LESSON PLANTG - StrengthBank® Talk Groups
Transcription
LESSON PLANTG - StrengthBank® Talk Groups
StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) Before the first Talk Group SBTG 1 *SBP Plan to take time to come up with talk group rules with the kids. Here are Introduc- some suggestions of items to start with to give them the idea of what is gotion ing to go on. Then let them comment. They will have read SG1 and answered the questions beforehand so there should be time in the session. It Path Ex- is critical that they understand this is not just another class discussion. A. No one has the right answer for anyone else. pander (PE) B. Listen with respect to a unique design you may not understand but One: is as valid as your StrengthBank® design. Dreams/ C. Dreams and insights shared with the group are not to be shared outVision side of the group except by the person whose dream or insight we heard. PE Two: D. Snacks are provided as long as clean up happens by everyone. Holidays E. In the course of excitement, try not to interrupt someone when he and Curent or she is speaking. Events F. Ask questions without hesitation. G. If you do not have something to say about a particular point, ask that you be excused from an answer right now. Do not simply sit and say nothing. This is a talk group. H. Participate by saying at least one thing each talk group. If you can’t think of anything, guess at something. It is important that conversations and talking happens in an orderly way in this talk group. No one has a better StrengthBank® or Animal make-up than anyone else. We are all equipped with a StrengthBank® and we all have all 4 animals within us. Let these two truths draw the group together. What Romance? As you discovered in the certification process, the text of the introduction is laid out for visual effects and a rhythm. The students from the beginning EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Evaluation: ComSG 1: pleting SGs can be Intro worth a participation grade. It is critical that the students participate. You can catch up in some classes but this one so specifically builds that it is much harder to get the maximum view if they miss steps. Absentee make-ups need to be creative… maybe an afterschool talk group once a month for those with excused absences. The answers can be graded for content and we personally believe that spelling and grammar should be attended in all subjects, not *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 1 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) need to realize this is not just another elective or academic treatment. They are about to experience something so personal and powerful that we need to get them into a frame of mind to receive it just that way. Please read the background notes provided. Be ready to not go the traditional path with these kids. Their discovery depends on both the teacher and mentor: • Not telling but letting the kids tell themselves. • Not putting a price tag on ANYTHING they mention. • Not responding as if they are correct that the money one would make is a first consideration in choice of dream to follow. Silence is a safe non-affirmation of throw out money comments at this stage. The concept will sway them to the truth. Arguing them out of what they think is right never works (with adults either). • Making no assessments about the job market right now and their dreams. • Staying positive about their revelations even though you know that some of them are just being “cute.” That is better than their silence. These are talk groups. StrengthBank® is a discovery process and must not be rushed. It takes what all good, healthy relationships take: Time and Energy. The class activities and StrengthBank® Talk Groups are for that very purpose. As each lesson unfolds the added activities, class discussions and mentor-led talk groups are designed to help the students "dig-in" to the discovery. Please take all the time needed to talk about it but, of course, do not stretch as a time-filler or go on and on when the insight is sufficient. Ask students to read the beginning text (formatted like the introduction to The StrengthBank® Principle Book). from SG 1. Let them read it for themselves at each one's own pace and so that the formatting creates the desired visual effect for each mind. When each has finished, open the SBTG to get at whatever has occurred to them at this first glimpse of where we are going. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) just English. Even the students more gifted at communicating in pictures need to understand their work will need written work, too. With the availability of spell check and partners with gifts for written detail, all is possible. Student Projects that might follow the talk group. Create a graphic or logo that embodies the introduction’s idea. Write a script drama sketch of two people or more discussing this concept. Perform the skit written above. *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 2 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) Having them complete the questions in SG 1 should help you get to the heart of the matter in this first talk group. 1. Some helpful questions might be: a. What came to your mind? (And then wait and prompt with the question repeated, nudge one or two by name, etc. This is a talk group. They are to do the talking. b. Let them simply go as far as they will. Even ask them about the way the text was arranged on the page. Why would the text be arranged like that? Open their creative minds…you will be amazed… i. Ask how they might have presented the text or the idea. Start getting a feel for where they might best communicate to you their understanding. 1. Text 2. Pictures 3. Stories 4. Films 5. Sketches 6. as a sports analogy c. Inspiring stories – at some point students may pick up on inspiring stories of people who have lived their dream… Keep this simple statement as a repetitive reminder of what StrengthBank® offers: Now is your chance to live your own inspiring story. 2. As their feedback continues, ask them what they think a dream is. Tie whatever they say back to what they have just read. They are either repeating the foolishness of dreams or affirming they know each has one…etc. Be sure they become clear at the outset that this entire program is about bringing out what they hold in their dreams from the time each can remember. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Write a poem that individualizes the introduction. Write a story about someone’s dream grasped. Research a noted famous person’s comments on this early dream. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 3 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) 3. A great question to ask after the talk group has grown participatory by the kids… How did you know your dream? Did your parents tell you? Did your grandparents tell you? How did you know? a. They will stumble around a bit and finally someone will say “I have just always known…in my head….I have seen myself….. i. Press the question about who told each one the dream. The truth they need to grasp is that there is a Creator and that they have been created. Human beings are created beings. ii. Press on to be sure they understand that the universe was created by the same Creator. That is why the dream is reliable. It was revealed in your being from birth, designed with a specific purpose for the universe into which it was created. iii. It is imperative that each student begins to get the jist of following a perfectly created plan for each life. They know there is a higher power than themExample selves, the purpose here is to crystallize it into a TG Actionsconnection with the dreams they “have simply alDream ways known.” Example TG Actions-Vision/Dream After they have finished this activity, you will guide them to begin writing their first look at each one's own StrengthBank®.) 1. As you are seated in a circle (if possible), ask the question something like this: “If there were no obstacles, if everything were possible right now, what is that thing that you have always seen yourself being or doing in this world. What is your Big Time, no obstacles count dream for your life?” *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 4 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) NOTE: Some kids will pop off here; that is fine. Take the pop off into account! Sometimes the pop-off comment is really a disguised StrengthBank® indicator. For example: if someone says life ambition is to be a trash collector, start asking questions as noted formerly.... a. so do you like the outdoors? b. do you hate to have on business dress? c. do you have a sense of satisfaction when trash is removed? d. do you like large trucks and being in or on one? e. do you like things that require more physical skill than analytical thinking? f. describe how your typical day would go? Wait. (Let the kids blurt out one by one. Do not let them make excuses about why it will not work or say that it is stupid. I had one high schooler actually say “trash man”. Because I know that each divine path for every life fits into the needs in the world, I brought his example before the group as a great one. He may have meant it as a joke or “put off” but I chose to take it seriously. It was a good teaching point to illustrate that there is no better or worse StrengthBank.® How would you like it if no one wanted to be a trash man? KEY POINT: There are worthy things that need to be done in this world that someone is designed to do. If you do what you are designed to do, you will do it at the highest levels AND someone will pay you to do it. If they say something like drug dealer or robber... something unworthy, use the time to talk about each design is for a worthy pursuit to do something for the greater good. Anything, including a StrengthBank® can be misused. However, in the misused state it is not building character but instead perpetrating evil...[more on that later].) 2. Take them through memories of earliest school years to come up with things they remembered they liked..... and then chose to do when they had a choice. To get them started, let them remind you that recess is usually a first *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 5 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) “fun part” memory and go from there. Power they should begin to see is the power (positive energy, positive behaviors, ease of performance) of Likes + Choices. KEY POINT: The ‘fun part” in earliest schooling, that is, recess was the only time we could do what we liked to do. We could choose! Begin talking the power here is in likes and choices coming together for relationship power. When we can choose how to spend our time, it is usually more “fun” for us and we are more tolerant of others. (Someone will undoubtedly pop off here with “Yeah, I would like to choose not to do this.” Great responses come to mind. One might be, “But, in the real world, until we are supporting ourselves we may have to acquiesce to adults choices for us until we learn how to make better choices for ourselves. Right now is one of the real world times when learning requires suspension of personal choices.” I do not usually focus on family time but let them know they can also list favorite activities outside of school if they wish. (Family situations are not always pleasant and can sometimes halt the memory or things that are fun. Hopefully, school days serve as a better benchmark for remembering things liked, i.e., the fun parts.) If no child says anything, let the adults start. These must be honest! If teaching your subject and your grade is not your completed dream, say so. Kids pick up insincerity immediately. This must be honest. 3. Start a question and answer dialog with each student; Take the trash man example: Go to that student and ask deeper questions. You are trying to put it solidly in his mind or dispel it as a joke or misstatement on purpose. Give students plenty of time to think about each one. Adults may have to start to demonstrate. This is fine. Sometimes we need to *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 6 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) be reminded of where our dream will ultimately take us. 1. What clothes would you need to have to do this job? (Everything including gloves, masks, etc.) 2. Your typical workday would be in what environment? (name all locales - sign in warehouse, truck, outdoors, lunch stops, etc.) 3. What advantages would you have that other workers in other jobs would not have? 4. How would your family (now and future) play a part in your dream vocation? 5. What have you been told about people who do this job? Good or Bad 6. What would you get to see or do in this vocation that no one else would think about? 7. How would you be a valuable member of your local community because you do this particular thing? 8. If you were ask to go to a school on career day, what would you say to encourage others to think about doing what you are doing? 9. What would your idea of a vacation be if this is what you did for a living? 