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7 Norms of Collaboration: Paraphrase

Hello, Friends!

Since shifting into my new role, I find myself wanting even more time to process and reflect. I haven’t blogged or posted as much lately. However, I can’t wait any longer to share this reflection. This one has me thinking about so much more than just school, work, and the education profession.

Here’s my progression of thought in real time:

A few years ago, I saw Phil Echols tweeting about collaboration strategies. He was using words like “pause, paraphrase, pose questions.” I was curious. I kept following to learn more.

Later, I saw Phil’s sketchnote about the 7 Norms of Collaboration. It looks like “pause, paraphrase, pose questions” were three norms in a larger framework of expectations for meetings. This is interesting. How might this happen in our work spaces? How about in a Professional Learning Team (PLT) meeting? I’m still thinking on this.

Last year, I saw the 7 Norms of Collaboration appearing on meeting agendas. Usually, we breezed through the norms in about ten seconds. The facilitator would read the list. Attendees gave their thumbs-up agreement to abide accordingly. I knew the what, but I didn’t really know the why or how.

Last Fall, I got to see the modeling of these norms during my #wcpssplcplus training. Seeing examples in action helped me access prior knowledge to identify the norms, build bridges to the how, and connect to the why in deeper levels of relevance, rigor, and significance. In fact, I was starting to question myself:

Am I really practicing things like “pause, paraphrase, pose questions” in the workplace?

Last week, I got to attend the workshop: “Cultivating Greatness through Listening and Inquiry.” On day one (of three), I got to see the norms-exemplifying Model Conversation again. This time, it really hit home. It was starting to get personal. For the first time, I was starting to think about how these norms might apply to me beyond the workplace. Again, I questioned myself:

Am I really practicing things like “pause, paraphrase, pose questions” in my personal life?

What Is Paraphrasing?

According to Phil’s sketchnote below, paraphrasing includes: acknowledging, organizing, and abstracting:

Why Paraphrasing Matters

In the middle of pausing and posing questions (which definitely encompass the following rationales) is paraphrasing. It’s hard for me to separate the three. Yet, it’s paraphrasing that’s really captivating me and convicting me to become better.

While I have a lot more research to do on all of the 7 Norms of Collaboration, as of today, I believe that…

Paraphrasing:

Paraphrasing Might:

When Paraphrasing Gets Personal

For the longest time, I thought that norms like paraphrasing were just for work stuff. Norms maintain order in meetings in all the professional things. Yet, when I thought about paraphrasing in my personal life, I felt all the feelings:

I hear you. You’ve made it this far, and you’re thinking it through. You’re contemplating comments you might want to leave. 😉

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