Activity: Flexibility
Activity: Flexibility Read More »
It is important to monitor your own responses to change. As you gain understanding about how you react to change, you will develop flexibility skills.
List three changes that have occurred recently in your personal or professional life.
1.
2.
3.
For each of the three changes, answer the questions listed below.
What are the implications of your reactions to these changes in your life and/or your work?
*Adapted with permission from TTI International, Ltd. 2010.
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The goal of this activity is to have an opportunity to notice your own emotions. Most people rarely stop to consider the emotions they are experiencing, except when those emotions become intense. This is a self-empathy check-in.
Choose a two-day period and stop briefly at identified times of day to notice and note the emotion(s) you are experiencing. Use the chart format below to record the emotion and what you were doing at the time (e.g., eating breakfast alone, reading a book, dealing with a difficult customer).
Reflect on what you notice about the emotions you wrote down.
Diplomacy and tact impact our relationships and environments, and this exercise uses the “Three Levels of Text” protocol to deepen understanding and skills in these areas by reflecting on an article’s content and implications.
“Tact and Diplomacy” is an article with definitions, prerequisites, and strategies. Our understanding of what we read can be enhanced by using a protocol that promotes reflection as we read. One such protocol is the Three Levels of Text Protocol, which can be used as you read and can also enhance discussion when two or more people have read the same article in a group setting. Read the article and, as you read, use the prompts below to reflect on essential elements of the article and identify implications for your own communication.
Reflect on your current communication skills and identify one specific goal you want to achieve in the area of diplomacy and tact. Write down this goal, ensuring it is clear and actionable. Consider how achieving this goal can positively impact your personal and professional relationships.
Activity: Diplomacy/Tact Read More »
Learn to use a Decision Matrix Tool to simplify the process of choosing between multiple options, ensuring the best decision is made by individuals or teams.
Think of a decision you need to make that involves two or more options. Are you trying to decide which of three new bicycles to purchase? Or which course to take? Or which major or career to pursue?
Write down what decision you need to make. Then write down the options you have.
Decision:
Options:
The article, “The Decision Matrix: The Decision Matrix Is The Perfect Tool For Decision Making,” defines the decision matrix and presents a case study that shows you how to design and use a decision matrix. Read the article, and as you do so, consider how to design and use a decision matrix of your own to make the decision you identified in Step 1, above.
Design and use the decision matrix that will lead you to the best decision among the options you identified in Step 1. You may use the template below or adapt it to best fit your specific decision and options.
What are the benefits of using a decision matrix for you? How could you use this tool in the future?
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Google, a company with a reputation for innovation, gives its engineers one day a week to work on a passion project. That’s right—20% of their billing time is spent pursuing ideas and interests that may only loosely tie back to their workflow. What would happen if we gave students the same flexibility? What if we gave them the time to pursue their own genius?
Note: This exercise is a commitment. It requires time and a willingness to engage in serious exploration and growth over the course of months.
Optional Add-On: To develop “Time and Priority Management” and “Planning and Organizing” skills, write a proposal that includes how you plan to manage your time over the course of this project and define the different tasks you must complete before the project is considered complete. Essentially, you will submit a detailed plan of how you will carry your project out and manage your own time over the planned timeframe of the project.
Brainstorm what your “Genius Project” could be. Your ideas should be specific to you as an individual. Your passion project must be tied to your top one or two Motivators so start brainstorming by looking at your Motivators on your Indigo Summary Page.
Examples of ideas: starting and growing a new club at school for people interested in coding or investing, building a business, planning a school-wide volunteering day, writing and producing a one-act show for students, leading a full-fledged fundraiser for an initiative that you care about, managing your school’s social media initiatives, learning to build a website from scratch, working on a massive art project or performance, etc.
Write a one-page proposal. The proposal should explain the overall project scope and also how it fits your top one or two Motivators. You should explain how you plan to utilize your top five Skills from your Indigo Summary Page to execute your project. Hold yourself accountable to picking a project that fits you and is sufficiently challenging.
Spend one or two hours a week pursuing your project. This project can be as long or as short as you would like it to be, but the sweet spot is at least 15-20 hours—enough time for you to develop serious projects with a large scope of work.
Create a presentation about the end results of your project. This can be in any form you choose—presentation, essay, collage, video, website, etc. – as long as it is clear that the results reflect your true genius and genuine effort. In your final presentation of the project, you should demonstrate how the project tied in to your top Motivators and how you used your top Skills to successfully complete the project.
