

the
World Café is a powerful social technology for engaging people in
conversations that matter, offering an effective antidote to the
fast-paced fragmentation and lack of connection in today's world.
Method:
World
Café can be modified to meet a wide variety of needs. Specifics of
context, numbers, purpose, location, and other circumstances are
factored into each event's unique invitation, design, and question
choice, but the following five components comprise the basic model:
1)
Setting: Create a "special" environment, most often
modelled after a café, i.e. small round tables covered with a
checkered tablecloth, butcher block paper, colored pens, a vase of
flowers, and optional "talking stick" item. There should be
four chairs at each table.
2)
Welcome and Introduction: The host begins with a warm welcome and an
introduction to the World Café process, setting the context, sharing
the Cafe Etiquette, and putting participants at ease.
3)
Small Group Rounds: The process begins with the first of three or
more twenty minute rounds of conversation for the small group seated
around a table. At the end of the twenty minutes, each member of the
group moves to a different new table. They may or may not choose to
leave one person as the "table host" for the next round,
who welcomes the next group and briefly fills them in on what
happened in the previous round.
4)
Questions: each round is prefaced with a question designed for the
specific context and desired purpose of the session. The same
questions can be used for more than one round, or they can be built
upon each other to focus the conversation or guide its direction.
5)
Harvest: After the small groups (and/or in between rounds, as
desired) individuals are invited to share insights or other results
from their conversations with the rest of the large group. These
results are reflected visually in a variety of ways, most often using
graphic recorders in the front of the room.
cited
from : http://www.theworldcafe.com/ibank.html
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