[OSList] Fwd: [Mindful] Prepare for an open space session?

Phelim McDermott phelim at mac.com
Thu May 19 05:32:38 PDT 2011


Mmmh in my opinion Mmmh I detect some double signals in this publicity. Open space as engineered by the human grid! Fascinating! 

Best regards,

Phelim McDermott
-----------------------------
 I generally pick up emails only at the beginning and end of the working day. I am currently aiming to respond the following day. If it is urgent please call me on 07956 187298. 
___________________/////////////

Sent from my iPhone

On 19 May 2011, at 12:05, Viv McWaters <viv at mcwaters.com.au> wrote:

> Hi all
> 
> This landed in my in box and i thought it might be of interest. I can't go so I won't be able to experience how open space is 'taken to the edge'. I'm trying to keep an open mind (trying being the key word) and am reminded that we humans seem to have an endless capacity to try and organise that which is self-organising :)
> 
> Cheers
> 
> Viv
> 
> ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> From: Mindful <hello at thisismindful.com>
> Date: 18 May 2011 21:55
> Subject: [Mindful] Prepare for an open space session?
> To: viv at mcwaters.com.au
> 
> 
> We look forward to seeing participants ready to start at 9am Saturday morning at Hub Melbourne (we'll send a reminder of all the details Friday) tweeting with #mindful!
> 
> We are always in a space, at a time, and so there will be a portion of the time we spend together at Mindful to experiment with this concept. We are really excited that Steve Hopkins (founder of Trampoline and Awesome Foundation Sydney) is going to lead us in an experimental version of the popular open space technique during the day. This video and email describes where Steve will lead us. 
> Taking open space to the edge
> 
> Open Space Technology is a fantastic tool for organizing groups of people together to solve complex problems. I've used and experimented with Open Space at events like Trampoline, CPX and the Lantern Mental Health Unconference over the last few years and have always been impressed by it's ability to create interesting conversations. At Mindful on the weekend, we're going to extend that experimentation once more, and push the concept further along.
> 
> Some of the things we'll play with are:
> 
> 1) A human grid 
> 
> Open Space is great because it allows everyone the chance to set the topics, time, and place that sessions will occur. This is good except for when the crowd takes over and you get lesser quality sessions, which reduces the energy in the group.
> 
> So we're going to have a person act as the grid. That's me. 
> 
> With a human grid, people will still pitch their talk to the group, but the human grid will only place the session into the agenda if it resonates with the collective assembled. Real interest can't be faked, and our intuitions as a group are excellent at detecting low enthusiasm. So we'll use that to select our sessions.
> 
> 2) Rule of two feet
> 
> We've all been there before. You arrive for a session but within the first 5 minutes you realise its not for you. But you stay. The rule of two feet is one of the most crucial aspects of an open space meet, so why don't people exercise it? 
> 
> People get addicted to the people. They stay not because they're contributing or participating in the talk, but because they've become attached to the idea of being a part of the group.
> 
> This is a shame, because the very best Trampoline sessions we've seen over the 5 events so far has been where all of the attendees of a session were participating, through active listening, discussion and enquiry - which can't happen if some people in the audience would rather be somewhere else.
> 
> So, at Mindful, we're going to remind you during sessions to move on once it stops resonating for you. Perhaps we'll change the rule to the 'law of resonating feet' to really make that clear.
> 
> I'll stop sessions and nudge you to move on to what resonates.
> 
> 3. Space and Time
> 
> In an open space setting, all you can really control is the space you're in, and the time you're in it. As we've discussed above, creating sessions which resonate strongly with people is the aim, but resonance is more than just a good topic. It's everything else, too. It's the ambient nature of the space you're in and a the suitable time to be in it. 
> 
> So how do you create spaces which resonate? You make them appeal to different frequencies of thought. At Mindful we'll create very different spaces, with different lines of enquiry to be drawn throughout the sessions. This way, it will hopefully become easier for people to discern what mood their resonating in at any given time and move to an appropriate conversation.
> 
> If you're keen to talk or lead a line of enquiry, then come prepared to do so! 
> --
> 
> We look forward to meeting you, ready to start at 9am Saturday morning. 
> 
> Buy Mindful* tickets at Eventbrite.
> 
> Thanks to our sponsor Integral Development (@integral_org_au) for enabling Mindful! 
> 
> 
> 
> You can follow the participant list and the speaker list on Twitter. Have a great week!
> Ross Hill and Jan Stewart
> _
> thisismindful.com
> 
> Follow @thisismindful on Twitter | Visit thisismindful.com
> 
> Sent to viv at mcwaters.com.au: unsubscribe | update profile | forward to a friend
> 
>  
> 
> 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Viv McWaters
> Beyond the Edge Pty Ltd
> PO Box 665 Torquay 3228
> Australia
> +61 417 135 406
> Email me: viv at mcwaters.com.au
> Connect on Twitter: vivmcw
> Chat to me on Skype: vivmcwaters
> Read my blog: www.vivmcwaters.com.au
> 
> _______________________________________________
> OSList mailing list
> To post send emails to OSList at lists.openspacetech.org
> To unsubscribe send an email to OSList-leave at lists.openspacetech.org
> To subscribe or manage your subscription click below:
> http://lists.openspacetech.org/listinfo.cgi/oslist-openspacetech.org
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://lists.openspacetech.org/pipermail/oslist-openspacetech.org/attachments/20110519/c230c92f/attachment-0008.htm>


More information about the OSList mailing list