10. Have you ever talked to someone whose job is what you believe your dream job is? 11. If you have talked to someone who does you kind of job for a living, what have they said? 12. What kind of questions did you or would you like to ask someone who does what you want to do? 13. What would it be worth to you to be able to live your dream? What sacrifices would you be willing to make? (be specific--like spend 4 years in college, delay marriage until you were established, Not give up when obstacles get in the way.... etc.) 14. What would keep you from doing this vocation? (This is a great *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 7 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) teaching point. What the talk groups will be about is breaking down obstacles into achievable steps. Formula you will see later in the lessons is: Struggles teach perseverance, perseverance builds character, character builds hope into living life. No one succeeds without Hope. 15. These are the skills and talents that when used: o give you energy o "time flies" when you are using o creates the favorite vision of yourself o make you realize you have always known this was easy, fun o others have noticed it o probably got you into trouble sometimes for it (because it comes to the fore easily when you were bored or doing something that was not easy for you) You may think of other questions to ask depending on what is said. The point is to let the student begin to see how their unrealized dream could play out. Later lessons will fine-tune this picture. All we want for now is a vision they already have and a few test questions to be sure it is their vision and not something they made up, something someone else taught them to say, is politically correct, etc. We do not want the beauty contest, "I would fight for world peace" answers. If answers to the questions are hard to come from one of the students or do not flow in harmony... perhaps, give them time to rethink their dream while you talk to someone else. When It Is the Real Thing Key behavior you will notice in students who see their dream clearly: Enthusiasm builds as the student talks Eyes light up Creative answers Get more detailed in the answers they give. *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 8 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Do not have a problem talking about it You begin to feel inspired for that student Remember: Some of these kids have had their dream beaten out of them to the point that it may take some time for them to see it again. Never forget that each one was given a uniquely designed StrengthBank® at birth. No one is left behind. Be creative and keep them talking and excitement will build as the talk groups progress. Do not try to make this an academic exercise. It is a talk group! Relax and enjoy the revelations you are getting from doing it also. When you have gotten responses from all in the group and initial questions have been asked, wrap up by asking: Do you think it makes a difference if you love what you are doing for a living or if you just find the highest bidder and hate work and have fun after work? Let them talk, give examples, etc. Find out what they have been exposed to. Debunking the popular statement that you “gotta do something” to put bread on the table whether you like it or not begins here. There is a way you can earn your daily bread with your dream. That they need to start thinking about. Better if students do not go to a pen and paper exercise for this activity until after each has brainstormed his or her dream. The introduction is critical in the process of getting their minds engaged before forcing an “answer.” “Partner Pick” As we progress, each Talk Group should see the forming of a new partner pick. This is how we teach networking and the value of partnering with people you don’t already know. The purpose of having the kids change partners each talk group and debrief what happened with the networking that happened between talk groups with respect to speaking to partner is to teach networking. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 9 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Learning to network is a vital relationship skill and will service them well as they work and live out life. How many times has someone you "happened to mention something to" been instrumental in a decision, finding a source for something, or just learning something you did not already know? Through community we strengthen each other. The strongest neighborhoods, for example, are the ones where neighbors know each other. We are encouraging kids to take into account the people around them. They are in these human configurations for a reason; it is not an accident. To be unable to take part in life with the people placed around us leads to shallow living and self-absorbed focus....all the negative relational behaviors that diminish the development of StrengthBanks working together. Human beings do not become functional with others while remaining solo. You might think of a clever way to pick your new partner as you enter the room for each talk group. First person you see with whom you have not previously partnered and who is not your partner for this talk group; teacher assigns at random as each walks into the room, next person to come in after you have entered, etc. Keep them partnering amongst each other and mentors can be partners, too. (If mentors partner, be sure to contact student two times before next session. No mentor should partner with any one student more than once and mentors should partner only to “even things out”-not as a first choice. One child does not have the same partner all year (semester, trimester). Many different and diverse personalities is the way they will be asked to work in the real world…on project teams that change frequently, have new members constantly, require meeting different people constantly (especially if in a service environment or one that deal with the public). StrengthBank® can be seen from many people, not just one favorite partner. Changing will also accommodate new members easily. For example, the first partner picks should be someone each one does not know well or does not know at all. It is far better to keep best friends apart as often as possible. *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 10 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) The first StrengthBank® Talk Group should get beginning insights of the big dream (upon which StrengthBank® is based) from each student, teacher, and adult volunteer. Pre- “The Way I See My Life Right Now ” program Hand out the survey form that will be used to compare to growth periodiSurvey cally. At first the students may have “no clue” about some of the free-form answers. Let them know that if they do not have a lot to say in any one category, that is fine. One of the purposes of the StrengthBank® Talk Groups will be to have more to say. better define some of the areas. One of the purposes of the StrengthBank® Talk Groups will be to better define some of the areas. However, by the time they see it again, they will have more to say. Measurement requires seeing where we are now and where we are after we have had talk group input over time. Mentors also need to see this information. If new mentors come in at break points (semester, trimester, beginning of year) this is a great way for them to get acquainted with the kids quickly. The talk groups are made up of random ages so that they remain constant except for new students enrolling in mid-year and new sophomores to replace seniors each year. This makes for a grand mix similar to what each will be experiencing in life at work, in the community, at church, etc. Insure students feel comfortable that this information is for talk group use only. It is not a test. All answers are correct because the answers come from their lives. This is a way to let them think about some things they may not have thought about before. Relax and use it as an opportunity to focus on themselves rather than a school subject. Once filled out, ask them to keep them in a permanent StrengthBank® Talk Group Folder you will keep for them. Let them know that at the end of the course they will have an opportunity to change, add, and review what they write now because the folders will be given back. Using the format of the survey is a great way for mentors to initially intro- EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Student Strength- SG 2 Bank® Folder: All talk group activity assignments should be kept in a 3-ring binder (could also be kept on disk if that is available as long as there is a current back-up disk at all times.) (Some of the items in the folder will be used again in the program. For example, we will revisit the interview after learning the Animals, etc.) The other elements covered in this talk group are shown on the Content Map as well as on this grid as they *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 11 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) duce themselves to the students. Mentors are cautioned to be honest and occur. sincere. Do not fabricate answers. Kids pick up fake adults quicker than adults do. They will not relate as we need them to if the adult isn’t willing to “be mentored” as well as mentor. If there is a question the adult cannot answer or chooses not to, the kids will invoke the same methodology. These are not deep, dark secrets. These questions are designed to ask questions where there will be better or more measurements to answer as we go along. Short answers or seemingly uninformed answers are fine. We are at the beginning. If the students could fill in the whole thing in huge paragraphs, we would not have work to do. We want their beginning perspective. SSBBTTGG 22 The Basics: Torturous Fear, False Confidence, Sense of Humor *SBP Refer to SG 3 where the students get the text and applications to learn Chapter 1 how these words work in the concept. It is critical they understand these foundational themes as the entire concept references them to illustrate **SBLG: how relationship savvy or ignorance is at the root of all three. TBA Connecting SG 3 and SG 4: The SG 4 interviews will have begin or may be and in tandem with this talk group that includes definition clarification and ideas gathered or being gathered from the interviews. Are they seeing any torturous fear….etc? Students Refer to the SG 4 and prepare the students with a framework for these inInterview terviews based on what you may be observing in lives around you, that is, results Dreams fulfilled, dreams in progress, dreams not fulfilled and not in progress, how often people refer to what they always dreamed they would do and pretend it was not a reality. Let them get interested in excuses many have that are seemingly “understandable” but stopped the progress or the reasons people sometimes give for achieving their dream… usually not a direct route a seemingly insignificant something that was supposedly un- SG3 Basics Definitions Student Project Ideas: Role play a particularly colorful interview for the class. Take class on a field trip to interview a local celeb- SS 1-2 SG 4 *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 12 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Concept Metaphor SSBBTTGG 33 Discovery Steps Example TG Actions WOG B Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) predictable. Get their curiosity up but caution them to just ask the questions and let the answers fall where they will. Give them a chance to be an unbiased reporter. When they experience being unbiased…well, all kinds of new awareness can come in. Stress that they should not editorialize the answers. Go over the questions on the worksheet to be sure everyone is clear about what to ask and how. This would be a good time to bring in some of the advanced drama kids to do a role play about what one of the interviews might look like. If you have that opportunity, use it. Every chance you get to include another teaching discipline is good…you are showing the kids your networking prowess! See SG 5 for details. This section is to clarify any misconceptions and help the kids get more out of the way the concept is presented. It is a chance to teach through extended metaphor as the StrengthBank® gains greater visibility for them. The StrengthBank® Discovery steps give the kids the opportunity to start grasping the idea specifically for themselves. SG 6 takes them with text modified from *SBP Chapter I to the completion of the 7 step StrengthBank® learning process. Go at their pace. Each step is crucial. Pay special heed to absentees that they don’t miss a step. Hopefully, this is the class they will come to even if they miss others!. Hey, we can dream, can’t we? These steps are where they learn the WOGs. From here they will learn the AWOGs in Path 2. Discovery Steps Begin 1-3 Example TG Actions WOG B "Today's Frequent Talents List" A. Have students fill out "Today's Frequent Talents List" (For adults (faculty and mentors) use your job or primary activity each day rather than school day activities.) I. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS rity (student sets it up with your help) (Short of a field trip you might arrange for the superintendent or officer of a parent booster club to come to school and be interviewed.) Write a script or short story based on an interview.: Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SG 5 Assignment Evalua- SG 6 tion Idea; Lots of necessary completion on their parts. The importance that they are attempting each exercise in order of its appearing cannot be overstressed. SS 3-6 Have each student list 8 to 10 talents and skills they use every day (To- *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 13 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) day’s Frequent Talents List"). Read the directions with the kids and be sure they know they are looking for talents and skills their current activities require on a daily basis. Stay with this until each one has a list of at least 6. Get them to think about their current schedule. What talents (regardless of skill level ) are they being asked to use this semester? BIG POINT: This list will change every time there is a school-day schedule change. And, get them to talk about irregular days within each semester: Pep Rally days Special Assembly days Testing days On special days, some additional or changed talents and skills may be needed. Example: Pep Rally days: I have to make a decision about what I would rather do: attend a pep rally or go to study hall or come to school late or leave early. Everyone has to use their creative talents to stay with an different schedule and pick different than ordinary times to do things like lunch, first period class, second period class, etc. Everyone’s entire schedule is changed and will be changed back on the next school day. Ability(skill) to make constant, irregular changes without being unduly stressed is tested. If I am a ball player, I have to “perform” in front of an audience but not on *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 14 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) the playing field for this event. If I am a cheerleader, I have to be able to perform in a gym rather than on a playing field. If I am a participant, I have a chance to use my talent for rhythm and memory to chant and learn the dances, moves, and words. If I am a band member, I have to be able to use my musical talents normally used in marching without marching. If I choose not to attend the rally, I have a chance to spend more time ___________________________ Etc. Background Necessities Be sure each understands what a talent and skill is. Define and give examples (definition from Merriam-Webster): SKILL: 1. ”a learned power of doing a thing competently : a developed or acquired aptitude or ability” 2. ” a coordinated set of actions become smooth and integrated through practice.” TALENT: 1. “the abilities, powers, and gifts bestowed upon a man : natural endowments.” 