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Teambuilding
through Improvisation
1-day and 2-day Trainings tailored to your organization's needs
What
is Rehearsals for Growth (RfG)?
Derived from theater improvisation, RfG is a highly-developed method
of role-play that trains people to choose alternatives to their habitual
ways of behaving in the present moment. RfG promotes confidence, social
skills, and flexibility by exploring and expanding the limits of "who
else you can be" instead of directing attention to "who you
are." A group of training managers who participated in an RfG demonstration
described these techniques as "effective," "fun,"
and "innovative."
The interactive RfG methods teach the following principles of good interpersonal
functioning:
- Accepting offers (input from others)
- Giving up overcontrol
- Thinking "on your feet"
- Giving and receiving support
- Attending to relationship, not personality
- (looking at the group as a system)
- Making others look good
- Attending to power transactions
- Experimenting with non-habitual behaviors and roles
- Being willing to take chances
WHAT
ARE THE METHODS USED IN RfG?
RfG methods are brief, tested, interactive exercises requiring no prior
experience or skills, which are presented along with discussion and didactic
segments. RfG role-plays often go beyond realistic simulations. RfG draws
on a pool of over two hundred tested exercises.
This workshop addresses the problem of Intra-team conflict or only superficial
cooperation, where teamwork breaks down in crises and members do not make
efforts to enhance one another's performance.
RfG Skills training sessions are conducted with a presently-functioning
work team to foster partnership. Partnership is present when:
- Team members engage in mutual, cooperative interaction that enhances
all individuals’ performance simultaneously.
- The team shares an attitude of willingness to be responsible for self
AND for the team.
- Team members are mutually willing to make all team relationships work.
- Team members actively engage in supporting one another through demonstrating
and revealing the truth of whatever works and doesn't work, both with
respect to instrumental tasks and relationships.
- There is respect for and appreciation of each member's differences.
In order to attain partnership, team members learn Accepting offers.
To accept offers means to build on the input of others. Full accepting
results in aligning oneself with others and leads to partnership, improved
team cohesiveness, and strengthened team problem-solving.
To not accept offers (called "blocking") means to oppose the
influence of others. Blocking is a way in which persons limit the influence
of others and maintain their power to keep distance from others. Under
stress, people are more likely to block offers.
In realistic situations, one can emotionally accept fully the offers of
others while blocking their content, thus allowing for constructive criticism
and differences of opinion. Open disagreement is constructive to both
team functioning and the relationship among team members when it arises
out of a partnership context of mutual support.
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