The Pledge, the Turn & the Prestige: Building teams

by | Sunday, February 05, 2017

Making connections between the movie The Prestige, and the design of 2 activities to build trust and a shared vision in teams…

As I have settled down at ASU and the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College, my responsibilities have grown as well. I started as Associate Dean of Scholarship and gradually have taken on the responsibilities of data analytics for the college; the work on innovation (that deserves another blog post altogether); and the Information Technology Services. What this means is that I now have a large team of people I work with and it is important that we all share a common vision and approach to all these diverse things we do.

One thing common to these different tasks is that they are service tasks – to different audiences but service none-the-less. Given my interest in design thinking, it was no surprise that I turned to the book This is service design thinking for inspiration.  

service-design-book

The book offers 5 key principles of service design (A quick introduction to these ideas is here.)

  1. User Centered: Designing from the user’s perspective and experience
  2. Co-created: Involving all stakeholders in the design and creative process
  3. Sequencing: Services play out over time as a series of interrelated actions and events
  4. Evidencing: Intangible services should be visualized in concrete terms.
  5. Holistic: Every aspect of the environment should be considered in designing the service.

Over the past few meetings we have explored these ideas as a team and yesterday we tried to bring it together. So with the leadership team we designed an hour-long experience to embody, instantiate and capture these ideas.

The question was how could be create an activity where the “implicosphere” of these ideas could be explored collectively, and would lead to a concrete artifact that could embody our collective learning and capture our experience. So this is what we did.

4l
4l2square

The Pledge: When the team got together, they were given 4 L shaped pieces of cardboard, arranged in the form of a square.

We then broke up in to 4 groups, each group was assigned one of the first four principles (leaving holistic aside for now). Then each group was tasked with a phase of silent writing, putting onto the cardboard words, phrases, ideas, that were related to the principle. This was followed by a session of open discussion within the small group followed by a reporting out and broader group discussion.

4l2cross

 The Turn: Then, came the twist. Now the groups were asked to use these 4 L-shaped pieces to create a “+” sign This is a bit tricky since the first instinct is to create a “+” with the pieces – but the solution actually requires thinking of a “+” as “negative space” like shown below.

The Prestige: That is when we revealed the next piece – a pre-cut “cross” shape that fit exactly into the “hole.” And this piece, of course, was devoted to the final principle, Holistic. This piece was deliberately made of a different color and we spent a few more minutes, as a group, silently adding words related to holistic to that piece. This is what we came up with at the end (better photo coming soon).

cross

I think this activity worked well at many levels. At the most prosaic level it allowed individuals who had worked in different teams to get to know each other. It allowed us to explore the 5 principles both individually, in small groups and collectively. Finally it gave us an artifact that captures this entire activity.

But there is more.

We are four different teams (with different ways of working, different personalities and cultures)  who now have to come together as one team. This means reorganization, reimagining, realignments, which if not handled well, can lead to confusion, ambiguity, and stress. My hope is that this restructuring can, if done properly lead to something more than the sum of its parts. And this activity, by taking four pieces making a square, and then reorganizing them into a new more interesting shape, suggest that the reorganization can lead to new and better things. Or one could even say the “(w)hole, that emerged, was greater than the sum of its parts.” And that is my hope as well… that at the end of the day, our new unit would be greater/ better than the four pieces that went into it.

To end the hour, everybody completed a short takeaway activity – providing feedback to me regarding their mood, successes, challenges and what they would need. This was done (stealing an idea from Candace Marcotte) by creating a little 6-page book from one sheet of paper. The front and back covers of the book are shown below:

little-book-front-cover

Front cover of the little 6 page booklet

little-book-back-cover

Back cover of the little 6 page booklet

Note: Instructions making such a book can be found here and here. The pdf that I designed for this purpose can be found here.

Note 2: The title of this blog post comes from Christopher Nolan’s movie The PrestigeWhile writing this post I realized that the 3 part structure of the activity with the L-shaped cardboards mapped somewhat neatly onto  the three elements of a magic trick as specified in the movie The Prestige. I don’t want to belabor the analogy but I did find it intriguing enough to incorporate into this posting. [Shout out to Rohit Mehta who first brought this connection between teaching and The Prestige to my attention.]

A few randomly selected blog posts…

What can design do for you?

TPACK involves understanding the capabilities of technology - understanding how we make meaning with it, how we can manipulate it to communicate, engage and teach. I include below an extraordinarily powerful use of media, created with the simplest of tools, one...

Using eclipses to see

Let me start with two questions: First, what is the shape of the Earth? And two, what shapes does the sun cast on the ground when filtered through the leaves of a tree? Of course we know the answer to the first question. The pictures from space show clearly this...

Contextualizing TPACK within systems and culture

Contextualizing TPACK within systems and culture

Melissa Warr and I were recently asked to write a afterword to a special issue of the journal Computers in Human Behavior. The focus of the special issue was on the kinds of knowledge, skills and attitudes (KSA) teachers need to successfully integrate technology in...

Soham starts college, new ambigram,

We dropped off my eldest at the University of Michigan today. He begins the next stage of his life. We couldn't be more excited. Here is a new ambigram design to mark this occasion. Soham whichever way you look at it, with UMich colors! Mouseover the image to rotate...

Why Theory: Or the TPACK story

Why Theory: Or the TPACK story

Note: There are two key updates / correction to this post The first has to do with a couple of things that I either got wrong, or rushed over. More about that at Update on "The TPACK story" or "Oops!"The second has to do with an update to the diagram itself that came...

Number (non)sense & flatulence!

Numbers are a gas! (Image credit: Phillie Casablanca) Numbers are seen as being critical to developing our understanding of a subject. As Lord Kelvin, (1824-1907) said: ... when you can measure what you are speaking about, and express it in numbers, you know something...

Special CITE issue on TPACK

The CITE Journal had a recent special issue devoted to TPACK. You can access the special issue (edited by Judi Harris and Matt Koehler) here or individual articles below. Bull, G., & Bell, L. (2009). TPACK: A framework for the CITE Journal. Contemporary Issues in...

Oh Wow! Oh Wow! Oh Wow!

Much has been written about Steve Jobs in the past few weeks since his passing but the best piece I have come across is the eulogy by his sister Mona Simpson. Mona Simpson is an author and professor of writing and delivered this eulogy on Oct. 16 at his memorial...

0 Comments

Trackbacks/Pingbacks

  1. What “The Prestige” teaches us about engagement – meta-mehta - […] acts in teaching, especially using it to design the overall structure of your lessons or PDs. See, Punya Mishra’s…

Submit a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *