FOUR WORLD`S PRINCIPLES OF CONSULTATION

Purpose

Ten Principles for Success

  1. Respect each participant and appreciate each other’s diversity. This is the prime requisite for consultation.
  1. Value and consider all contributions. Belittle none. Withhold evaluation until sufficient information has been gathered.
  1. Contribute and express opinions with complete freedom.
  1. Carefully consider the views of others — if a valid point of view has been offered, accept it as your own.
  1. Keep to the mission at hand. The extraneous conversation may be important to team building, but it is not consultation, which is solution driven.
  1. Share in the group’s unified purpose — desire for the success of the mission.
  1. Expect the truth to emerge from the clash of differing opinions. Optimum solutions emerge from the diversity of opinion.
  1. Once stated, let go of opinions. Don’t try to ‘‘defend’’ your position, but, rather let it go. Ownership causes disharmony among the team and almost always gets in the way of finding the truth.
  1. Contribute to maintaining a friendly atmosphere by speaking with
    courtesy, dignity, care, and moderation. This will promote unity and
    openness.
  1. Seek consensus. But if a consensus is impossible, let the majority rule. Remember, though, that decisions, once made, become the decision of every participant. After the group has decided, dissenting opinions are destructive to the success of the mission. When decisions are undertaken with total group support, wrong decisions can be more fully observed and corrected.

Guidelines for Talking Circles

Talking circles are useful when the topic under consideration has no right or wrong answer, or when people need to share feelings.  Moral or ethical issues can often be dealt with in this way without offending anyone. 

The purpose of talking circles is to create a safe environment for people to share their point of view and experiences with others.  This process helps people gain a sense of trust in each other.  They come to believe that what they say will be listened to and accepted without criticism.  They also gain an appreciation for points of view other than their own. 

During the talking circle, people are free to respond however they want as long as they follow these guidelines.

    Some groups have found it useful to encourage participants to focus on consciously sending the speaker loving and compassionate feelings.  In this way, listeners are supporting the speaker and not tuning out so they can think about what they will say when it is their turn.

 

(Excerpted from The Sacred Tree Curriculum Guide produced by The Four Worlds International Institute)

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