Ideas by Cross-Cutting Theme
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90
Planning system
Assets and ownership
Business
New business models
Volunteering opportunities
Use of natural resources
Creativity and design
Outdoor activities
Bureaucracy
Time
Learning from each other
Accountability and gaps
Perceptions
Democracy
Levels of scale
Motivation
Partnerships and sharing
Capacity building
Support and facilitation
Inequality and power
Sustainability and integration
Finance
Barriers
Opportunities
Solutions
Iterative process – all ideas shown against the research themes EU FP7 SMARTest research
159 ideas – type up finished later
Number of Ideas by Branch
0 10 20 30 40 50 60
Blank
Research andDevelopment
Implementationand Maintenance
Promotion andAcceptance
Strengths
Opportunities
Problems and Challenges
Iterative process – first pass at themes for discussion in EU funded research meeting
42 ideas – just those with ticks by them (done during the workshop)
Iterative process – all ideas shown against the workpackage teams (one team per felt)
Number of Ideas by Team
0 10 20 30 40 50
4
1
2
3
TeamNumber
Strengths
Opportunities
Problems and Challenges
Overview of the Day
• 9:30 - Warm up to day and intros• Introduction to Ketso and practice workshop • Key Principles of Stakeholder Engagement• 11:00 – 11:20 - Break• Action planning grid practical• Managing data capture and analysis
• Running a workshop • Facilitation practice groups 1 and 2• 1:00 - 1:45 - Lunch
• Facilitation practice group 3
Running a workshop
Ketso Facilitation ExerciseAims of the session
• For each of you to have a taster experience of managing a Ketso process.
• To share some tips from our experiences of facilitating a wide range of Ketso workshops and meetings.
Ketso Facilitation Exercise
• Each person will lead a 20 minute Ketso session at their table
• You will be provided with the ‘workshop plan’ and have a little time to prepare your branches and centerpiece
• During the exercise you will be responsible for asking the questions, keeping time, and guiding your participants through the process.
• FYI – it can be harder to facilitate a small group at a table than a larger group, so this experience will stand you in good stead!
Ketso Facilitation Exercise
• Aim to achieve the following
– Manage your time to cover all the stages in the time available (20 mins)
• For this exercise we suggest asking people to write only 1-3 key ideas for each stage
– Keep participants engaged in ‘Think then Share’ rather than just discussion
Facilitation Exercise
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
– Ketso is simple, but it doesn’t always seem that way to people seeing it for the first time
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
– Ketso is simple, but it doesn’t always seem that way to people seeing it for the first time.
– A good way to help people to be comfortable with using Ketso is to use it for warm up exercise. Explaining about writing on leaves is much harder than just doing it.
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
– Ketso is simple, but it doesn’t always seem that way to people seeing it for the first time.
– A good way to help people to be comfortable with using Ketso is to use it for warm up exercise. Explaining about writing on leaves is much harder than just doing it.
– Give people an overview of what the session will involve.
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
– Ketso is simple, but it doesn’t always seem that way to people seeing it for the first time.
– A good way to help people to be comfortable with using Ketso is to use it for warm up exercise. Explaining about writing on leaves is much harder than just doing it.
– Give people an overview of what the session will involve.
– Telling the Ketso story – even very briefly – helps people to connect with it and engage with the process
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
– Ketso is simple, but it doesn’t always seem that way to people seeing it for the first time.
– A good way to help people to be comfortable with using Ketso is to use it for warm up exercise. Explaining about writing on leaves is much harder than just doing it.
– Give people an overview of what the session will involve.
– Telling the Ketso story – even very briefly – helps people to connect with it and engage with the process
– Use and adapt the slides that you saw in the demo to guide you and the participants.
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
– This is a key difference that makes the difference between Ketso and less structured approaches
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
– This is a key difference that makes the difference between Ketso and less structured approaches
– We refer to this as ‘Think then Share’ and we find that this idea bears repeating often – a natural tendency is for groups to drift into discussion led by the usual suspects
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
– This is a key difference that makes the difference between Ketso and less structured approaches
– We refer to this as ‘Think then Share’ and we find that this idea bears repeating often – a natural tendency is for groups to drift into discussion led by the usual suspects
– It can be difficult to get people to co-operate with ‘Think then Share’ if they are already in the swing of just discussing things. So it’s important to establish it as the way things work right from the start.
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
– Introduce writing on leaves before the different colours
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
– Introduce writing on leaves before the different colours
– Introduce pointing the leaves at branches before the idea of clustering
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
– Introduce writing on leaves before the different colours
– Introduce pointing the leaves at branches before the idea of clustering
– etc... refer to the example slideshow to see one way of doing this
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
• Elicit co-operation early on
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
• Elicit co-operation early on
– You can’t avoid interrupting people and if forewarned they will be more understanding and accepting of this
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
• Elicit co-operation early on
– You can’t avoid interrupting people and if forewarned they will be more understanding and accepting
– Top two items of feedback from workshops
Ketso Facilitation – What’s Important?
