226 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
226 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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A MANUAL FOR GROUP FACILITATORS
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by *center for conflict resolution*
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731 State Street
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Madison, Wisconsin 53703
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The Center for Conflict Resolution (CCR) is a nonprofit collective in Madison,
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Wisconsin, which teaches other groups skills in group process, conflict
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resolution and problem solving. CCR does this by sponsoring workshops, by
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providing consultation and crisis intervention, and by offering written
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materials through a resource center. CCR works with diverse groups including
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food and housing cooperatives, various collectives, the public school system,
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city government, university groups, and many others. Although many of these
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organizations do not use consensus decision making, CCR has remained committed
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to this process as a way of increasing group cohesion, member involvement, and
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meeting effectiveness.
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Preface
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This manual was written in order to share with others some of the
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information and skills that we, members of the Center for Conflict Resolution,
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have been developing over the past seven years. The Center for Conflict
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Resolution is a non-profit, educational organization. Through workshops,
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consultation, intervention and a resource center we provide information on
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conflict, group process and problem solving to other groups. We have also
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sponsored several conferences on peace-related issues and social concerns and
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have provided training for nonviolent action. Since our inception in 1970 we
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have been in a constant state of evolution as we attempt--both as a group and
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as individuals--to find ways of combining education and action in areas of
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peace and social justice.
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Five and half years ago CCR became a collective, replacing official
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leaders with facilitators and implementing a consesus decision making process.
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We began experimenting with this kind of group structure to see how far we
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could go in sharing the leadership function among all our members and in
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practicing our values of cooperative and egalitarian group process. Learning
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to operate as a collective has not always been easy, but it has been rewarding
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and educational and has vastly improved our ability to help other groups in our
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function as a skills-sharing center.
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Collectives, operating on group concensus, are only one of many possible
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forms of group structure. We do not feel that every group has to be a
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collective to use the concepts and skills that we describe in this manual.
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However, we are convinced that a group is most effective when all its members
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can participate fully in decision making and group activities. People support
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what they help to create. Most individuals in leadership roles understand
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this, but for a variety of reasons, they are often drawn into taking more
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responsibility than they need to or want to. We have decided to write this
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manual in order to synthesize all we know about non-directive leadership, which
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we call facilitation, and to make this information available to others.
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This manual is especially addressed to persons who are inexperienced in
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performing the role of facilitator, but who are called on to act in that
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capacity. We have particularly focused on a resource person-as-facilitator
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role--when person is asked to facilitate a group which is interested in some
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area of expertise that the person has. However, we expect the information in
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this manual to be useful to people in a wide variety of group situations in
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addition to the ones we specifically address.
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We do not expect this manual to be the only learning resource for
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people who are acquiring facilitation skills. The most important learning
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resource one can have is practical experience, particularly the guided
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experiences of an actual training course. However, we hope this manual will be
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valuable as an introductory survey, as an accompaniment to other training, or
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as a refresher to practicing facilitators.
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The information we present here comes primarily from our own
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experience. Although we have drawn on formal education and published research,
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everything included in this handbook also registers as good sense to us and is
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confirmed by our experience. We hope to hear from people who read and use this
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book. Please send us your comments since we see this manual as one step in a
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long process of the development of a field of information by people practicing
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these skills.
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The five of us who worked together on this manual are--
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Brian Auvine: has worked at the Center for Conflict Resolution and as a
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research scientist for the University of Wisconsin for five years.
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Mary Extrom: in her five years' involvement with CCR has trained individuals
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in nonviolent direct action and in group facilitation. Some projects she has
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worked on involve support work with Native Americans, a study of racism in
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education, and counseling women.
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Scott Poole: has a Master's degree in Communication Arts. He has worked at
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CCR for two years and has taught college communications courses for four years.
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His interests are organizational and group communication and techniques of
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nonviolent social action.
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Michel Shanklin: has been with CCR for a year and a half. She has worked with
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community groups for four years, including working with a women's center and
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crisis counseling.
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January 31, 1977
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The Center for Conflict Resolution
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731 State Street
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Madison, Wisconsin 53703
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HOW TO USE THIS MANUAL
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We want you to be an active user of this manual, a user who will
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evaluate the material we provide according to your own viewpoint and
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experience, who will adapt our information to fit your own situation. For this
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reason we have left wide margins on the pages for you to write notes in, and
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have written the manual in outline form so that you can locate specific
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information at the time you need it.
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We hope you will read the entire manual, in the order that it is
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written. However we have attempted to make each section able to stand alone as
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much as possible. The Table of Contents includes all of the major outline
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headings and by glancing at it, you can probably find where the information you
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are looking for is located.
