• View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • add a primary image (only if there is none)

    add a secondary image

    add a suggested image

     

    Image Ideas

    elephant in the room, with group of people meeting (maybe photoshop)

    elephant under the rug

    lifting the veil and pointing

    behind the curtain

    kid pointing out emperor with no clothes

    anything under the rug

    naming ceremony for baby

    chick just born

    list of names, with many crossed out

    nametags

    Daybreak aprons

    small group talking, facilitator with few items written onto flipchart

    speaker with finger pointed ("saying it like it is")

    rose (with nametag?)

     

     

    Heart

    Call it out, stating directly what is perceived. Naming functions to birth things not yet recognized by the group, sometimes things that are taboo. Akin to an alchemical process, to name can be to transform, and brings change in its wake.

     

    Description

    Like Translation and Reframing to which it is related, Naming is a basic core facilitation skill, whether practiced by the facilitator or by others.  One speaks what has not yet been spoken, or better yet supports a group member to do so. 

     

    This initial framing may have a profound impact on the group's relationship to that which is named.  There is a great difference between saying, "The old guard is blocking the way to change," compared to "I see the elders of the group protecting that which has been carefully nurtured for many years," compared to "The new and old members each bring different energies; what is the valuable gift of each?"

     

    Sometimes Naming is saying what the group knows is true but isn't talking about; unnamed undercurrents can have a profound effect on the group. Naming taboo topics or other skewing influences can function as an important corrective and is sometimes downright cathartic.  For example, if a group is suffering from unacknowledged power differences (as contrasted with clear and effective hierarchy and role differentiation), getting real about this can free up energy so that the group can proceed with its purpose. Obviously this needs to be done in a respectful and careful manner. If you are an outside facilitator, it's the group members who will have to live with consequences after you are long gone, so the goal here is to invoke the skill in such a way that it builds future capacity in the group.

     

    Naming can also create a safe space for truth-telling, and sometimes it isn't safe to tell the truth, in which case a wise facilitator will name that "truth".

     

    Naming can be an iterative process. Naming a contentious item may provoke both positive and negative reactions in a group. As the group works through those reactions, further clarity arises, and this can lead to a new naming, and new reactions.

     

    Self-awareness and courage are job requirements in this, as is ownership of the naming: it's cleaner to communicate as a personal observation, rather than a pronouncement. Sometimes it can be as simple as identifying an awkward feeling and asking the group if there's a relevant issue knocking on the door.

     

    Other times what needs Naming are the stakes, a reminder as to why we are all here and why what we're doing matters.  Knowing what to name and when is part of the flow that arises from being fully present. Once something has been named, the group can then decide whether to further explore or to lay it aside.

     

    Cautions & Caveats:

    • Be aware of jargon or unfamiliar terms in your naming.
    • Don't mistake naming something for fully comprehending it.

     

    Examples

    Tree Bressen once worked with a cohousing group where the tension was clear but no one was willing to name it or address it directly.  She passed out blank cards to everyone and asked them to write down an answer to "What do we most need to talk about today?" without signing their names.  The cards were passed in to a basket and then each person drew one out and read it aloud.  This succeeded in bringing the tricky issue of the fierce tension between one family and the rest of the community out into the open, and in a way where the group was responsible for naming it rather than Tree as outside consultant.

     

    Daniel Lindenberger once worked with a grassroots organization whose rapid growth sparked tensions around how decisions were made. He named and outlined common phases of growth in similar organizations, and the challenges each phase met. This shifted the group from blaming individual members for causing the tensions and allowed them to contextualize their issues as being fairly standard "growing pains" due to their success, rather than as an indication of their failure to work well together. In this case Naming from an outside consultant helped the group reframe their challenge.

     

    Related patterns


    Naming points primarily to:

    How Related

     

    Other patterns Naming also points to (secondarily):

     

    Transparency is about being open enough to share what you are experiencing. Translation and Reframing are varieties of naming, ...

     

    Patterns that point primarily back at Naming

    How Related

     

    Other patterns that also point back at Naming (reverse secondaries):


     

    Category and tags

    Category:
    Keystone Pattern for this Category? Add +keystone
    Tags: 



     

     

    Resources

    Roger Schwarz, The Skillful Facilitator, 2nd edition, and particularly his work on Ground Rules for Effective Groups, which are designed to provoke and support more authentic commuication. www.SchwarzAssociates.com

     

    Peter Block's book Flawless Consulting and Geoffrey Bellman's book The Consultant's Calling both address the importance of authenticity and being willing to say what is as part of the facilitator's craft.

     

    Other

    "Show Up," "Tell the truth without blame or judgement" —Angeles Arrien

     

    Stage

     

    Personal Stories about Naming

    Each card listed here has at least one relevant story. Add your own stories in Anonymous+Personal Stories.

     

  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  •  

     


    I'm not sure i'd call it Bouquet yet, but, it is a *really* nice page :-).

      --John Abbe.....Thu May 27 01:25:19 -0700 2010


    What do you think is needed to get it to Bouquet?

      --Amy Lenzo.....Wed Jun 09 12:55:49 -0700 2010


    I might not go to bouquet until i was looking at 5-10 interrelated patterns at once, and thought i had their relationships worked out in a good way, then bumped most/all of them up to bouquet at once. But i think starting with one is fine too - it makes it stick up and hopefully some of us will contemplate its relationships with other patterns and move more patterns toward bouquet.

      --John Abbe.....Thu Jun 10 00:00:16 -0700 2010


    To state directly what is perceived, preferably as observation rather than pronouncement.  Naming can function to birth things not yet recognized by the group, undercurrents, things unspoken or taboo.  Akin to an alchemical process, to name can be to transform, and naming can bring clarity and change.

      --LisaMarie DiVincent.....Mon Nov 22 00:29:45 -0800 2010


     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  •  

    Recently added patterns


     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • News   

    more... (includes older news)

     
  • View
  • Changes
  • Options
  • Related
  • Edit
  • Help   
    • If you are signed in, you can double-click inside any "card" to edit it.
    • To make a link to another card when you're editing, place the card name inside double brackets, e.g. [[card name]].
    • To post URLs or links where the text you click on has different wording than the technical location of the link, put the real location before a "pipe" character | and the displayed name after, like this:  [[exact URL|display link]].
    • To get to the page (and web address) for a card, click on .
    • There's a link to your home card in the header — My Card: your name, and you can put information about yourself there, and change your password (in the Options tab).

    If you have questions see the Wagn documentation, contact John Abbe, Amy Lenzo, Raines Cohen, or leave a question here:


     


     
     
     

    Text is available under the Creative Commons attribution, share-alike license (for more detail, see Copyrights).

    Creative Commons attribution, share-alike license

    See the link under any image for its licensing information.

    Wheeled by Wagn v. 1.7.1