2. “a special innate or developed aptitude for an expressed or implied activity usually of a creative or artistic nature -- often used in plural <students with talents in music find both recreation and training -- Bulletin of Bates College>” 3. “ general intelligence or mental power” Examples of Skills: *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 15 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) swimming playing musical instrument sports activity hobby etc. Examples of Talents: Singing getting up and speaking in front of others figuring out solutions to puzzles organizing others being the fastest to finish reading creating music at a higher level than other players being the fastest to finish a sports activity good at “______________________” (coming up with a plan for the group, making others laugh, listening to others, math, English, geometry, etc.) Summary: Talent comes with you when you are born. Skill is the level at which you use a talent. We have skill levels in things for which we have little talent. Example: I have some talent in gymnastics but not enough to really enjoy the process of getting better at gymnastics. I cannot even do a somersault. I have some talent to sing. I sing in the shower but would not enjoy being a professional singer and sing in front of others. Have each Student put a star to the left of the talent or skill he or she uses most frequently in daily activities now. (If they just cannot narrow it to one, each may choose 2 but no more.) This is not in the past or in the *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 16 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) future but NOW; what is most frequently called from them NOW. Now, ask the students to make a similar list that does not consider the school day, but uses as the background for the list or skills and talents all the other parts of a day and the weekends. What we want to get here is a different list. When you are doing different regimens, you use your talents and skills differently. Example: If the student has a part-time job, what skills and talents does he/she regularly use. Some might cross over depending on the job but “making change” that is a big part of retail work, for example, probably would not be a main skill used during the school day nor would: Pumping gas Sweeping floors Stocking shelves Serving food Mixing drinks (soft drinks at Sonic, Dairy Queen, etc. This list can be as creative as all the outside activities represented in the room. Some will be jobs, some will be hobbies: Horseback riding Training Quarter horses Working with handicapped kids Singing in groups Playing in a rock band Competitive tennis, swimming, etc. Ballet lessons Again, have them star the one each likes the best. For both lists, have the students write in the column next to each list how they feel when doing each of the items on the list. Make sure they use different feelings for each item. “Bored” for each one is not acceptable. We want them to start identifying feelings related to events they *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 17 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) experience daily. Example: Marching in the band Math Sports Cleaning my room EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) excited, tired, bored, challenged, hate it, anxious, love it having a good time, challenged, nervous like it, feel good when finished, hate it,tired, mad SSBBTTGG 44 Discovery Steps Continue 4-5 SS 7-12 SF I,II SSBBTTGG 55 Discovery Steps Continue 6-7 SS 13-16 SF III Example TG Actions for WOG C Example Now have students use WOG C and point to the first column that is blank. TG Actions Remind them that each has already brainstormed what will be in this colWOG C umn. it is a matter of writing it down. You might demonstrate on an overhead using your StrengthBank® list. Remind them: Get down the favorite things to do the favorite skills and talents they remember liking to do in earliest memory in elementary school (or before.) Each has now listed them (8-10 or more) in the StrengthBank® column. Now have each one put a star by the talent or skill listed that is his or her favorite - each remembers this as his or her favorite in earliest years. We are not dealing with today, we are recalling our favorites from earliest memories. Voice the StrengthBank® Colum n A. Have each student turn to a partner and read the list each just wrote. When the starred item is to be read, give a quick anecdotal 2 or 3 sentences for it. For example: My ✮’d item would be “talking in front of people” so my anecdote might be: “Yes, even if it was the paragraph in history class, I *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 18 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) would volunteer to read aloud.” B. Watch the group. Let them “get into it.” If you will let it happen, they will start getting louder, laughing, gesturing easily explaining their anecdote.... This is the most important time in the beginning session...letting them “see the light.” You are watching them be able to converse with each other about things both of them feel good about. Do not rush them to finish. Relational power is here! When you call the talk group back to order ask one question: “How did that feel. Good or Bad? Most will nod “good” or say “great” or “silly” or ___________________. • Point out to them that this is what it feels like to be talking about your StrengthBank® and be talking to someone who is also talking about something in his or her StrengthBank® • Point out that feelings come from THOUGHTS. What were you thinking about, talking about? Right! What you loved to do, what was fun for you. What was the other person thinking about and talking about? Right! What he or she loved to do, what was fun for that person. (Later in WOG J and K we will come back to this principle.) What would it be like all day long if everyone was thinking about and talking about his or her StrengthBank® activities? Hummm? Right! Nirvana. That is not going to happen. However, as we progress in these talk groups, we want to get your StrengthBank® so clear to you that you can see someone else’s: You are so comfortable with your own that it is easy to look at someone who has a totally different StrengthBank® and say: "Wow, that is “cool”! There is a better chance that more of our relating can be based on mutual StrengthBanks than on: “Why can’t you be “cool” like me?” The former has the making of good relationships; the later is a relationship *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 19 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) killer. Here begins appreciation for differences, more than appreciation, expectation of differences. Ask them to remember this moment. Bring it up often as a reminder throughout StrengthBank® Talk Groups. It is so easy to forget what a good conversation is supposed to look like, feel like, and produce. It is the same feeling you will have when you are experiencing good conversations. This is the goal we seek in all relationships so that both of us feel heard whether we agree or not. (In a later expander called "Conflict") KEY POINT: As students remember their pleasant exchange of a few moments ago, ask ”How hard would it have been to make you mad at that moment? Easy? Difficult? Why? The answer you are moving them to is that when I am in a “good mood” (talking to someone about what I like and hearing the other’s view on his or her likes, I am calm and not ready to be confrontational. The conclusion you want them to come to is that StrengthBank® alive and well is a confidence producer, a way to stay engaged in what is going on rather being in a defensive posture that says you have to prove yourself in every conversation. Being solidly confirmed in StrengthBank® is a life-long composure no matter what happens. Everyone has a StrengthBank® so there is relational contact point, something with which we can relate to each other that will please both of us. The problem is that everyone is not aware of his or her StrengthBank®. Our goal in dealing with others will become giving them a glimpse of their worth to maintain functional relationships with them. Always possible at some level. (Hope is now rising to the surface....) *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 20 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTGG 66 *SBP Chapter 2 SSBBTTG G 77 *SBP Chapter 2 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) Before these next two talk groups, be sure to read the Path Expander: Positive Places on the AWOGs. SF IV is presented here as well. Much of what can lead up to the talk groups in these foundational concepts is outlined in Student Guide 8 and the background is in *SBP . The SGs are outlined in the same order and with the same section titles as the book. Get lots of feedback so that you know they are anchoring the points to use on the upcoming AWOGs Preparation for WOG F Have students take a look at the WOG C in total and suggest how the other columns are going to fit with each one's filled in StrengthBank® column. Let them simply brainstorm. Some interesting observations may come from their guesses. Just go with it. You are just letting them get a framework for the next activity. This should only take about 5 minutes. It is a warm up. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) SG 8 FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) SS 20-21 OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SF IV SS 22,23 WOG F Now that they have made some comment about behaviors and the animals they see pictured on the StrengthBank® WorkOut Grid, have them pull out the “Behavior Styles Survey.” Go over the directions making sure each understands that there is not right or wrong. That one section will have more circles than the others. That one section may have very few circles. Make sure all words are clearly understood. We do not want a vocabulary problem to generate wrong results. In the interest and time and best results, read aloud the words and have the group go through the survey with you. That way no one with agonize over a word or dig too deep into a meaning and not know which ones to circle. As you read the words, demonstrating or giving additional synonyms and letting students give you synonyms is helpful for accuracy (especially if you have English as a Second Language (ESL) students in the room). Be sure there is vocabulary understanding on a first exposure level. Do not get caught up in diving deep into nuances of meaning or they will get *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 21 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) "bogged down" in semantics. Simply ask them what a word means to them to check for first response understanding. If they are on track, move on quickly.. If the totals for two sections are equal, tell them to make an arbitrary choice about which one is most like them. There must be a 1, 2, 3, 4. (If a student has nearly the same number in every section marked…encourage them to think of most usual 55% of the time, not every single thing each has every thought about being. Equal sections indicates high stress or not understanding the instructions-same thing is true for only one circled in each section. Animal WorkOut Grids Introduction Students are ready now to see how answers appear on the AWOGS H-I as #1, #2, #3, #4 preferences. Have them transfer #1, #2, #3, #4 to the WOG H. Remember! One style is not bad and another good. As you begin talking about the styles, do not show preferences for one or the other by having only good stories about one and bad stories about another. Be sure you can get into the pace or focus of each one easily even though you, too, have #1, #2, #3, #4 preferences. Later you are going to let the students guess what they think your #1, #2, #3, #4 is. Be ready to hear them positively and encourage them in the ability to “see” and “hear“ you preferences. Watch the language they use related to what animal is "uncool" and what one is "cool." This is a great place to begin the "all-styles-have-value." We all use all of them with differing frequency. In fact, if you cannot stand one of the styles, that means you cannot stand a particular functional, relationship-nurturing part of yourself....