Virtual facilitation

From DevSummit
Revision as of 21:33, 25 November 2021 by Gunner (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Virtual Facilitation - What Works/What Doesn't? What works * Self Monitor - Know what's next? * a way of people indicating that they are done speaking (a word like "done" o...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Virtual Facilitation - What Works/What Doesn't?

What works

  • Self Monitor - Know what's next?
  • a way of people indicating that they are done speaking (a word like "done" or "over" or even just indicating by muting)
  • Collaborating, reviewing, and agreeing on norms and expectations around indicating sequence of speakers, etc
  • Harder to pick up on super cues
  • Hide Self-View
  • Visual Aids and Slides - Meetings
  • Fun elements
  • Preparation -
  • know what we're doing at the meeting (why are we there?)
  • have explicit social time; expectation setting for just chat,etc
  • breaks!
  • ergonomic set ups for meetings
  • have agreements on agenda and other norms

Three things I’ve learned about tech: https://www.fabriders.net/six-things/

  • Keep the tech simple. Only use the tools you need. For example, a meeting platform like Zoom, Google Meet, or Jitsi, and a collaborative text editor, like an etherpad or a google doc, to help your participants stay on track and contribute. The more complicated you make a session, the more likely you and your participants will encounter barriers and have problems.
  • Test the tech, prep as much as you can. Test anything that you aren’t sure about ahead of time. Don’t assume online tools will work the way you expect them to. Prep by running through everything, do dress rehearsals with everyone helping to run the session and make sure they know what will happen and what to do.
  • Something will go wrong with the tech, so be ready when it does. There are many different factors that you can’t control, from people’s internet connections, power supplies and their own devices. Stay calm when disaster strikes, have a plan b for what you can control, and a plan z (z for zen) for what you can’t.

Three things I’ve learned about session design:

  • Design to empower your participants from the start. Provide clear guidance and instruction. Let them know what will happen and when. Give them guidelines for participation, how to make contributions.
  • Design to build community and solidarity. The most significant benefit you can provide to your participants is making connections to others from wherever they may be. Whether they are in an office or at home, connecting with new friends and old ones is the most significant value we can provide. Provide them opportunities to listen to each other and develop relationships. Small-group breakouts (no bigger than four people) are a gift.
  • Design for productivity. Anything you can get your participants to contribute to will make them feel time well spent. Think about getting your participants to create best practices or lessons learned list they will find helpful in the future. The ADIDS format, for ensuring learning and knowledge sharing, works well in a virtual session.

Instructions are really important to reduce fatigue and help to strengthen self-guiding of break-out groups etc.

Document questions in a collaborative space for participants to refer back to at their own pace and when they're in need of clarification

questions with bullet points in a doc and note taking

Facilitator could pre-build out some documentation infrastructure to establish a framework for participant engagement and collaboration within the document

Embrace the silence. allow space/time for processing/absorption/reading

Utilize collaborative document to track engagement or lack of engagement/needs for facilitator's support

https://www.fabriders.net/canvas-v1/

Activity - Discussion - Input - Deepening - Synthesis