Jonathan SmithNEGOTIATIONModel Lesson Plan
INTRODUCTION TO NEGOTIATION
LESSON: Negotiation
SOURCE: Original Lesson Plan
TIME AND DAY TAUGHT: 50 Minutes
Number of Students: Lesson designed for class of 30 students
Materials Required: Student Journals
I. GOALS
- Understanding the role that negotiation plays within life and the law
- Learn basic components of a negotiation
- Improve negotiation skills
II. OBJECTIVES
- Knowledge Objectives – As a result of this class, students will be better able to:
- Define negotiation as a legal concept
- Learn the process of a negotiation from preparation to settlement
- Understand which types of negotiation tactics work in certain situations
- Identify when the process of a negotiation is needed
- Skills Objectives – As a result of this class, students will be better able to:
- Identify the issues that need to be resolved in order to reach an agreement
- Consider the alternatives to an agreement (BATNA v. WATNA)
- Ask questions that improve the negotiator’s bargaining position
- Work with the opposing party to formulate as many solutions to the problem as possible
- Agree upon a deal that works well for both parties
- Attitude Objectives – Students will be better able to feel
- The negotiation process as a part of their daily lives
- An ideal agreement is not always possible
- Negotiating can be FUN!
III. CLASSROOM METHODS
- Entry Task
- Students must use the journals provided to them at the beginning of class to answer the following question:
- What are the first words or images you associate with the word “negotiation?”
- What would you most like to learn about the process of negotiating?
b. Small Group Discussion
- Have the students form into groups of 4-5
- Introduce themselves to the group
- Share the responses to the Entry Task questions
- Appoint a leader to: 1). Introduce the group 2). Collect and report the data
- Introduce negotiation as a concept.
- Definitions:
- The process by which people involved in a dispute talk to each other about their problem and try to reach a solution acceptable to all.
- An interactive communication process
- Includes parties with differing interests
- The parties seek to
- Coordinate their behavior
- And/or reallocate resources
- To be better off than their alternatives
d. Brainstorm different situations in which the negotiation process is used
- Write student ideas on the white-board as they come in.
e. Quickly explain the process of a negotiation
- Negotiators can prepare by thinking through their goals and possible questions to ask to achieve those goals.
- During a negotiation, it is sometimes useful to withhold some information.
- Negotiators should always keep in mind the possible alternatives
- Negotiators should actively predict the other side’s position
- Negotiators should never lose sight of goals.
f. Negotiation Vocabulary
- Interests
- The party’s needs underlying a demand (the whys of what is being asked for)
- Alternatives
- Possibilities that are available to the negotiating parties which do not require the opponent’s participation or approval
- BATNA = Best Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement
- The best situation that may happen if you walk away from the negotiation table
- WATNA = Worse Alternative to a Negotiated Agreement
- The worst situation you are stuck with if you walk away from the negotiation table
g. Steps of the Negotiation Process
- Preparation
- Establish and prioritize your goals
- Determine your:
- Alternatives
- Resistance point (i.e. bottom line)
- Information Exchange
- Develop a comfortable atmosphere where you and your negotiation opponent may share and gather information from each other
- This creates the most productive negotiation climate
- Bargaining
- Plan to resolve negotiation issues based on the parties’ interests
- Resolution
- Restate the final terms to confirm the agreement
- Consider other options in order to “sweeten” the deal
- Agreement needs to be:
- Clear
- Comprehensive
- Durable
h. Negotiating in the state of Washington
- Section [2] Preamble to the ABA Model and Washington RPCs:
- “As negotiator, a lawyer seeks a result advantageous to the client but consistent with requirements of honest dealings with others.”
- ***Unless otherwise instructed, students should follow this guideline
- Role-play:
- Explain to the class that we are having a short negotiation over the sale of a bicycle
- Divide the class into two groups (1s and 2s)
- 1s will be the seller of the bicycle
- 2s will be the buyer of the bicycle
- Have the students group together and explain the confidential information to them in preparation for the negotiation.
- Group 1:
- Desires a price of $200
- They are in desperate need of money and need to sell the bicycle today.
- They have one other offer of $150.
- The bicycle has some trouble switching between gears.
- The bicycle is a nasty shade of rusted orange.
- Group 2:
- Likes this bicycle and will spend up to $250 for it.
- Wants to spend as little as possible.
- Is very skilled at repairing bicycle malfunctions.
- Has a close friend who paints and gives maintenance for bicycles. Can get a discount of $50 for a new paint job.
- The teachers will facilitate discussions within the group regarding strategy.
- Then pair the students to negotiate. Give them about 15 minutes, then debrief using the following questions.
IV. EVALUATION
a. Exit Task
- How did the negotiation process develop between you and your opponent?
- Describe the negotiation tactics and behaviors both you and your opponent used.
V. ASSIGNMENT
- Assign students to write down their goals, strategies, and questions regarding negotiation.
- Assign students to negotiate a situation with their parents/guardians that night and come back with a report on how the negotiation went.