Four Corners: TUCCC Conference
Marshall Bewley, Ph.D.
Kari Leavell, Ph.D.
Presenter Outline:
- 10 minutes: Introduction of Leaders& Establish Credibility for conducting this program
- Rationale for doing this activity
- Give participants credibility for where they are in their career
- Highlight opportunity for lifelong learning about oneself and how this impacts practice
- Offer perspective that they can take this activity back to their own work
- Encourage presence and vulnerability despite established career
- Acknowledge requests for movement and identify chairs placed around the identities for those needing to sit
- Ground Rules for Exercise
- PROCESS handout
- Instructions
- 30 minutes: Facilitation of Four Corners, Part I:
- 5 minutes: Leaders read identities of the four hypotheticalindividuals, and are then asked to choose a life to live through and move toward it
Person 1
- Female
- Caucasian
- 20 years old
- Heterosexual
- Christian
- Middle-class
- Paraplegic in a wheelchair
Person 2
- Male
- Caucasian
- 40 years old
- Heterosexual
- Jewish
- Lower-class/poor
- Able-bodied
Person 3
- Male
- African-American
- 30 years old
- Gay
- Christian
- Upper-middle class
- Has a mild reading disability
Person 4
- Female
- Hispanic
- 65 years old
- Heterosexual
- Weighs over 300 pounds
- Upper-class
- Able-bodied
- 10 minutes: Leaders then facilitate exploration and sharing of why participants made their choices
- Why did you choose the person you did?
- Why did you not choose the other people?
- When you think about these people what assumptions do you make about their quality of life, their occupations, their education level, and their happiness?
- To what extent did financial status impact your decision?
- Was there any guilt about your choice?
- Did you feel compelled to align with or abandon an identity that you hold?
- Now if you imagine yourself interacting with or seeing a client with any of these identities, what feelings/thoughts come up?
- What assumptions might you make about their capacity to be successful in their life?
- 10-15 minutes: Facilitation of Four Corners, Part II
- Each identity has two elements of their identity that is changed; leaders will facilitate a brief process of participants’ reactions to living that person’s life based on identities that were not initially chosen
Person 1
- Female
- White
- 20 years old
- Heterosexual Lesbian
- Christian Atheist
- Middle-class
- Paraplegic in a wheelchair
Person 2
- Male
- White African American
- 40 years old
- Heterosexual
- Jewish Protestant
- Lower-class/poor
- Able-bodied
Person 3
- Male
- African-American
- 30 years old Age 55
- Gay Heterosexual
- Christian
- Upper-middle class
- Has a mild reading disability
Person 4
- Female Male
- Hispanic
- 65 years old Age 27
- Heterosexual
- Weighs over 300 pounds
- Upper-class
- Able-bodied
- Facilitation Questions:
- How does your perception change based on the changes of these identities?
- How do these changes impact your initial decision?
- What assumptions come to mind in light of these changes?
- How does imagining having this identity yourself impact or not impact how you would think of a particular colleague/ client?
- 20 minutes: Group level process about what participants took away from the activity and emotions that arose
- Invite participants to return to their seats, they are encouraged to reflect in silence about what is coming up for them
- Leaders bring selves into the room
- Acknowledge our own visible identities
- Acknowledging that we have made assumptions about these 4 people, we intentionally want to ask what assumptions have you made about us? (Invite you to consider possible identities that you assume we hold)
- What’s it like to voice these genuine assumptions toward two real people? (Acknowledge discomfort & willingness to go there – edge of comfort zone)
- Connect to what participants say about why they chose the identities they did
- “You mentioned you chose a white male for xyz, would you be willing to share what you think my life might be like based on those IDs?”
- Even as a skilled professional, we still hold biases and areas of value regarding different identities
- How do we manage that? (i.e., how do we not self-shame, remain ignorant to it)?
- Ultimately connect to the vulnerability of being a supervisee or client
- If no one is talking—“What makes this so difficulty for us right now?”
- Still crickets—Connect to training (there and then vs. here and now)
Back Pocket:
- What’s it like to have an identity you didn’t choose?