Even as we type, my colleague and good friend David is in Portland Oregon, teaching a couple of courses on facilitating family decision making group-based service teams. What a mouthful THAT phrase was! These courses are based on work he and I have done here at CFRP over the past dozen or so [...]
Family Conferencing. Restorative Justice. Wraparound. Social Justice.
…in the service of social justice
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Model Mania
Facilitation: Content-Neutral, Process Advocate
Being neutral doesn’t mean you are passive. Good facilitators know when to pull the group’s attention toward them and when to step back and get out of the way. You should take a seat or otherwise get out of the way when a group is talking well about its content (aka topics [...]
Facilitation: Neutrality and why it matters
A word today about facilitator neutrality: what it is, what it isn’t and why it’s essential to program success. Many programs assume that a counselor or social worker is (or should be) prepared to facilitate team meetings. We beg to differ. Our facilitation model is based on the work first developed [...]
Fun With Decision-Making
Decision-making is a fascinating field. Do you know the difference between a "tough" decision and a "bad" one? Not every bad outcome is the result of a bad decision, just like not every GOOD outcome is the result of a good decision. Decision theorists describe tough decisions as ones that are:
Complex
Ambiguous, and/or
Conflictual
Tell [...]
Moral Dilemmas Part Deux: When Social Worlds Collide
Today while walking across the parking lot I encountered one of our conference facilitators who asked me to say a word about “what happens when moral issues come up in conferences”. I peppered her with questions: how do these conversations differ from any other conversations in which there are intense feelings, difficult decisions and controversy [...]
Do Meetings Make Us Stupid?
According to a study published in Live Science, it appears that they do. And if Malcolm Gladwell is to be believed, human decisions often depend more on what we think within the first two seconds of a situation than they do on any sort of group process. Meetings are fun to hate. [...]
Newsflash: You Have To Be An Ascended Master to Facilitate a Family Conference
OK, not really — but sometimes it feels that way. If we can’t get Buddha, Jesus, Mohammed or any other ascended master, we might have to settle for Ghandi, Martin Luther King Jr., Eleanor Roosevelt. Desmond Tutu or Jimmy Carter if we’re desperate. Most of us simply don’t have [...]
Power and the client identity
What’s in a name?
Some of us remember when Carl Rogers stopped using the term “patient” and starting using “client” instead. 21 years ago I was working at a community mental health agency when I first took note of a movement afoot: mental health patient advocacy groups were eschewing the term “client” and referring to [...]