(We are not into denial or self-hate. Students begin here to see that some of their prejudice is based on opposing styles in people whose StrengthBank® and accompanying personality styles are not what they have traditionally appreciated. They may have *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 22 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) purposely failed to talk to or get to know a person with an opposite #1 preference. [nerds vs jocks, cheerleaders vs debate team, drama club vs drill team, etc.] Gaining greater appreciation for self can move them to better understanding of others and teach them how to get along with others who have opposite styles that accompany sometime opposite StrengthBanks.) Ask students how they think the grid works. Again, let them set up a thought framework before you tell them how it works. AWOGs Demonstrated. Point out how AWOG H and I are set up for two simple indicators: People Focus/Task Focus Slower Pace/Faster Pace. Keep it simple. Take time to model or let them model the variations of People focus/Task Focus and Slower Pace/ Faster Pace styles in speaking, moving, gesturing, eating, walking, etc. Be absolutely clear that they see how the grid works. Note the outer edges and that behaviors in the outer edges are not the pleasant part of us. That only in coming to center do we have pleasant, easy-to-get-along-with behaviors. Note difference in Aggressive vs Passive Note how Passive Aggressive might sound: St. Bernard #1/Mustang #2: "Yes, I will do it." Later you discover she did nothing. Example for passive-aggressive - St. Bernard #1/Mustang #2 Committee member agrees to bring refreshments to the meeting. She "forgets" and you have nothing. The passive-aggressive manipulation is that who can punish someone for "forgetting"? After all, we all forget. Right?! If you recognize that might be what is happening, learn to ask more questions than just accepting the "yes"--if you suspicion you have a St. Bernard who is moving to the outer edges. "What kind of refreshments do you think you *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 23 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) will bring? When do you plan to pick them up or make them - the reason I ask is that I might be available to help you if I knew when you plan to do it. Or, maybe another committee member will want to help. Would you mind calling me just before you get them or start preparations? I want to be sure we have the count for the meeting correct. Oh, can I reach you at _____________ just before you get or pick up the items...etc." The idea is that a St. Bernard may move closer to center and tell you the truth about whether he or she is going to bring the refreshments if you will use your St. Bernard (regardless of your first preference) to spend nonconfrontational time up front. Then, when the person actually brings the refreshments as promised, thank profusely and more than once. The passive-aggressive behavior, for whatever reason are behaviors you can understand. You have those styles too and when you feel uncomfortable, you have at some time exercised this very behavior. Maybe this is not your frequent GONE BADÓ but you have been here. Maybe next time so much of your time to get to center with this behavior GONE BAD may not be required. It depends on the St. Bernard behavior and how you treat that person with a #1 St. Bernard between now and then. Relationships build or are destroyed moment by mom ent! Ask kids for examples when that they now recognize as passive-aggressive with a #1 St. Bernard behavior “GONE BAD.” Be sure to point out the behaviors on the Conversations WorkOut Grid and if they have misdiagnosed, lead them to the better diagnosis. You are teaching them to bring in scenarios where they have been uncomfortable and let the class help by using the AWOG. Yes, relationship success is leadership and requires work on your part, too. Maybe the St. Bernard will learn to stay closer to center with you, maybe they will resist. Either way, you are supported to yourself in knowing you had some tools and can use them again if needed. Some require it; some *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 24 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) don't. Take joy in the folks who "are not so much work" and learn your relationship skills at a higher level by dealing with those who will not function in center with you. Example: Passive-Aggressive- Owl #1/Chimpanzee #2: "I gave you all the information you asked for." Later you discover one important piece of information was missing but it is too late Again the solution will be conversations spurred by questions up front. "I know you have so much information about this, let me ask you a question, what should I have asked you and did not? What piece of information later on is going to be critical for me that I did not ask about? I really appreciate your expertise on this. There is no way I could be as accurate as you are about this." In your ongoing relationship with this person, ask for more detail as you go. Relationships build or are destroyed moment by moment! The Owl part of us likes to answer questions about our area of expertise. It is flattering. Over time you will find that the #1 Owl behavior will not be so nit-picking and over explanatory if you will ask them for information more often all the time, not just when you need something important, No te that Passive is not Bet te r than aggressive; both are "GONE B AD " behaviors. Preferences….Not Voids Before you go any further, it is important that the students understand that styles are preferences. Example: Right-handed or Left handed (Even if someone says they are ambidextrous, note that there is still a preference for one hand over the other for certain tasks.) The style preference comes with you; it is designed to go with your StrengthBank®. (Give them info about what happened when we said left- *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 25 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) handed was wrong and tried to make everyone right-handed even if they were born with a left-handed preference. http://www.io.com/~cortese/left/southpaw.html http://www.alligator.org/edit/issues/97-sprg/970306/e02left.htm Point out what we covered in the training that we all have all preferences just like we all have some level of skill with both arms. However, if we are forced to use our less preferenced arm because our most preferenced arm is broken, we feel awkward and ill-equipped, at first, for even the simple task of brushing teeth. As time goes by we get better at using our less preferenced arm but are never quite as comfortable as we are when we have our most preferenced arm in use. (Be creative. Let them try to do something simple with their less preferenced hand or arm. Activity possibilities: write name on the chalk board with less preferenced hand; bounce a basketball with less preferenced arm, type with only the less preferenced hand, buckle a belt with less preferenced hand, draw a simply design with less preferenced hand, cut a piece of cake, pie, etc. with less preferenced hand…etc.) So it is with personality styles. We have all four to varying degrees. When we are doing things we like to do, we are in our favored (#1 or #2) preference. That's when relationships work best. When we have to do things we do not like, that are not comfortable, we often are in the "GONE BAD" part of our #1 or #2 preferences. Cite examples from the exercise you just did. Some kids probably just quit, or shouted that this was stupid or.... We are not our most congenial selves out of our #1 and #2 preferences any more than we are our most lovely selves when we cannot use our most preferenced arm or hand. This analogy can be used over and over as the kids bring in scenarios to “grid” and say something like “why did he or she say or do that?” Big point: We have all been in the "GONE GOOD" and "GONE BAD" realms of the grid. Have each student talk about times when each has seen himself *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 26 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) or herself "shouting" even though, “I am a #1 St. Bernard.” Not telling someone the truth in fear that it will hurt the other person's feelings like: "You have spinach between your teeth," even though I am a #1 Mustang who likes to tell it like it is, etc. Help them see, however, that most often when things are not working for them (out of their comfort zone)they______________ (List a frequent "GONE BAD" behavior here for each style. Note the “GONE BAD” Styles Survey. The students should begin to realize that they could have picked their #1,#2,#3,#4 using these as well…should see themselves same as in the Behavior Styles Survey. However, we don't want to develop more of these; we want to know what to do with ourselves when we meet them in others or see them in ourselves so that we keep better conversations and lower frustration. We all have "GONE BADs" - coming up with the styles that way is a bit negative. However, later it will help confirm by frequency that the #1 is truly the #1 for each one, the #2 is truly the #2, etc. SSBBTTG G 88 *SBP Chapter 2 Have some fun here! Let them tell you what they see when they "know you are not having a good day." (Or the principal....nurse, counselor, other teacher, parents, friends...) We all read behaviors at some level. What we want to do here is get specific about how to read them for a more frequent positive use, that is, to create better conversations that evoke more positive behaviors. Come up with examples of how one idea or statement would be presented Project Idea: 4 different ways related to the 4 styles. We typically use "It takes too long." Get Partner Pick Use it or pick another more relevant to kids like: Partners to brainstorm a great ex“You have only seven minutes to get to class.” ample for one of the ideas pre“Meeting is tomorrow afternoon, be there.” sented in the text. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 27 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) “Pep rallies do not last long enough.” If you have a songwriter, maybe they could compose a Special Note for following demonstrations: This is a great place to get one of song about songs the students with a dramatic bent who understands the concept to “perand their benefit or form” these. Also a great place to get the kids to come up with their own something. If it is songs…making sure the songs they choose have the right rhythm (pace) and something really words (focus). In the background below is listed some song suggestions for great that we could each style. It is important that you really get into this! Sing! You don't have use in future proto be a good singer. It is important that the “relationship stress relief song“ grams, we might methodology take root. We are going to dig deeper during the Path Exeven buy it from pander “Feelings.” Music is a great therapy in all of our lives if we learn how them. to use it properly. Use every chance Demonstrate the “GONE GOOD” way to say it and the “move to center” way to show the kids to reply. Then make the point that if using the style it takes to come to cen- the career possiter starts to irritate you, “sing a little song in your head“ that makes you bilities for their smile and remember that you have some of this style, too. Holiday Idea: Whatever holiday is Songs as a methodology comes up here. Have some fun with this. Ask the coming up, use it. kids when they sing. They all sing! You may even have a student who sees There are usually that as part of his or her StrengthBank®. Start encouraging them to suggest songs associated songs that fit the beat or message of what we are talking about. As you with holidays. Have know, that is one of the mechanisms used in *SB P. The more they feel their the kids identify music can be included in this class, the more they feel this StrengthBank® the Animals’ favorthing really is about them. Yeah, someone will go too far… they are teenites. One Christmas agers, after all. Put on your toleration ears and remember what it was like in we chose a Christhigh school when you listened to what adults called garbage…you know, mas carol that exlyrics that had such deep meaning like: Do wah do wha do wha ditty, talk pressed each Ani- *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 28 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) about the girl from New York City, She loves you, yeah, yeah, yeah, she loves you yeah yeah yeah, We all live in a yellow submarine, a yellow submarine a yellow submarine, and don’t forget, achy, breaky heart….she stomped that sucker flat. You get the drift. AWOGs Practiced 1. Let the students in partners or small groups of 4 come up with examples of 4 ways to demonstrate how each style would say, “No. I don’t want to go out with you.” “No, I do not care for Brussels sprouts.” “No, I am not going with you.” (or something with a No need to say. We have trouble saying "No" gracefully...good practice for saying no to drugs, cigarettes, sex... We are not getting that heavy here. However, every time a better way to say no is taught, the word as a choice is opened up for use positively in the teenage vocabulary.) In partners or groups then present what each developed. Critique each one to see that we could clearly determine the differences in style by the way something was said and the words used. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) mal. It told me a lot about how the kids understood the pace and priority of each one: Silent night: St. Bernard Jingle Bell Rock: Chimpanzee 12 Days of Christmas: Owl Up On the Housetop: Mustang 2. Ask each of them which one is the hardest for them to portray. After everyone has said which one is the hardest, let them know that is normal. In fact, it is abnormal to say that all of them are easy for you. Anyone who has tried to make all columns have the same number of circles or says that all styles are their favorites is in extremely high stressed and trying to please everyone. They have virtually avowed they have no distinctness. Very disturbing and probably a matter for some one on one conversations until they see distinct preferences. