Participation level:


  • High (Stakeholders participate in decision)

Innovation level:


  • Low (Traditional)

Facilitator skill level, and other support required:


  • Low (No special skills)

Can be used for:


  • Engage community
  • Discover community issues


Brainstorming aims to develop the broadest possible range of creative options,to evaluate these, and to select the best.



Brainstorming will offer better solutions to a community issue or proposal because a wider range of options has been canvassed.


 

 

 

  • Can encourage creative solutions.
  • Can serve as a warm-up exercise.
  • Can replace conventional participation tools wheresuch tools are inappropriate.
  • Can assist in developing unity between participants.

 


  • Ideas are unrestrained and may not be achievable.
  • Sessions may be difficult to record.
  • Realistic outcomes are not guaranteed.
  • Allow time to engage jury & facilitator, put together briefing papers and contact 'experts'.
  • Jury can take up to four days to consider its 'verdict'.

 

Organizing Brainstorming

How many people to organize?


  • Large (> 12 people)
  • Medium (2-12 people)
  • Individual

Time required:


  • Short (< 6 weeks)

Cost:


  • Low (< AUD$1,000)


  • Select participants from as wide a range of disciplines with as broad a range of experience as possible. This brings many more creative ideas to the session.
  • Select a leader for the session, who can
    • outline any criteria that must be met;
    • keep the session on course;
    • encourage an enthusiastic, uncritical attitude among brainstormers; and
    • encourage participation by all.
  • Set times for the whole brainstorming session, and for generating ideas.
  • Keep fresh ideas coming, and welcome creativity.
  • Do not allow any one train of thought dominate for too long
  • Do not criticise or evaluate during the brainstorming session. (Criticism stifles creativity and spoils the fun.)
  • Record ideas no matter how unrealistic, until there are no more ideas, or the time allocated for generating ideas is up.
  • Record all ideas on a whiteboard or projector so that all participants can see all the ideas.
  • Encourage 'spark off' associations from other people's ideas, or combinations of ideas.
  • Either, evaluate solutions at the end of the brainstorming session to agree on the most practical way forward, or
  • Record the session either as notes, tape recording or video for later evaluation.

 

References

 

Description

Brainstorming is a method for developing creative solutions to problems. It works by focusing on a problem, and then having participants come up with as many deliberately unusual solutions as possible and by pushing the ideas as far as possible. During the brainstorming session there is no criticism of ideas - the idea is to open up as many possibilities as possible, and break down preconceptions about the limits of the problem. Once this has been done the results of the brainstorming session can be analysed and the best solutions can be explored either using further brainstorming or more conventional solutions.


Brainstorming is useful in warming up a workshop and creating a sense of unity between workshop participants by 'breaking the ice' between them. (Source: http://www.mindtools.com/brainstm.html)


This page originally copied with permission from the Citizens Science Toolbox


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If you have questions, contact the Process Arts wiki support team. We may also be online live, or you can just ask your question here and someone will answer it shortly:


see http://p2pfoundation.net/Category:Facilitation where we are also listing similar practices

  --Michel Bauwens (Not signed in).....Sun Jan 31 00:53:33 -0800 2010


The Bohm Dialogue, especially Collective Reflection has significance for me in terms of artistic critique and dialogue.

If one wanted to connect this to Jungian thought I'd relate to that.

  --Srule Brachman (Not signed in).....Mon May 21 17:09:16 +0000 2012

 

 

 

 

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