• Good clear introductions
• Balance of individual thinking and group discussion
• Introduce one new thing at a time
Ketso FacilitationFeedback & more ideas
• BELL
• Back pocket grey leaf
• Start with the felt folded and the branches hidden
Overview of the Day
• Planning a workshop (applied to your contexts)• Introduce BASICS• 3:00- 3:15 - Break• Apply BASICS to planning your own workshops
• Solve each other’s problems• Practicalities and packing up• Review and reflect
• 4:30 - End
Planning a Ketso Workshop
Basic structure of a Ketso workshop
• A series of questions asked in sequence, using the coloured leaves for different questions
• Plus the 'trunk', the core focus, which is written on the centrepiece, and (often) 'branches', which give themes to help structure the workshop.
The most commonly used Ketso Seed
The core Ketso Seeds
• Look forward & Plan• Review & Reflect• Discuss & Share• Learn - Beginnings• Learn - Review
Very slight variation on Look forward Seed – for looking backwards
Useful for asking for feedback (e.g. of project or strategy) as well as general exploration of ideas
Start with what people know – and help them to relate that to what you are teaching
Useful after a training session or a course, focus on content / skills & what to do with them
Which seed?
• Which seed from the hand outs in front of you seem to be the most useful?
• Do you need to adapt them?• There are a few adaptations for specific context
shown on your hand outs as examples.
Basic structure of a Ketso workshop
• A series of questions asked in sequence, using the coloured leaves for different questions
• Plus the 'trunk', the core focus, which is written on the centrepiece, and (often) 'branches', which give themes to help structure the workshop.
Useful after a training session or a course, focus on content / skills & what to do with them
Developing branches: has it done before?
Developing branches: is there a good report / ideas from a strategy you can use?
Developing branches: is there a widely used framework out there?
And yes, googling is a good place to start!
• No slides for the stages of this workshop• You can do it, but it is nice to have the slides! • And you can download them from the website and
adapt them to your needs
Developing branches: talking to the people you are working with
Developing branches: do a practice workshop with blanks (& always a good idea to test your branches)
Developing branches: refine and develop over time
Where to go for more help – a guide to resources under ‘Make the most of your Ketso’
Which branches?
• Is there a branch set that will work for your workshop?
• Brainstorm branches onto comments cards• If there is time – do a little test, what sorts of ideas
are likely to come up? • Do they fit? • How do the branches structure your thoughts? • Is there anything missing?
A few more hints on branches
• We do tend to find that 6 branches works well • And don’t forget to leave at least one blank
branch! • And don’t forget to leave at least one blank
branch!• There are spare branches on the back, you can
add as you go along• It can be nice to have a floating branch for things
that don’t fit
• You may have to adjust as you go along
Facilitation reminder
• Remember to unfold the branches after people have started with leaves• People develop their ideas before they see structure• Then see how their ideas fit with your structure
• You may have to reassure people that it is OK if their ideas don’t fit • Can they develop some now that do fit?• Do you need a new branch / different branches?
• Compare your experience of the first practice workshop and the mini Ketso facilitation exercises
BASICS of planning a workshop – what do you think this acronym might stand for?
• B• A• S• I• C• S
BASICS of planning a workshop
• Beginnings
• Activities
• Sequencing
• Inputs
• Conclusions
• Skippables, squashables and supplements
BASICS
• Beginnings• Activities
Enhancing the student experience
Total Ideas by colour
128
121
100
63
- 20 40 60 80 100 120 140
What works well
Future possibilities
Challenges
Opportunities
BASICS
• Beginnings• Activities• Sequencing
Health and wellbeing in a time of change
BASICS
• Beginnings
• Activities
• Sequencing
• Inputs
Emergent themes – researchers search for themes from ideas
Speed exercise using colours to ask different questions only, some clustering
Emergent themes
Methods@Manchester Fair - Your Research
0 50 100 150
Real world problems
Develop knowledge
Inspiration
Impact
Personal motivation and pressures
Networking
Professional development
Methodology skills
Em
erg
en
t th
em
es
Number of ideas
What do you hope to get fromresearch training?
What inspired you do to yourresearch?
BASICS
• Beginnings
• Activities
• Sequencing
• Inputs
• Conclusions
Health and wellbeing example
Health and wellbeing example
Health and wellbeing example
BASICS
• Beginnings
• Activities
• Sequencing
• Inputs
• Conclusions
• Skippables, squashables and supplements
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