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 29 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) The one that is hardest to comfortably portray for any length of time displays where much relationship work will be needed...always. You are not trying to change someone’s style preferences or you would be denying that they have a StrengthBank® it needs. Our goal is not to make #4 into #1 preference, but to become more comfortable with using that style to draw others in to me in my StrengthBank®. So that we can “hear” each other, accomplish things together in harmony. There are people in the room who find one person's hardest style as the easiest for another person. That is why we need each other....to balance styles so that no matter what happens, someone will have the #1 style needed in the situation and we are willing to let them use it because we know our #1 is elsewhere, needed for another important circumstance. (Shared Leadership....in actuality the only REAL leadership.) Stay with it until you feel each of them understands that there are at least 4 (but in reality hundreds) of ways to say the same thing depending on style. This one tenet keeps life interesting and unpredictable. Those who do not learn to flex to others by using all personality style potential, find life becomes very frustrating and joyless because StrengthBank® remains unused, dormant... can not be seen because no one is drawn to you for simple conversation. The only way our StrengthBank® is seen is through relationship with others. To drive the point home, you might use historical figures or current people in the news and have what they say said in the style of someone else. Example: Have President Bush give a press release statement but in the style of Mohammed Ali; Dolly Parton give a tip on dating but in the style of Barbara *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 30 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Walters, etc. Let the kids get creative here. Anytime you can, let them give the demonstration! The point is that they see different styles in action and different results come from how something is said by a particular person. When you change the style, you change the impression and meaning we get from the same statement. Dolly Parton is not a journalist and her style is not a convincing journalist’s style. Mohammed Ali is not a politician and his style is not convincing for a press release. SSBBTTG G 99 Personality styles will also be used as benchmarks for keeping conversations started. However, what we want to keep stressing is that one style coupled with any profession is not better than another. If a person does not like a personality style, the person is saying he or she does not like a part of herself or himself. Hummmm, we are moving into the realm of teaching that in relationships it is dangerous to assume someone is against you because the other’s style differs or you just do not like "that kind of person. Now is the time to start getting the kids to come up with their own examples. They can work with different partners each talk group to get examples from their own lives, current events, other class research, tv clips, etc. From here on out, the kids talking their own examples is the thrust. They are to become very familiar with “taking things to the workout grids” and showing others how the situation demonstrates how to get from GONE GOOD to GONE BAD or the reverse. Practice, practice, practice. M.A.S.H episodes are great to show them how. I usually have an oversized, laminated set of the AWOG and the WOG C and place them under the tv screen and leaned up against the av cart. As episodes show an animal style working or transforming from GONE BAD to GONE GOOD or the reverse, I stop the tape and ask the kids: “What did you just see about the Animals?” If they get it I commend them and go on. If they don’t I explain, rewind and let them see it again before going on. Seems to work well and they like the Project Idea: Let the kids choose the medium they wish to use to demonstrate their grasp of an SS or AWOG basics or WOG C as it displays on AWOG. SS 27-29 *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 31 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTG G 1100 SSBBTTG G 1111 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) M.A.S.H. characters and the show is relatively clean by today’s standards. The series is usually available, too, so that they can watch some on their own and it is easy for you to grab various episodes to tape. I don’t usually get completely through any episode before they start bringing their own stuff – the goal. IT IS CRUCIAL THAT THE AWOG DOES NOT OVERSHADOW WOG C. THE AWOG IS A BLOW UP OF THE INTERIOR COLUMS OF WOG C-KEEP REMINDING THEM. We do not want them to lose the connection of the two workout grids. MAJOR LEARNING point in the connection of the two. There are many options to let them do their own version of “It takes too long” demonstration. This is a chance to get the Animals into their own phrases. Also, fertile for their imaginations is the 4-way demonstrations. Let them pick their own applications for the 4-way approach to things. As adults they will experience departments of people with a similarity like they see in the math department vs the fine arts department, etc. They can begin to observe that even amidst like interests, all 4 personalities are there…or not. When a department or team is made up of clones, there is usually high tension. However, if a hiring manager is astute at what we are talking about, he or she will look for the like interest and then choose to balance the team with Animals rather than assume the like interest (strength/dream) means the people will get along well together. An im portant point to show here is that column #1 on WOG C does not predict AWOG 1, 2, 3, 4 preferences! If it did, everyone with a similar dream would have exactly the same personality style. How boring that would be: For example: • All actors could only play one part. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Project Idea: This would be a good time to teach caricature (political cartoons, ridicule vs jest in fun, how Animal icons we are using are caricatures… etc.) So many mediums can participate: • Written dialogue, essays, advertisement… • drawings • photography • In fact, you might mention that if no one could write or Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SS 31-41 46-47 *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 32 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) • EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) All Presidents of the United States would have the same personality draw a caricature of you, well, it probaExample: I like to take prominent Presidents of the past (I stay away bly means that you from too current references so that the discussion will not be jaded by are not letting the their personal feelings – another interesting point about presidential real you come politics or elections… how much our feelings predict rather than our through. We all brains? Hummmmmm That for another course.) have our speciaties. o President Truman (#1 Mustang-Cigar in mouth “The buck Note examples stops here.”) given here and that o President Bush (the first) (#1 St. Bernard – kinder, gentler, there are literally a million ways to nation) o President Reagan (#1 Chimpanzee – Great Communicator- demonstrate it. speeches replete with metaphors “The crew of the space shuttle Challenger honored us by the manner in which they lived their lives. We will never forget them, nor the last time we saw them, this morning, as they prepared for their journey and waved good-bye and "slipped the surly bonds of earth" to "touch the face of God.") o President Nixon (Owl – “Let me make this perfectly clear“ and make hand gestures for “quotes” to punctuate his speeches. • All advertisements would be directed at a one-style population. Every ad might be Mustang-style like the current Allstate Ad, Champanzee -style like the Cingular or Target current ads, Owl -style like the many cholesterol ads, or St. Bernard-style like the current Chase Manhatten or Citibank ads. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 33 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) There are many ways to demonstrate the point and it is critical that the kids understand that putting on the personality of a profession will not make that your StrengthBank®. If more parents understood this, they would stop trying to push kids into careers not suited to the StrengthBank® of the child that will manifest itself in the appropriate Animal mix for the environment best for that child’s StrengthBank®. For example, law degree does not necessarily mean lawyer for the District Attorney’s office or a large law firm. It might be handling legal issues for the homeless or a nonprofit business, or being an actor who is particularly adept at writing courtroom dramas. Life is too unique to predict it. That is why the discovery of the dream is so important. The dream (StrengthBank® calling) followed works out all the other issues because it was designed with them involved. Nothing short of amazing and exciting on the receiving end. Life will never be dull in your StrengthBank® because you will never know or reach the full extent of it…that’s in the design. Woweee! Let the students feel that excitement that what they are seeing in themselves is an original! And, original is good! Put another way, ask if they have ever noticed that the friends they choose are not clones of one another. There is a reason…. Choosing to your StrengthBank® rather than to a convenient or seemingly easier option has relational consequences. People are drawn to others who are confident (and we all can be if we know we have a StrengthBank® and are growing in it). Approachable (people in StrengthBank® are having fun so are easy to bring to “center of the AWOGs- easy to talk to), and interested in the other person. (People in StrengthBank® are more likely to be othercentered, looking for opportunities to confirm someone else’s StrengthBank® so that we can both “have fun.”) Loving to sing but saying you would never go through what the American Idol contestants go through is in essence saying you do not love to sing or *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 34 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) you do not have the confidence or faith in the vision. (There is no way any of the American Idol winning contestants could handle the pressure and criticism if they had not believed the StrengthBank® vision. Some who fail may have just wanted to be a star and thought singing a little song was not a big deal or were pressured into auditioning or wanted this to be their vision but it was someone else's, not theirs.... If there is an American Idol competition going on, many conversations about StrengthBank® could be used with it.) A beauty pageant or sports contest might serve the same purpose. Get kids to start listening for StrengthBank® dreams fulfilled or coercion to do something someone else deemed important. Then teach to follow the career. If you cannot tell at first how the person handles others, celebrityship will tell the tale. Many crumble under celebrity status or lose focus on growing a StrengthBank® if the “win” was pursued out of other motives than StrengthBank® dream, i.e., just to be rich and famous, only thing you thought you could do, wanted to please a parents, want power over others, etc. When the motives are other than StrengthBank® the person can exhibit unsavory personal behaviors. Marilyn Monroe vs Meryl Streep, Leonardo Dicaprio vs Brad Pitt, Aretha Franklin vs Madonna, Troy Aikman vs O.J. Simpson, etc. Ask the kids for examples. No one can take your StrengthBank® from you... no job loss, loss of girlfriend or boy-friend, tragedy, unkind act.... nothing can take it away from you except you. If you do not choose to keep the vision, to understand that is where the "best" you will always be behaviorally and relationally. If you keep it tucked away and useless, it still does not go away! Even you cannot destroy it! It was designed in you before you were born. To grow your StrengthBank® was why you were born; it is your mission in life. So, why not discover it and use it for a more pleasant and productive life?! We cannot always be in our strength in every subject in school. However, *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 35 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) that we recognize we need help in some and can help someone else in another is the beginning of learning to work as a team or in community with others. It is the beginning of learning that if we choose something to do in this world or to earn a living, if it is something that is just for the money and not because it is our StrengthBank®, our relationships will suffer. We will show our worst self and repel others rather than be in a job, vocation, or volunteer activity that is fun for us. "Fun" usually means that others around us are enjoying our company. We usually don't define fun as a time when everyone ignores us and stays away from our very presence when possible. When we are having fun, we draw others to us. Be ready with examples and get more from the group. Example: Who is a real person at school that you never talk to but you have seen them at their place of work and they are : "transformed". You almost did not recognize them. Or someone who is quiet in school and “comes alive” on the basketball court or as a drill team leader… What about a quiet person who stays mostly to himself or herself and is always working at the computer; then, you see the person as a sales rep in a computer store and they are "Chatty Kathy or Chatty John"). Stress that it is a natural need to talk to someone. The person who never talks to anyone is behaviorally saying there is nothing I want to talk about. Finding something to talk about is as easy as recognizing and saying aloud something you see in the other person that is good (come on now, there is something). That one observation is a surefire way to open them up to a conversation. Possibilities now emerge; each of you can relate to each other StrengthBank® to StrengthBank®. Example: (Feel free to use your own example.) A friend of mine in high *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 36 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) school was a good student but not in the "in" crowd. Josie was poor and not unattractive but looks and grooming were not her main focus. She was interested in computers. Now as an adult, one of the "in" crowd Mindy is in desperate need of a friend who can help her set up a new computer. Mindy's husband Gene had met Josie who is now a photographer like he is. Josie has developed her photography business around use of computers to a very high level. Gene