Chapter 1: 25 Ways to Have Participants Introduce Themselves
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14.
P
rovide examples of “try-umphs” and ask them to write
their own.
Learning ain’t what it used to be. The law school model of study groups has moved beyond the
legal classroom. More and more learning situations today have students studying together—
proof that the point is to gain knowledge (perhaps in order to pass an exam) and not to compete
with one another.
To this end, ask participants to work with at least one other person. The teams are to come up
with a three- or four-word statement that is a positive affirmation of the learning experience.
The statement should suggest what they will try to do and add the “umph” factor to their
efforts. They will use their try-umphs to introduce themselves.
Sample try-umphs: Just do it. (Nike ad)
Just say “no.” (Theme of an anti-drug campaign)
Drive out fear. (Dr. Edwards Deming)
Eliminate turf wars. (Dr. Joseph Juran)
Never give up. (Winston Churchill)
15.
Q
uote Drucker. Then ask them to ask questions.
Management guru Peter Drucker maintains that leaders know how to ask questions—the right
questions. Ask each person to think of a question they’d like to ask you and to then introduce
himself and ask his question.
If the class is large, divide the questions and the responding time in half by pairing up
participants.
Brainteaser:
What do these words have in common?
red, pink, gray, brown, black
Note: Participants will immediately respond that all the words are colors. Keep pushing them
to find additional similarities.
Answer: The words are also all monosyllabic. They all end in a consonant. They also all start with a consonant. Each has
only one vowel. Each has another word contained within (“Ed,” “ink,” “ray,” “row,” and “lack.”).
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