Your facilitator will guide you through each of the following questions:
Extra Question:
What areas of diversity and inclusion could be enhanced within the organisation?
Your facilitator will guide you through each of the following questions.
In relation to the inclusivity of written and verbal communication:
Activity Three: Subtle Acts of Exclusion (Micro-aggressions)
Instructions
The facilitator for this discussion will be the person who most recently joined the organisation.
Guide your team through a discussion about the hidden messages and impact of the 3 Micro-aggression examples below.
A speaker isn't needed for this activity.
Activity Four: Subtle Acts of Exclusion (Micro-Aggressions) Confidential Chat
Instructions
The facilitator for this discussion will be the person who has been with the organisation the longest.
Facilitate an open discussion on the questions below.
This activity is completely confidential and won't be shared on our return to the Main Room.
A speaker isn't needed for this activity.
■Do you have any examples of micro aggressions that you have experienced or witnessed?
■What was the impact?
■What action was or should have been taken?
Activity Five: Top Tips for Improving Inclusion
Top Tips for Improving Inclusion
1. Interrupt the interruption - women get interrupted 2.8 times more often than men, when women voice views they are punished with 14% drop in how competent they are perceived - so hold back from speaking up - hence important to create interruption-free space
2. Share perspectives silently - 74% of people in a group conform to the view of the majority (Solomon Ashe)- write down perspectives and group conformity vanishes - gives equal access to diverse perspectives
3. Conquer ‘Group Think’ - divide groups into many small and different kinds of groups that work independently of each other - compare the outcomes of each group.
4. Flip perspectives. - e.g., present a project as a 90% chance to succeed to one group and a 10% risk of failure to another group, changing the anchoring mitigates group think, compare results
5. Leaders and experts hold back- be the last to contribute and give permission for others to critique your views
6. Reframe ‘conflict’ - often seen as negative - reframe to 'friendly challenging', to uncover blind spots – take it in turns to play ‘devil’s advocate’
7. Take another perspective - what would others/a new leader/a leader whose leadership skills you admire do to deal with this challenge?
8. We can pay attention to the ways we deliberately include people, creating the feeling of being valued, respected and included instead of excluded.
9. Don’t be a bystander – be an ally to those who have been overlooked or those who are on the receiving end of discrimination.
Discuss:
What additional Top Tips do you have for improving inclusion and overcoming groupthink?
What can you do to encourage others to present alternatives, critique a position, or even to express an unpopular opinion?
What could the organisation do to encourage others to present alternatives, critique a position, or even to express an unpopular opinion?
How might this be of benefit to the organisation?