mentioned Mindy's need to Josie and Josie offered to help. Josie and Mindy talk as if they have known each other for ages. Well, yes they have but in high school they did not have one word to say to each other. Point: StrengthBank® is not partial. Everyone has one, even the person you think is so unlike you that you will never have anything to say to each other. Opening those doors to each other through conversations allows for connections now and later in life that are more fun because you did know each other in high school. Human beings like to be known from the past; we like "roots." Who do you know that is quiet and shy until he or she is on stage or are in the spotlight in a ballet? o o o o o o o Who do you know that rarely puts two sentences together Clark Kent vs Superman A pop singer who can't give a good interview… An Idiot Savant (extreme example)… An actor who tries to sing and can't… A singer who can't dance… Moses could not speak well yet he persuaded a King... Albert Einstein was considered mentally deficient (he was dys- *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 37 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) lectic) yet he won a Nobel prize... o Consider that 10, 20, 30, 40 years from now by choices made today, some of the students in front of you will have "amazed" us all.... one way or the other. Note to adults: Perhaps, if you attended your 10 year high school reunion, you may have some stories to share. StrengthBank® may not be obvious from a casual observer while someone is in high school. High schools is a very regulated, peer pressure to be like others environment. What we want to get across is that each of them has one and knows a direction for it that may or may not be available while in school. Like President Reagan (or other example you have chosen earlier), StrengthBank® had to go through some different avenues but when his was finally revealed, we could look back and see its seeds from the very beginning. Crucial here is knowing StrengthBank® is there for every person and being encouraged to seek relevant activities in it now may keep that StrengthBank® vision alive to be lived out in full as an adult. It is there! Discovery and future planning in the daily now is where we want the students to talk. That is the sole reason for talk groups. Talking about what “can be” gives a better chance that StrengthBank® dreams will come to fruition. Encourage the kids bring in examples for the next StrengthBank® Talk Group In fact, as has been mentioned, start EVERY talk group by asking for an example to “take to the WOGs. Students can then begin to see that choices have behavioral consequences, that is, relationship consequences. We can forgive others for being in a “GONE BAD” because we have been there, too, and maybe it is just not that person' is not in StrengthBank®. They begin to learn to not take other's behavior personally. *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 38 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTG G 1122 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) The big thing you want to hear from the kids is that they understand that vulnerability is a part of forgiveness. That to be on such solid personal StrengthBank® foundation that another’s Animal does not throw you. We all have tough stuff to deal with at times and some of it is another’s walking daily in GONE BADLAND. However, remembering that we, too, have our GONE BADLAND moments is the critical component most people never learn to live. Again, that is how the songs can help! Anything we do that keeps us out of GONE BADLAND,, for very long anyway, is a great thing. Learning H.A.L.T is a critical step to practice and then share your experience. You could make this the challenge for the partner teams to report on next talk group or in the regular class as the fulfillment of an assignment. Set them up to experiment. Every time they try something and it works, they become better relational beings, if not this very minute, as they mature and remember this exercise.. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SS 48 SEX: To prevent premarital sex, HALT is most effective. Are you too lonely? Is that why you fall for or give the ”line.” Well, I know, but this may be a perfect opportunity for them to understand the brainwork behind abstinence. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 39 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) abstention, abstinence the trait of abstaining (especially from alcohol) abstinence act or practice of refraining from indulging an appetite http://www.visualthesuaurus.com Point out the number of selfprefixes. Conclusions to lead them to: 1. abstinence is a choice. 2. No one has a responsibility of having sex with anyone. It is a choice. 3. Having sex starts in the brain and is either controlled there or not. 4. No way you can truthfully say you could not help it. You made a choice. Plain and simple. This particular choice needs to be made before the question is asked or the situation arises. Analogy ideas: *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 40 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) a. You make a choice to put on deodorant BEFORE you get body odor if you want it to assist in smelling sweet to others. b. You make a choice to eat food BEFORE you starve to death. c. You choose to drink water BEFORE you can get dehydrated. d. You make a choice to use special soaps, creams, eat the right foods, etc. BEFORE you might have to deal with more zits. e. You make a choice to wear clothes to school BEFORE you walk out of the house. f. Etc. My brain stopped here but the more ridiculous the better as along as the analogy is good. Kids will try to prove your analogy false but in the process, they just might hear! The sex issue is not one to shy away from but is one to think out before the talk group. Give them a perspective they can now hear a new way. They now know the place of the brain and feelings and actions! Yahoooooo *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 41 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTG G 1133 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) You and I hear too many adults never get this idea. Stuck is too easy, gets too much sympathy and understanding, is too easy to excuse, ends up creating too much violence that we end up rationalizing because, after all, the individual was a victim of circumstances. If you look carefully, you will see underneath all that blaming and crying “I am a victim of my childhood, my broken fingernail, my mother’s father’s fifth cousin’s slander…. etc. is someone who allowed a circumstance to justify a permanently stuck-inbackwards point of view. Twins for example, really have to come to the battle ready. They come as one of another same, or “unoriginal,” or “nobody ever truly knows who I am. Smart parents get down to the nitty gritty to encourage individuality and distinct dream difference or twins get confused. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SS 48 Each of us has a UNIQUE (GOOD) StrengthBank®. That alone is worth, that alone says you are loved, that alone is a reason to move forward no matter what! We have others in our lives that can , IF EACH ONE OF THEM chooses, enjoy the fruits of our StrengthBank® with us. The hard part is truly under- *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 42 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) standing that it is a choice based not on the value of my StrengthBank® but on the other person’s perception and choices. Boy! If they can get a grip on this, we are winning. There will always be people in our lives who do not honor our StrengthBank® calling and some of them are very close to us. That does not discount the value of each StrengthBank® calling! It just says some don’t come to the party. Let it not be our StrengthBank® kids. They will be the leaders far and above others when they grab hold of the stuck options – no one has to stay there. NO ONE! You might apply a dating metaphor here as well. There are far too many who get stuck on someone they could not have or do and are then rejected by in high school. Scarred for life because I got stuck on you is all too common and has been the reason for some very wrong decisions. Some high school romances grow together but the odds are not good. StrengthBank® based decisions whether your current “squeeze” approves or not is the better platform for life decisions. Young love can seem so overwhelming unless there is another anchor….Enter StrengthBank®! The goal is that the students have the StrengthBank® Tool Kit understood. SSBBTTG 1 4 G 14 It is all of its parts not just one. We’ll discuss more on this later but they need *SBP to be able to say that WOG represents the major pieces of the Tool Kit and Chapter 3 that WOG J –end fit into the major framework of WOG C, that is, help come up with the completion and constant working of WOG C. Be sure they realize that WOG C changes when there is a dramatic change in what you do every day. We call those times major adjustments: • From school to college (or work) • From junior high to high school • Changing geographic locations – more than 1000 miles away. (However, moving 50 miles can be a big deal, too.) • From single to married • Etc. SG 8 SF IV *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 43 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTG G 1155 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) Focus on making sure the kids understand WOG C titles above every column. We are expanding their understanding so that they will realize that WOG C is the 1 page StrengthBank® WorkOut Grid. All the other WOGs and AWOGs are merely to get the information to the WOG C and apply the Treasure Hunt. If you need to expand this into two talk groups, do so. There is a payoff for being in ones' StrengthBank®. Have the students look at the words below the word StrengthBank® and above where they have written a list. EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) SS4958-58 When doing I have: Courage to Risk (Ask students when doing something different is not comfortable. With several answers you and the students will discover that what is risky for some is not for others. That is what you want to point out. Our risk level is tied to our innate StrengthBank®. We will risk changes in something that is easy for us. We risk no change when we are uncomfortable with what talent or skill is at issue. Example: One student will risk making an oral presentation for a special project where another would never volunteer to stand up in front of the group. One might easily risk singing a new song never seen before in front of a group; one would not dare do that without much practice. One might risk asking a girl out on a date where another would have to have the girl make that invitation seem very acceptable before he would risk asking her out. One person's comfort level is not another's. Not good or bad - just is. So for a parent, friend, teacher, etc. to tell one sibling he or she needs to do what the older sibling has done can create problems. Our StrengthBanks are individual and unique.) *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 44 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Unlimited Growth - (Dig into the meaning of unlimited. Ask students a definition and examples. Because the StrengthBank® is supernatural to anything we could think of or create in ourselves, it has never ending potential. The earlier you plug in and follow its path, the more it will reveal itself. Example: Do you usually remember to eat a meal? Of course you do not forget to eat. That is never-ending until you are dying. That desire comes with you and is not limited. As long as you are alive you will have the desire to and need to eat. As long as you are on this earth, you will have the desire to enjoy what you do and the desire to know more about yourself and the world around you in reference to it. Unlimited. Be sure the students understand we are talking about growth as a relational person here, not physical growth. As them what personal growth means to them. To summarize the discussion, be sure they understand that StrengthBank® is the surest, positive direction for their personal growth and will be as long as they are on this earth. Remind them that everyone also has the choice of accepting his or her StrengthBank® and experiencing personal growth. What would that be like? Ask them. Ask them if they know anyone in their life that is just "existing" with no purpose, no joy, no goals…. just breathing and doing what he or she is forced to do? Interesting discussion should come about. Anyone without a purpose brings us down. If you encounter someone without a purpose, try to let him or her know you see potential. If they will not accept that they have a StrengthBank® potential, an inborn, given way to experience a purpose for living, move on or that person could bring you down with them. *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 45 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Example Demonstration: A common but great illustration of this is to have a student stand on a chair. Take the student's hand and gently help them down. Easy. Then ask the student to stand on the chair again. This time ask the student to stay standing on the chair and try to life you or another student up on the chair. Impossible. Point: It is easier to bring someone down than to lift them up. If someone is unwilling to see his or her StrengthBank®, his or her way to contribute to this world and enjoy the process, walk away. You will likely not be able to lift that person up but that person can surely bring you down. Caution: Be sure the understanding is that first we try to help them see each StrengthBank®. We do not want to walk away from someone because he or she is unaware of a better way of seeing themselves. First, reach out and try to help that person see his or her StrengthBank® potential. A statement, “Hey, you are really good at getting our attention,” is better “Hey, loser, get outta my