Activity: Creativity/Innovation Read More »
Being a continuous, lifelong learner involves making a commitment to pursuing questions, engaging in inquiry, and expanding one’s areas of expertise and skill. This activity is designed to provide an opportunity to define lifelong learning, to acknowledge the ways in which one is already a lifelong learner, and to commit to always continuous learning in school, at work, and in life.
Read 50 Ways to Be A Lifelong Learner at Home.
As you read, take notes using the format below, or print the template in the PDF below (click “Download PDF” to view).
What commitment will you make to engage in continuous learning in your work and in your life? Write down your commitment.
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Some of the best new ideas result from fully engaging in conflicts. Many people avoid conflict because they have not learned the skills necessary to create productive conflict. This activity will give you a six-part process you can use whenever you encounter conflict.
Read the short article, “The Proven Six-Step Tool for Conflict Resolution”. As you read, consider the extent to which you have or have not used these six strategies when engaging in conflicts in the past.
Consider your skills in these six strategy areas and rank them from your strongest skill to your weakest skills, with 1 being your strongest skill and 6 being your relatively weakest skill.
Set a goal for your part in the next important conflict situation you encounter. What will you do more of? What will you do less of?
Goal 1: I will do more……
Goal 2: I will do less…….
As you go through the next week, observe the conflicts you are involved in, both large and small. Use these situations as opportunities to practice the Six-Step Tool for Conflict Resolution, and then reflect on these questions:
What did you learn about conflict as you used the Six-Step Tool?
What did you learn about yourself as you used the Six-Step Tool?
Activity: Conflict Management Read More »
When it comes to analytical problem solving, identifying the problem is only the first step. We want to create solutions! Shift the mindset away from complaining about problems to collaborating on solutions and implementing the best ones.
This exercise can be repurposed to tackle any big-picture issue or question.
Think about your complaints about your school. Do you hate the food? Do you wish the classrooms had more light? Do the bathrooms smell? Write them down. The problems could be about anything – school, friends, family or your community.
Set a timer and come up with as many solutions as you can in 5 minutes. Write them on post-it notes. The goal of Part 2 is quantity, not quality. Challenge yourself to come up with as many crazy ideas for solutions as you can.
Pick your top 3 – 5 ideas and use the “Yes, And” technique to improve them. How can these ideas be made better? Which are feasible to do? How can you make each solution more tangible? Add more post-its and create an affinity diagram to answer these questions for your top 3 – 5 ideas.
More information on affinity diagrams can be found here.
Other ways to build analytical thinking skills: Play brain games online at Lumosity or common games like Sudoku, chess, backgammon and Scrabble.
You can also try incorporating online analytical apps and tools into your daily habits. MyFitnessPal, Mint – a budget manager and tracker, Google Analytics, and other data based apps are great ways to track your habits and improve analytical thinking.
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To advocate for the importance of Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) in education, introduce Indigo’s SEL activities, and encourage educators and parents to incorporate SEL into their practices by highlighting the benefits and resources available through Indigo’s booklet. Additionally, to create awareness about the impact of SEL on students’ holistic development and inspire a culture of empathy, resilience, and empowerment in educational settings and at home.
Whether you’re a teacher looking to infuse SEL into your curriculum or a parent interested in supporting your child’s holistic development, our booklet offers a treasure trove of resources.
Download our booklet today to access a comprehensive collection of fun and impactful activities. With a handy copy at your fingertips, you’ll be ready to spice up your classroom and empower students to thrive socially, emotionally, and academically.
Exploring Indigo’s SEL Activities: Enhancing Learning Through Fun Read More »
This exercise helps students understand they need to find and create environments that fit who they naturally are.
Academic: Creativity; Results Orientation; Positive Attitude.
Career: Self Advocacy; Self Motivation / Self Direction; Critical Thinking.
Social/Emotional: Sense of Belonging; Self Confidence; Communication; Whole Self.
Have students read the Your Ideal Environment section of the Indigo Report. Have them star the things that are important to them.
Have students describe the “perfect class” or “perfect job” by either drawing a picture or writing. It’s important to communicate to the group that students will have different desires for their school and work environment—and that is okay. It’s not about conforming, but about better understanding what you need. When finished, ask students to share with the group.
Here are a few questions you can use to guide the conversation:
Example: A student sees her report says she likes “Work tasks that change frequently.” She writes about a classroom where activities are different every single day.
Activity: Ideal Environment Read More »