Ensuring that content from a conference, or training day, remains at the forefront of thinking and practice can be challenging. I offer a way to capture these moments, allowing attendees to access and recall key messages during and after the event. Please contact me to discuss your requirements.
PATH is a creative planning tool that uses both process and graphic facilitation to create a shared vision of a positive future for individuals, families, teams and whole organisations. PATH draws on people’s ability to visualise different futures and to plan backwards from a future vision or dream and tell stories about how that vision can come into being. It is ideal for developing a cohesive and shared vision whereby all participants feel they have authentically contributed.
The PATH session will be led by two or three trained facilitators – a process facilitator who guides people through the stages and ensures that the person is at the centre throughout, and graphic facilitators who create a large graphic record of each of the steps in the PATH.
There are 6 steps in the PATH process and it is rather like the facilitators are placing six different sorts of ‘containers’ in front of the group and asking them to fill them one by one. A typical group PATH can involve as many as 40-50 stakeholders made up of staff, parents, members of the community, and most importantly, the children and young people that remain our focus. A PATH lasts for around 3 hours (possibly longer with larger groups). Each step in the PATH process has its own particular conversation associated with it.
The Vision: PATH begins by asking the pathfinder to think about what a good life for them would look like. What matters most to them as they think about their future? Others in the group will be asked to build on the vision and say what kind of future they would love to see for the pathfinder. This is the longest step and sets the direction for the rest of the PATH
SENSING the GOAL – ‘Positive and Possible’. In this step the facilitators ask the group to imagine that a year has passed since they created the vision. The conversation in
step 2 is about looking back on the ‘past year’ and remembering what has been achieved in this time towards the vision. This is a more grounded and realistic step – we are not dreaming anymore. – All
the stories and memories heard in this step need to be possible (they could actually have happened) and positive (we are only remembering the good times). Step 2 aims to give the group a better sense
of what it could look like if they really were on track towards the dream.
NOW – this step aims to create a tension between the vision of a positive possible future and where the pathfinder is now in relation to this future. The facilitators will ask you to
talk about the facts and figures of the now. It is a conversation about where the group is starting from.
The remaining steps are now focused on the different kinds of actions needed to bring the positive future closer…
ENROL – this step asks the group – ‘who will we need with us on the journey?’ towards the positive future – it is an opportunity for the pathfinder to invite those present to enrol
in his or her future as well as committing themselves to that future. The facilitators will also ask the group if there is anyone who is not present who should be invited to join the group in the
future and any names given are recorded for future invitations.
STAYING STRONG – this step asks the group to identify and talk about what they will need to do (and not do) to keep focused on the path ahead – naming what skills and capacities they
already have and can put to work as well as the relationships knowledge and skills they will need to develop.
ACTIONS – this final step gets the group to identify bold next steps – both big and small that can be named now. The focus will move between things that can be done tomorrow and
things that can be achieved in a week or a month’s time. The facilitator’s will push for specifics – the who, what, where and when of actions to be taken. Agreement will also be made on when progress
will be reviewed
The PATH process ends with a round of words and reflections from the group on the work they have just done together and the completed PATH is photographed, taken down from the wall, rolled up and
presented to the individual or team.