face.” At the same time, this example starts getting at the wisdom of choosing to be around people who will support and confirm your StrengthBank® because you are able to support and confirm theirs…mutual personal growth. (This can extend to future mates, co-workers, etc.) Get m any ideas - When you are engaged in something and really enjoying it, notice that you have many ideas. In fact, when you are having a good time, you do not have trouble talking to the people around you. Enjoying what you are doing is a brain stimulant. Doing something that is easy for you, that you enjoy actually clears your head for ideas. Example: Take a favorite exercise. I love to swim. It is part of my physical StrengthBank®. My body design swims well. It does not jog well. So, I swim for exercise. When I have had an intense day, I go to the gym and get in the *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 46 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) pool to swim laps. Some of my greatest ideas come as I swim. I am engaged in something that I love to do and it literally frees my mind. Example: I have always loved to read and read several different things at the same time. I find that when I read several different things rather than finishing one before starting the other gives me ideas and connections that I would never have thought of if I had read the books, magazines, research articles, etc. one at a time. That fits my StrengthBank® - I have been a professional speaker who is called upon to be well versed in many areas at once and able to respond with detail to many different situations "in the moment." Use your own examples here then solicit them from kids. We all know what we are doing when we are able to get ideas. I never get good ideas when I am struggling to do my checkbook. It takes all my concentration to think in numbers. However, a mathematician would find working with numbers relaxing and probably when he or she gets many new ideas. Creative - The ideas you get when doing something that is interesting, that gets your attention, and that is fun to think about, unleashes creativity that allows you to change the way you are doing something. Or, it changes the way you perceive something. Example: A young man was walking in empty fields with his dog. The weeds and grass were about a foot high and dry. He loved to walk and think. His had an engineer's training and a mind that looked for detail and answers to how things work. He observed after his walk that burr's were clinging to his socks and to his dog's fur. As he patiently extracted the burrs, he began to look closely and realize that the burrs stuck with a series of hooks that grabbed loops in clothing or hair. He just kept that in his mind and later the *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 47 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) idea came to him for what is now Velcro. If you will look at Velcro tape, it works by having one side hooks and one side loops. Borrowed from nature by a man whose StrengthBank® was engineering so he trained in that area-a man who loved nature and looked with greater creativity to how nature worked than someone without that StrengthBank®. Documentation: George de MestralHe found the logistics of attaching hundreds of tiny hooks to cloth tape to be a challenge, but eventually his hook and loop fastener was manufactured as VELCRO®, derived from the French words velour (velvet) and crochet (hooks). Although most hook and loop tapes are nylon-based, there are also varieties made from plastic, stainless steel, and silver-impregnated substances for electrical applications. Invention Impact VELCRO® fasteners have provided society with a practical and effective tool. Touch fasteners are used in clothing, aircraft, office equipment, and sporting and leisure equipment. They are also used in the automotive and medical industries, nuclear engineering, and NASA’s space program. Inventor Bio De Mestral -Born Jun 19 1907 - Died Feb 8 1990 - from a small village near Lausanne, Switzerland. By working odd jobs, he paid his way through the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne, where he graduated as an electrical engineer. He began his own company to manufacture VELCRO® fasteners, and later sold it and all patent rights. Today, the Velcro companies continue to manufacture touch fasteners and other products. Perseverance - The ideas and creativity may or may not lead to the goal you are seeing immediately. There will be struggles to overcome. For example, getting through high school with the necessary composite of *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 48 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) skills developed from your talents along with the necessary socialization is the immediate goal. Struggles may include: o o o o o o o Homework completed Passing tests Getting to school on time regularly Following the rules of behavior Understanding what is being taught Making friends and keeping them Making after high school decisions that work best Deciding what role you will play as you get to know the opposite gender Feeling confident around your peers Being well-liked Being treated well by teachers and principals Getting along well at home with family and neighbors Working at a part-time job Getting a good recommendation from those you work for and with o o o o o o o (Have students enumerate…. It is interesting to see what they see as struggles. Remember this for the Path Expander SiX - Perception.) Understanding your struggles in light of your StrengthBank® leads to being able to persevere. If you do not know your have a purpose and that it is bigger than this moment or struggle and that it is dependent on how you handle the struggle before you, you may not persevere. That is, you might be tempted to just let the world roll by or roll over you. Dissatisfaction sets in for those who do not persevere and lives can become dull and meaningless. Example: What if Christopher Columbus had decided that it was just too *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 49 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) much hassle to pursue his StrengthBank® (Dream of finding what became known as America and evangelizing the natives.)? Instead of giving in, he kept promoting his idea that he could open the trade routes to Asia… beyond Spain. He kept talking about it until he got the ear of the Queen Isabella of Spain. She could see his vision and supported it. Now here is a man who had a dream, ventured out where no one had ever gone before, not knowing what he would find, not knowing accurately what he found when he found it but returned home, ventured out again and found the same continent again. That is a step of faith; he believed his StrengthBank® vision. Great lesson for us! Columbus Background: He also had some tragedies (struggles) along the way. Lack of funds and loss of spouse. Christopher Columbus. Born in Genoa, Italy, in 1451 to a weaver, young Columbus first went to sea at the age of fourteen. As a young man, he settled in Portugal and married a woman of noble background. After his wife's death in 1485, Columbus and his young son, Diego moved to Spain. Like all learned men of his time, Columbus knew the world was round. He theorized that since the earth was a sphere, a ship could eventually reach the Far East from the opposite direction. He thought to establish trade routes to Asia in this manner. The fifteenth-century Europeans were not aware of the South and North American continents during this timeframe. Mapmakers did not show an accurate picture and no one knew there was a Pacific Ocean. For a decade, Columbus approached the Portuguese king and the Spanish monarchs to obtain a grant to explore possible trade routes to the west. After initially turning him down, King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella reconsidered once the Moors had been successfully expelled from Spain in 1492. Columbus promised to bring back gold, spices, and silks from the Far East, to spread Christianity, and to lead an expedition to China. In return, Columbus asked for and got the hereditary title "admiral of the ocean seas" and became governor of all discovered lands. He also had some tragedies (struggles) along the way-lack of funds and loss of *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 50 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) spouse. Energy, Drive, Passion-This the most telling payoff for being in your StrengthBank®. You are engaged! You do not get tired of doing what you love. You are not easily distracted. Time flies; using this talent for you is effortless…. could go on forever. In fact, your passion for it sometimes gets you in trouble because Mom or Dad or Teacher wants you to do something else. Ask the kids: o Think about subjects at school. Which ones are easier than others? o Do you agree that in the ones that are not your favorites, that are hard for you the time drags? It is the same amount of time for each but it seems like math class is longer, English class is longer, or physical education lasts forever. o Let students answer your questions here. Let them see they already have hints during the school day for what is each one's StrengthBank®. o Then ask each to look at his or her StrengthBank® list. Start getting them to draw parallels *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 51 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) StrengthBank® Likes List • Subjects/Activities Each Likes at School talks a lot Speech drama, debate… fishing math, Computer Science, Band, Choir, music theory, medicine, … doodle in dirt geology, arts, computer graphics…. running athletics, band, health, medicine, gymnastics… making dugouts, business management, marketing, pilot… playing war only liked outdoor science, physical education, geology activities write plays then speech, drama, debate, English… act them out playing “office” business education, English, marketing… read English, reading, history, music… help friends with psychology, sociology, English, cheerleading, stuproblems dent government… girl scouts/boy Student government, science, math… English, scouts speech, debate What we do not want to do is say the StrengthBank® list changed! The talent or skill may be talked about in more sophisticated, targeted, or current activity line-up but the basic talent is the same now as it will be when each reaches age 80. One more quick example: Ask student to think about what begins to happen 30 minutes before school is out each day? Restless Want to get out early Can't concentrate as it gets closer to the bell *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 52 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) Start getting all kinds of energy because right after school is band practice Start getting all kinds of energy because now I can… At the end of the day, how many kids “come alive” who have “plodded” through the school day as if in torture and totally de-energized. When what you are doing after school is more engaging than what you have in any academic subject, pay attention. You are telling yourself something. If you do not have some value to the educational day, you are saying your are already losing StrengthBank® ground. Something about the school day hits your StrengthBank®. Something even if it is the process of socializing at lunch. No one is without a StrengthBank®. No one. Since a high school day has so many facets all rolled into a few hours, something is there to teach the individual, to grow the individual as a person, and to give each a glimpse of your future based on what he or she has always seen in your head as the vision… the dream of each one's life's purpose. If some students struggle with finding the vision, be patient. Ask them more questions. No one is born without a StrengthBank®. No one. SSBBTTG G 1166 The Treasure Hunting Trot ties everything together and gives the students Project Idea: another great chance for specific application to their lives. Let them work Research a famous SG 9 SS 69-74 *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 53 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG SSBBTTG G 1177 Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) with the same partner, perhaps, for these two talk groups or maybe let them historical or curchoose a partner instead of random assignment this once. rent day hero related to this trot. We are confirming our StrengthBank® but looking at our frequent “GONE Everyone who contributes has BADs” vs “GONE GOODs.” We must learn to look at our frequent, “not so great” behavior to figure out where it is coming from and how to get back to learned a version of this trot. By heroes StrengthBank®. make it clear we Have the students look at the “GONE BADs” Style Survey. As the kids look at are talking about people whose legthese lists you will hear laughter at themselves and some defensive “Yea, I acy added somedo that but it is because....” What we want to get to here is taking responsibility for behavior. It is not a personal attack to say we notice you are sarcas- thing positive to the world. For tic; it is something that says you have alot of Chimpanzee but maybe it is example, Hitler or not being used in your StrengthBank® right now. Use positive behavior Osama Bin Laden modification. As you go back to the workout grid, go through the steps of would be off limits. finding more depth about your StrengthBank® from recognizing and accepting that you do have weaknesses and you do have wrong side outs. De- We are looking for example of salt and nial merely stifles growth in StrengthBank® and limits relationship powe. light not bitterness and darkness. When things are working well, relationships are not a problem, the StrengthBank® WorkOut is happening positively. However, when frustration, anger, hate begin to rise and conflict may be pending, that is the time to go to the grid and workout what is happening. Once you see what is happening, a person has the option of making a change for himself/herself that will affect the situation positively or one can