Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality. / Nielsen, Mie Femø.

In: Discourse Studies, Vol. 14, No. 1, 2012, p. 87-109.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Nielsen, MF 2012, 'Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality', Discourse Studies, vol. 14, no. 1, pp. 87-109. <http://dis.sagepub.com/content/14/1/87.full.pdf+html>

APA

Nielsen, M. F. (2012). Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality. Discourse Studies, 14(1), 87-109. http://dis.sagepub.com/content/14/1/87.full.pdf+html

Vancouver

Nielsen MF. Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality. Discourse Studies. 2012;14(1):87-109.

Author

Nielsen, Mie Femø. / Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality. In: Discourse Studies. 2012 ; Vol. 14, No. 1. pp. 87-109.

Bibtex

@article{1624e531c4d04c55b212dfd3610907e8,
title = "Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality",
abstract = "This article discusses {\textquoteleft}brainstorm{\textquoteright} interaction in a multimodal perspective. It shows how an innovation workshop facilitator is {\textquoteleft}doing facilitation{\textquoteright} by not only organizing group activities and managing turn- taking, but also drawing each group member out to participate actively and contribute to the group process. Institutional goals are transformed to individual conversational participation. Participants are helped to express their thoughts and engage in a social process of clarifying, developing and refining ideas. In the process the facilitator is socializing the participants into a particular participation framework, letting them collaborate in shaping a local community of practice. The facilitator is separating phases of activities to afford decoupling actions, creating specific local sequential environments for participants to produce particular kinds of talk, thus engaging a group of participants in a social process of collaborative idea development. The article will show how multimodal orientation to a range of semiotic resources (whiteboard, colored cards, speed markers, re-usable adhesive putty, body posture, gestures, gazes, pauses and talk) is used to manage topical talk, elicit talk from a particular person, manage speaker transition, secure progression and shifts, perform shift in participant identity and elicit talk performing particular social actions, explanations and accounts. A process is shaped in which collaboratively produced underspecified ideas are turned into {\textquoteleft}noticings{\textquoteright} in order to create slots for them to be explained and accounted for so that individual cognitive processes are made available for treatment in a social process of idea development, and selection of ideas is prioritized over discussion/rejection.",
author = "Nielsen, {Mie Fem{\o}}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "87--109",
journal = "Discourse Studies",
issn = "1461-4456",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Using artifacts in brainstorming sessions to secure participation and decouple sequentiality

AU - Nielsen, Mie Femø

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - This article discusses ‘brainstorm’ interaction in a multimodal perspective. It shows how an innovation workshop facilitator is ‘doing facilitation’ by not only organizing group activities and managing turn- taking, but also drawing each group member out to participate actively and contribute to the group process. Institutional goals are transformed to individual conversational participation. Participants are helped to express their thoughts and engage in a social process of clarifying, developing and refining ideas. In the process the facilitator is socializing the participants into a particular participation framework, letting them collaborate in shaping a local community of practice. The facilitator is separating phases of activities to afford decoupling actions, creating specific local sequential environments for participants to produce particular kinds of talk, thus engaging a group of participants in a social process of collaborative idea development. The article will show how multimodal orientation to a range of semiotic resources (whiteboard, colored cards, speed markers, re-usable adhesive putty, body posture, gestures, gazes, pauses and talk) is used to manage topical talk, elicit talk from a particular person, manage speaker transition, secure progression and shifts, perform shift in participant identity and elicit talk performing particular social actions, explanations and accounts. A process is shaped in which collaboratively produced underspecified ideas are turned into ‘noticings’ in order to create slots for them to be explained and accounted for so that individual cognitive processes are made available for treatment in a social process of idea development, and selection of ideas is prioritized over discussion/rejection.

AB - This article discusses ‘brainstorm’ interaction in a multimodal perspective. It shows how an innovation workshop facilitator is ‘doing facilitation’ by not only organizing group activities and managing turn- taking, but also drawing each group member out to participate actively and contribute to the group process. Institutional goals are transformed to individual conversational participation. Participants are helped to express their thoughts and engage in a social process of clarifying, developing and refining ideas. In the process the facilitator is socializing the participants into a particular participation framework, letting them collaborate in shaping a local community of practice. The facilitator is separating phases of activities to afford decoupling actions, creating specific local sequential environments for participants to produce particular kinds of talk, thus engaging a group of participants in a social process of collaborative idea development. The article will show how multimodal orientation to a range of semiotic resources (whiteboard, colored cards, speed markers, re-usable adhesive putty, body posture, gestures, gazes, pauses and talk) is used to manage topical talk, elicit talk from a particular person, manage speaker transition, secure progression and shifts, perform shift in participant identity and elicit talk performing particular social actions, explanations and accounts. A process is shaped in which collaboratively produced underspecified ideas are turned into ‘noticings’ in order to create slots for them to be explained and accounted for so that individual cognitive processes are made available for treatment in a social process of idea development, and selection of ideas is prioritized over discussion/rejection.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

SP - 87

EP - 109

JO - Discourse Studies

JF - Discourse Studies

SN - 1461-4456

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 38517438