[OSList] good questions

Hege Steinsland via OSList oslist at lists.openspacetech.org
Thu Nov 19 11:59:00 PST 2015


This is so great Michael. I will ask this question in an "Mini - dialog café" in my local church tomorrow, and listen carefully to the conversation :-)

what are the issues and opportunities for us (as individuals, community's and Church) to generate insight, energy and hope in today's refugee situation?

All the best from 
Hege
19. nov. 2015 kl. 20:19 skrev Michael Herman via OSList <oslist at lists.openspacetech.org>:

> i got curious, hege, so i went looking for your first message and your original question:
> 
> what are the issues and opportunities for us (as individuals, community's and Church) to generate insight, energy and hope in today's refugee situation?
> 
> this turns out even better, more open, than i expected... it leaves room for considering things that will make the situation better, but it also lends itself to using the current situation as a way to generate things that could help many other situations as well.  
> 
> 
> 
> 
>  
> --
> 
> Michael Herman
> Michael Herman Associates
> 312-280-7838 (mobile)
> 
> http://MichaelHerman.com
> http://OpenSpaceWorld.org
> 
> 
> 
> On Thu, Nov 19, 2015 at 12:49 PM, christine koehler via OSList <oslist at lists.openspacetech.org> wrote:
> Chris,
>  
> In my experience, “powerful questions” are more about me as the questioner than my trust in the group’s ability to find surprising meaning in conversation.
> 
> 
> Love it ! but after reading your comment twice, I am not sure to understand what you mean
> 
> Do you mean that powerful questions have the ability to build meaning in conversation, that the questioner may find surprising ? Does it mean that you can only say afterwards that the question was powerful ?
> 
> This makes sense to me, as you never know what impact will have your words. As many of you I guess, I recall occasions where I people told me "this particular sentence - then something follows that you forget you said or that you find completely common,or  truism, - you said had a strong influence in my life". mmmmmm.  be prepared to be surprised . 
> 
> I must admit that I speak from a position where I find extremely difficult to frame (or to help frame) powerful  questions. There are so many "resistance"  around questions, that sometimes a group will just reject a formulation during prework and then accept it as something obvious when preparing the set-up or that sometimes the group doesn't care, no matter how cumbersome the question is framed, they will anyhow discuss the important issues. 
> so I stick to easy criteria : open question (no assumptions) , very short, can be interpreted in many many different ways, and that may lead to a quantity of solutions, not a single one. 
> 
> Would love to hear what other thinks about framing questions
> 
> Christine 
> 
> 
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