always make it worse…but that is not the goal. Hopefully, the students will want to make the situation better. Probably bears talking about negative manipulation. Negative manipulation occurs when one uses the workout grid for evil purposes: Purposely *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 54 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) “work” the grid so that the other person has a hard time staying in StrengthBank® “GONE GOOD” behaviors. No need to go into extreme detail here. Our intent is not to teach them how to manipulate people for selfish purposes, to give them ideas we do not want foremost in their minds. Funny thing, you never have to teach the bad behaviors….When a situation is not comfortable at any level for you Step One : (Point to this on the grid and note that it is not furthest to the left as you would expect number 1 to be. Get their attention and keep it as you go step by step. Do this together as a group. Do not continue until everyone has taken each step.) Look at the behavior in you that says whatever is going on is uncomfortable for you. It will be one of the behaviors on the “Gone BAD” list and probably in your #1 or #2 preference…at some level…or another that you have added like: • Can’t stay awake (St. Bernard); won’t look at anyone • Keeps fidgeting (Mustang); picking nose rapidly • Talks to himself or herself and is disturbing others ( ); keeps laughing aloud in weird laughter Chimpanzee • Takes too much time making notes perfect (Owl); repeatedly rewrites and erases with sounds of pounding and brushing off erasure becoming annoying Write whatever you are going to call the uncomfortable behavior in the “WrongSide Outs/GONE BAD” column under workout step1. Note to them: If that behavior continues, we have learned we will be pushing people away from us. Others will not want to be drawn to us if this is the behavior we have frequently. Take a moment to think and observe. What are you doing when this annoying behavior happens most often. For instance, this never happens when you are_________________________________(have them *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 55 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) look at starred item in StrengthBank® column.) Obviously, the talent you are using here is not your “fun” part. Step Two : Write in the #2 in weakness column what is it each is doing when this annoying behavior frequently comes up. Note that our next discovery step is to think about what behavior is the opposite, the one we would prefer, the one that would get better feedback from others. The opposite of the #1 step is _______________ . Step Three : write whatever fills the previous blank under the #3 which falls in the “GONE GOOD behavior” column. (This may take some time and prompting.) Wait! Now, to discover the StrengthBank® item that would bring forth this preferred behavior in this child. This may take them some time. In fact, they may need to think about it until next talk group if that is appropriate to the amount of time you have left this session. They need to look back over their life and remember activities that brought positive behaviors like each wrote as Step Three. Those are StrengthBank® talents used in an activity. There can be more than one. Give them your example from faculty training or from what you have discovered since then. The reason this may take some time is that the student may not have this positive feedback in memory. It may come down to helping them form what activity they would be doing that would anticipate the preferred behavior or feedback each wrote in #3. Help them put this together by looking at what they have listed as “likes” in the StrengthBank® column. This is a powerful truth they can use over and over if they once learn to use it. Step Four : Write the StrengthBank® activity that has in the past brought the preferred feedback/behavior. Do not worry if you need to spend more time here than you thought. As the students bring in situations to “work out”, you will have an opportunity to rein- *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 56 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) force this over and over. Once this tool becomes a part of the thinking process, they will always have a way to figure out why something is not working for them. Wow! Great examples to use with them could be yours, another faculty member who is willing to come in and tell how they learned this Trot or a community member, or a fellow student who has been particularly beset with tough circumstances. As time goes on, you want to encourage these kids to come back and share with the next group. Maybe they are all familiar with a student or local hero who used the idea and found their good will treasure in the midst of disaster. Let them dig in and learn this dance. They may amaze you and themselves as well if you are able to get them down to “where they live” today! Use Interviews: As students to go back to interview questions that looked at different options and what sacrifice would have been worth it. Can they see that some of the interviewed people know the Trot and some did not? StrengthBank Match –up then Jolt! When they are finished asked them what they discovered. Go with it. Some will have found out they had 10’s on many items but they are not the ones they are using most right now. Some will find that they have few 10’s ….meaning no talent they are using just now is a StrengthBank® talent….(not good, my guess is a list like this means something is going on in that student’s life that bears one on one discussion. He or she is other focused. I say that because I remember when my brother and sister-in-law got a divorce, my nephew sat through Sophomore English and the study of A Separate Peace oblivious to it or any other things going on. What turned him around and got him engaged again was working with him until he talked about it. Talk groups are for kids to talk about it…in the group and sometimes one on one with you or a mentor. We do not want one child without the knowledge of StrengthBank® - it can be what makes the differ- *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 57 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) ence in a life that is useful or not useful.) What the num ber means… Right now, that is how closely what each does every day to what each one gets energy from doing. We want to monitor that number as each semester changes. Though the StrengthBank® list should not change significantly, the daily activities list will depending upon the subjects studies, phase of extra curricular activities, etc. This can be a great eye opener as students realize that what they do on a regular basis does affect how much they are using of each StrengthBank®. Remember, the goal is that after high school, each student will make better choices about vocation and lifestyle based on knowing themselves well. This match up is a precursor to good career and life choices. Give them some examples about how to interpret the items, look at the skill or talent the StrengthBank® item requires more than the activity itself. For example, you would not match "making mud pies" to making mud pies on their today list. You would look for today's activities to see if the starred item that is most frequent includes the same talents and skills as making mud pies: liking to have hands in the mud (or something with same consistency) getting a liquid mass to the right consistency to shape things molding shapes with fingers enjoying the smell of earth being creative with shapes using concentration and great powers of imagination doing something alone for others' satisfaction being able to replicate life or a concept in solid form Let them know that his number is the one we will watch for changes. As what you do changes, the amount of "fun" changes. Be sure not to say what they should like or should call fun. Remember, you are guiding them to *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 58 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) each one’s StrengthBank® not a clone of you, someone you know, or what you think is best. SSBBTTG G 1188 SSBBTTG G 1199 *SBP Chapter 4 SSBBTTG G..2200 SSBBTTG G 2211 This talk group is to make sure the Trot is understood and talk about how it is the road to good judgment, not blaming and feeling unworthy or victimized. The Trot is the WorkOut that needs to be well understood. It is the process at the heart of the entire WOG C. All the concepts and principles are to let them truly know how to listen from the inside out… the survival tool of utmost importance. The perception discussion coming up can reference this again. Here is a great opportunity to get the kids journaling, hopefully, as a lifetime habit. There is nothing more encouraging when times are tough than to go back and read how far you have come… and that there were other times things were tough, too. See PE Perception in addition to SG 11 and *SBP Being the Daily WorkOut Steps discussion. Make sure you have time to role play the first three with them Give them ideas about how to really keep this process working for them. Have them look at WOG O and make a commitment to start. What we want to dig into here is the seen and unseen concept on a much more individual level, that is the kids can begin to realize that their behaviors are the “writing on the wall” that tells us their inner perception. A startling thing they might want to think about is that they are not the only ones who have this relationship information. They never could hide their hearts for long anyway, but now, they need to begin to realize that over time, we all wear our inner most thoughts as outward behaviors. SG 9 SS 77 SG 10 SS 77-81 SF V SS 82-83; 85-87 SS 84 Example: Why do you label someone jovial? Moody? Fun to be with? Super Smart? The kids responses might be and probably will be appearance, the way the *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 59 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) person _______________________; what they see the person do, etc. They should note that their perception is working. How much is based on fact? Is the jovial person always smiling? Is the moody person happy one day and who knows the next Make the point that over time we know if someone is really wanting to connect or is manipulating us to get something, have someone to tell all their troubles to but never want to listen, etc. Yes, behaviors come from thinking…they do not magically happen. However, as we watch you, we begin to see a pattern that tells us the motives of your heart. In other words, how you choose to think is eventually known as how we think of you from what those motives have led you to do, say, choose. You cannot hide your inner motives; we can read you like a book in a very short time. It is important what you choose to put in your brain because it comes out as a behavior toward me. What music do you listen to? Kind of movies you see? Regular television you watch? Board games you like to play? Things you read up on and stay current on? Yes you are what you think. That old adage has merit. A speaker once said that he heard that at age 16. Do I need to say what 16-year-old boys have on their minds about every 7 minutes? Well, he became quite concerned about what he would become. Funny, but the ideas hear is to get the kids to control what their mind feeds on and eventually acts out… You are on display whether you like it or not. After you go through Steps 1-3 WOG O, get commitment from the kids. Perhaps commit to their partner this week that before the next talk group *SBP (The StrengthBank® Principle Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions TG Activities 60 of 61 StrengthBank® For High Schools – A Relationship Skills Initiative Talk Group Activities Leader Reference Also see Content Map SSBBTTGG Resources & tips for StrengthBank® talk groups (SBTGs) Remember to start and end each Talk Group with Partner Pick and Debrief from results of networking since last Talk Group. (See Administration doc for more) EVALUATION & Project IDEAS Student Guide (SG) FOCUS SB® Savvy (SS) OBJECTIVES SB® Formulas (SF) they will have read their StrengthBank® list every morning. That’s a start in the good thinking direction! The debrief can be did anyone notice anything changed even slightly (only for those who actually did it.) There will be things they have noticed if they did and if they have made a stalwart effort to get their StrengthBank® List as complete as they possibly can. What you talk about is who you are to us! Your conversations are as telling as your physical behaviors. Think about what kinds of things you would or would not tell your best friend vs. a classmate? Your parents vs your grandparents? Your teachers vs your boss? A stranger vs someone who knows the same people you know? What you consistently have on your mind comes out of your mouth related to any of the above. It may not be just in words but in the way you say the words as well. Motives of your heart are what we see of you no matter how you try to hide them when they are GONE BAD particularly. SSBBTTG G 2222 Finish up Step 4 and Step 5 for the Daily Steps. http://www.inspiringthots.net/movie/hold-on.php This is an inspiring movie clip that would be great to show the kids as we wind up and getting ready to send them on, There are other movie clips at this site, too, and they are free. Hold on is one I felt most germane to StrengthBank® relationship skills. Ask them what is meant by Receiving, Recognizing, Relying? Ask what the last page means about whether the StrengthBank® job is done? Wrap up and survey. See SG 12 and 13 SS 8889 SG11 SS 91 Letter SBP ChapSG 12 ter 5 Post Survey *Evaluation & Project Ideas are noted throughout the talk group discussions. Although they may be noted by one particular talk group, they can easily be used in many of the talk groups. SSBBTTG G 2233 *SBP (The St rengthBank® P rinciple Book, ) ©2005, StrengthBank Inc., All Rights Reserved. Duplication and use only by StrengthBank®Certified persons and sessions. TG Activities 61 of 61