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<p class="p1">Improvisation/conversation</p> <p class="p2">Improvisation/conversation is useful for groups which tend to be focused on results. This form of working</p> <p class="p2">teaches the participants to once again focus on receptiveness and keep an open mind by improvisation.</p> <p class="p3">The way it works</p> <p class="p3">This form is an exercise in sensitivity for what is about to unfold; there is no room for purposiveness. Participants</p> <p class="p3">may stay close to playing, speech is a continuation and reliving of the improvisation. Strict boundaries are put</p> <p class="p3">aside as a result.</p> <p class="p3">By speaking in a searching manner after the first time playing, participants experience multiple visions. They</p> <p class="p3">relive the improvisation via someone else and per consequence they understand what has been played better.</p> <p class="p3">As a result of this multiple experience the perception and content of the following rounds of improvisation</p> <p class="p3">becomes more real. The repetition of improvising allows for a widening admission of non-cognitive</p> <p class="p3">receptiveness.</p> <p class="p3">Clues</p> <p class="p3">The supervisor gives a short introduction in which she asks the participants to forget all their experiences until</p> <p class="p3">then. She brings their attention to here and now by looking about in the space where everyone is present. She</p> <p class="p3">helps them to wipe clean their minds and start this form with a tabula rasa. After the introduction/explanation</p> <p class="p3">there is silence.</p> <p class="p3">In three or four rounds that follow the group improvises collectively. After each round the supervisor asks about</p> <p class="p3">the personal experiences (hearing, feeling, seeing) of the participants and whether they are absorbed in the</p> <p class="p3">improvisation. In the conversation the supervisor emphasises on speech in a searching manner, words spoken</p> <p class="p3">before the thought. Participants may stammer and stutter. Speaking is still part of the improvisation .</p> <p class="p4">Duration Group size Requisites</p> <p class="p4">60 minutes plus evaluative minimum: 3 - a neutral space</p> <p class="p4">conversation maximum: 12 - where people can play</p> <p class="p4">- musical instruments, other creative or theatrical attributes (drawing materials, objects, et cetera)</p> <p class="p5">Photography: Godfried IJsseling</p> <p class="p5"> </p> <p class="p5">********************************************************</p> <p class="p5"> </p> <p class="p1">Polyphonic reading</p> <p class="p2">Polyphonic reading is useful for reading complex texts or texts that are still developing, because</p> <p class="p2">the response is rather exploratory than purposeful.</p> <p class="p2">The way it works</p> <p class="p2">By cutting up a text in fragments and dividing those among participants a polyphony of perspectives will arise. The</p> <p class="p2">dictatorship of the one perspective has been eliminated by breaking up structure and purposefulness of the text.</p> <p class="p2">This plurality is enhanced by adding questions and sources, through which new thoughts and perspectives are added to the</p> <p class="p2">conversation.</p> <p class="p2">Clues</p> <p class="p2">This form is made up of two parts. The first is an individual part, the second a collective one.</p> <p class="p2">Part 1:</p> <p class="p2">1. A substantial text in hard copy is cut up in printed pieces. The supervisor brings as many images/photos as fragments</p> <p class="p2">of text. Each fragment is placed under an image. Every participant chooses an image accompanied by the</p> <p class="p2">connected fragment.</p> <p class="p2">2. The participants read their fragment in silence and underline what is for them the bearing piece of the text,</p> <p class="p2">the piece which challenges them the most.</p> <p class="p2">3. The participants write a commentary on their choice.</p> <p class="p2">4. The participants formulate an investigative question based on their fragment.</p> <p class="p2">5. The participants write down a source (film, book, poem, image, et cetera) associated with the fragment of text</p> <p class="p2">they just read.</p> <p class="p2">Part 2:</p> <p class="p2">What follows are three rounds. In the first round participants read their underlined quotes out loud. In the second round</p> <p class="p2">they read in turn their commentary and investigative question. A conversation will develop. In the third round every</p> <p class="p2">participant presents his or her own added source.</p> <p class="p3">Duration Group size Requisites</p> <p class="p3">60 minutes; minimum: 6 - text on paper in fragments, as much or more than the number of participants</p> <p class="p3">20 minutes individually, maximum: 15 - as much images as fragments</p> <p class="p3">40 minutes collectively - pens and paper for writing <span class="s1">Photography: Godfried IJsseling</span></p> <p class="p3"> </p> <p class="p3"><span class="s1"><span>********************************************************</span></span></p> <p class="p3"> </p> <p class="p1">Associative writing</p> <p class="p2">Dear reader,</p> <p class="p2">I ask you to become a writer for the next couple of minutes. And a specific one at that. Try to make use of the</p> <p class="p2">following clues:</p> <p class="p2">1. Find a quiet and peaceful place to write.</p> <p class="p2">2. Try to focus on yourself and start writing a thought or feeling. Where are you? What is on your mind at this</p> <p class="p2">moment?</p> <p class="p2">3. Keep on writing and don’t remove your pen from the paper.</p> <p class="p2">4. When writing, try to make complete sentences and finish paragraphs.</p> <p class="p2">5. After a paragraph leave white space.</p> <p class="p2">6. Try not to stop writing for too long. A short moment is fine, but if you are stuck try to solve it by writing. For</p> <p class="p2">example: ‘I don’t know what to write.’ Or try writing about the space you are in.</p> <p class="p2">7. Write for 6 or 7 minutes.</p> <p class="p2">Please come back to me after writing and you and your partner can read your text to each other.</p> <p class="p2">Maybe we will have short talk afterward. Maybe not.</p> <p class="p2">Happy writing.</p> <p class="p2">Kind regards,</p> <p class="p2">Bart</p> <p class="p3">Photography: Godfried IJsseling</p> <p class="p3"> </p> <p class="p3"><span class="s1"><span>********************************************************</span></span></p> <p class="p3"> </p> <p class="p1">Artistic resonance</p> <p class="p2">Artistic resonance is wonderful for groups with an artistic and creative background to</p> <p class="p2">express themselves through art rather than normal conversation.</p> <p class="p2">The way it works</p> <p class="p2">The improvisations by the participants are a gift for the storyteller. He or she receives an additional story about</p> <p class="p2">his of her source or quote, he or she gains new perspectives. What has been evoked receives resonance,</p> <p class="p2">thereby deepening the meaning of the source or the quote.</p> <p class="p2">In this form speech and play are intertwined.</p> <p class="p2">Clues</p> <p class="p2">Two groups form two circles: an inner circle and an outer circle. The inner circle is made up of ‘participants’, the</p> <p class="p2">outer circle is made up of ‘spectators’ – a so called fishbowl.</p> <p class="p2">One by one, in turn, the participants in the inner circle take place in the centre of the room. Each participant talks</p> <p class="p2">a minute (or two maximum) about a source or quote that inspires him of her. The inner circle responds with a</p> <p class="p2">short improvisation of 2 or 3 minutes.</p> <p class="p2">Speaking and playing does not add up to more than five minutes in total. This time frame is strict.</p> <p class="p2">When all participants took their turn, the inner and outer circle swap places and participants become spectators</p> <p class="p2">and vice versa.</p> <p class="p3">Duration Group size Requisites</p> <p class="p3">No. of participants x 5 minutes minimum: 8 - invitation to participants to bring an inspiring quote or source</p> <p class="p3">maximum: 20 - requisites for improvisation; musicalinstruments, theatrical attributes, et cetera</p> <p class="p4">Photography: Godfried IJsseling</p> <p class="p3"> </p> <p class="p3"> </p>
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