Thanks for your comments and questions Michael. Any event can be re-enacted, paused and processed in the ways shown. Replay works well with team activities that involve moving from A to B - especially where pausing would bring out new stories or perspectives that went unnoticed at the time. Also following a dispersed team activity (e.g. a search exercise) action replay is a way of bringing all the different stories together. Replay can also help the healing process when groups or individuals have been in conflict. I have described some specific uses with ropes courses at: http://reviewing.co.uk/articles/ropes-course-reviewing.htm A ball game without a ball is just a handy way of demonstrating the method and is not for taking too seriously. Roger
Comment by michaelcardus on October 24, 2008 at 5:09pm
Roger,
I am happy to see this video here! I hope you share more.
In this video do you have the participants doing a specific activity? It seems that are playing, imagine baseball, then you have them interviewing each other.
Do you recomend any specific initiatives or is this "active replay" processing something that is applicable with all experiential initiatives.
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