dopo aver introdotto la tecnica del Brainwriting>>
la prima variante, Crawford Slip>> ;
la seconda, Game>> ;
la terza, Force Fit Game>> ;
la quarta, 6-3-5>> ;
ecco le ultime che vi propongo, Pin Cards, BrainSketching e Idea Card Method
Pin Cards is a technique developed in 1981 by Geschke, the originator of Brainwriting, as a variant to the classic technique. It is based on the use or post-it sheets of different colors, a different one for each participant.
The number of participants suggested by the author ranging from 5 to 8 and is useful to the participants sit around a circular table, as for the other sessions Brainwriting.
First you define the problem as a group, under the supervision of the moderator, therefore, the participants write their ideas on post-it, as they can, and pass them to their right neighbor. At this point everyone will be a series of leaflets on the left, those I come from near and on the right, who goes to his companion. The post-it notes are coming from the road near a source of inspiration for finding new ideas and share with the group, giving rise to a creative process and collaboration. The leaflets
make one complete revolution of the table and thus help to tease the imagination of all participants and create a large number of ideas.
The moderator's task is to prevent the sheets accumulate near one of the participants, without traffic to the other, and not create competition for those who produce more ideas or able to influence others.
BrainSketching VanGundy was developed by and published in the book, Techniques of Structured Problem Solving, provides the same procedure of Pin cards, but instead of sentences, the ideas are used to represent images and symbols. Each participant
graphically represents your idea on a piece of paper, using a maximum of 5 minutes and then pass it to the right neighbor, stimulating in him a new idea.
At this stage, following the analysis, discussion and evaluation typical of other similar sessions.
Idea Card Method is another variant of this technique, in which each participant writes their ideas on a piece that puts next to his neighbor, thus accumulating a pile of papers that the partner can use as a source of expiration and then transfer to another party nearby.
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