Initial/Beginning Stage
BEGINNING THE GROUP
- Convey warmth, trust, helpfulness, understanding, and positive regard
- Members form their impressions of the leader and determine whether or not they think the group is going to be helpful
- Methods for Opening the First Session
- Start with a brief statement about the group (1-2 min), then conduct an introduction exercise (most common)
Set a positive tone
- Comes from the leader’s enthusiasm and the members’ comfort and trust
- Draw out members, cut off hostile or negative interactions, hold the focus on interesting topics, and shift the focus when the topic is irrelevant or only interesting to a few members
- For nonvoluntary groups, leaders may need to be firm but also show concern and understanding
- Do’s
- Get everyone to share
- Be enthusiastic
- Be creative for nonvoluntary groups
- Get control early and let people see you are in charge and you know what you are doing
- Don’ts
- Let the group focus on negative issues
- Let one member dominate
- Start with boring group rules
- Don’t let members attack each other
Clarify the purpose of the group
Explain the leader’s role
Explain how the group will be conducted
- Types of exercises, risks of being in group, may be challenged to look at themselves
Explain any special terms that will be used (counseling terms, etc.)
Help members get acquainted
- Consider how members will be introduced to each other
- Time varies—when personal sharing will occur, then members need more time to get to know one another; less than 5 minutes for sessions less than 1 hour
- May want to use an exercise that helps members remember names; may use exercise that is pertinent to the purpose of the group
- May want to use name tags
- Introduction Activities
- The Name Round—members simply introduce themselves and may also give additional information that is relevant to the group purpose
- The Repeat Round—first person says his/her name, then second person says the previous name and his/her own name, etc.
- The Introduction Dyad—pair up and give information about themselves
Help members verbalize expectations (5 min)
- Have members tell you what they expect to get out of the group
- May need to point out if this will be met by the group or not
- If members are nonvoluntary, then you may not want to ask
Explain group rules
- May set rules, then ask for group input
- Discuss during the first session for elementary and possibly middle school; otherwise, may not need to discuss until needed
- Discuss in a pleasant, positive manner
Focus on the content
- Try to transition from introductions, purpose, and rules into topic
Address questions—just don’t let it become a Q & A session
Checkout the comfort levels of the members
- May spend a few minutes on the topic of comfort level
Draw out members
- Don’t force each member to speak, just make sure that they have had the chance to participate
- Use written exercises and rounds
Use exercises
- Rounds—allows everyone to speak, name round, comfort round, 1-10 scales
- Dyads—allows members to talk more personally with one member rather than the entire group (less than 5 min); make sure each person will have something valuable to contribute before doing this
- Sentence-completion exercises—gives members chance to think about what to say
- Don’t use too many
Assess members’ interaction styles
Cut off members when needed
- Don’t let one person dominate or attack another member
- Be prepared to refocus the group
Get members to look at other members
- Tell members to look at the group rather than just you
- Explain that at times your will not be looking exclusively at the person speaking because you will be scanning the group (could also be a signal for them to look at other group members)
- Scan the group (the member will try to get eye contact from someone else)
- Signal the member to talk to everyone by making a sweeping motion with your hand
Close the first session
- Leader will need to summarize and comment again on the purpose and what the possibilities are for the future
- Allow extra time for questions
Self-Assess the first session
- How did the members interact?
- Did all members participate?
- How was the room, setting, etc?
- How was the flow? Too much time on one person or topic? Too many topics discussed?
THE SECOND SESSION
Opening the second session
- Introducing new members
- Begin with introductions (will also help other members)
- Catch the person up (may do this individually or spend few minutes in group)
- Success of the 1st session
- If successful, brief warm-up then move into content
- If unsuccessful, restate group purpose, address what went wrong, or ask members for their reactions to the 1st session
- Arrive early to answer questions
Planning for a potential letdown
- May be different energy for second session
- Moves toward more personal sharing, become nervous
- Plan for an exciting, interesting session beforehand
Ending the second session
- Allow extra time for closing
- Ask members what has been helpful and unhelpful
COMMON MISTAKES DURING INITIAL STAGE
- Letting it go on too long by allowing the warm-up to stray from the purpose
- Skipping it and not allowing time for members to warm up
THE BEGINNING PHASE OF SUBSEQUENT SESSION
- Every session has a beginning or warm-up phase
- Plan your opening
- Be creative