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We have tried to present information in a more or less chronological
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order. Our chapters follow the sequence of preparation, getting started, group
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process and evalutation. Unfortunately, however, the subject of facilitation
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does not easily break up into discrete parts. The material in different
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sections is strongly interdependent and it is not always possible to put each
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section next to all the other sections that pertain to it. For this reason,
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the manual contains both redundancy and gaps. If you are reading it straight
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through, you may notice some repetition of basic points. We feel that this is
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necessary in order to treat each section fairly. We also feel that certain
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values and guidelines bear repeating. Even with this repetition, however, we
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find that many sections require reference to other sections in the manual. We
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have tried to place these references at the ends of sections where they are
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easy to locate and don't interfere with the content of that section. If you
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are familiar with the Table of Contents, you will be in a better position to
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follow our organization of material.
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We strongly urge that all users read the Introduction before reading
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other parts of the manual. Words such as "facilitation" and "leadership" have
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different meanings to different people. This first chapter should give you
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some perspective on where we are coming from, what our values are, and the
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basic principles on which the rest of the manual is based.
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At the front of the manual is a short glossary that includes words
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(both common and technical) which we use in a specialized sense. This is to
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let you know exactly what _we_ mean by a certain word which may have different
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connotations to different people.
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We have also included a short bibliography of books which contain
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exercises. Throughout this manual we will be speaking of exercises, how and
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when to use them. But, with a few exceptions, we have not included exercises
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in the text. This is because there are many other good sources of exercises,
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we are working with a limited amount of space, and we want our readers to be
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able to find and use a wide variety of exercises, not become dependent on the
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few that we might recommend.
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GLOSSARY
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Below is a list of words which we feel need to be defined for the
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readers of this manual. You will probably find that most of those terms are
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already familiar to you in some context, but because we use them in a special
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sense, we feel we should clarify them. These are words which are used
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frequently in the text, but which, for the most part, are not defined in the
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text. If a word you are looking for does not appear below, skim the Table of
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Contents, since we have not included words which appear in a major heading in
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the manual.
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AUTHORITY: power to direct or influence a group that is derived either from
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one's role in the group, or from having information other group members do not
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have access to.
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CLOSURE: a sense of having reached a natural stopping place, a feeling of
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completion.
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CONSENSUS DECISION MAKING (also just CONSENSUS): A decision-making process
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in which _all_ parties involved explicitly agree to the final decision.
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Consensus decision making does _not_ mean that all parties are _completely_
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satisfied with the final outcome, but that the decision is acceptable to all
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because no one feels that his or her vital interests or values are violated by
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it.
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CONTENT: The _subject_ of a meeting or discussion, what is being talked
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about or dealt with.
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CUE: an indirect message, often nonverbal, that indicates a certain feeling,
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desire, or state of mind. Cues are usually unintentional hints, though they
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may be given on purpose.
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EXERCISE: A patterned activity used in a group to promote awareness or
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learning. Exercises can be used to demonstrate or practice a concept, or to
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cause the participants to become more aware of themselves or their interactions
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with others.
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EXPECTATIONS: Participants' anticipations about what will happen in a group
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situation, both _what_ will happen, and the _way_ in which it will happen.
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FEEDBACK: A response to a message that tells how the listener perceived the
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message--how he or she felt about it, interpreted it, or understood it. Also,
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a similar response to an action.
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FREEZE: To limit oneself to a single, narrow mode of behavior or perception,
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while at the same time failing to see other possible modes.
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FOLLOW-UP: To take an action which continues or reinforces some other action
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_or_ to inquire about the effects of a previous action.
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GROUP PROCESS: The means by which group members interact, make decisions,
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handle problems, and develop roles.
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HIDDEN AGENDA: A personal expectation or motivation which can affect how
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that person behaves in a group or feels about a group, but which is not known
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to others in the group. A person may have a hidden agenda without being aware
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of the fact. (For instance, an individual may come to a meeting on "Economic
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Problems of Cities" because he or she believes energy sources will be
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discussed. The person may plan to deliberately steer the discussion in that
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direction, or the person may not even realize that he or she has a private goal
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not necessarily identical with the group's goal.)
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INTERVENE: To take an active role in changing a problem situation, (for
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example, when a facilitator decides to take an assertive lead in suggesting and
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implementing solutions in a conflict, as described in "Crisis Intervention.")
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NEED: Something which an individual or group feels it must have in order to
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achieve a sense of well being.
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NORM: An accepted and expected model of behavior in a group, or in society.
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POWER: The ability to exert influence over a group or over an individual in
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making decisions, establishing norms, or performing an activity.
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PROCESS: See "Group Process"
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RESOURCE PERSON: An individual whose role in a group is to provide
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information on a subject that the group is interested in.
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VALUES CLARIFICATION: A process which helps an individual identify his or
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her basic values. This process often involves using exercises.
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**end Preface**
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