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How to Facilitate Mutual Understanding Using 6 Thinking Hats

 
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Six Thinking Hats

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Gary Wong Gary Wong
Consultant, Canada
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How to Facilitate Mutual Understanding Using 6 Thinking Hats
Conflict resolution means the reduction, elimination, or termination of opposing views. Interest-based negotiation and mutual bargaining are win-win conflict resolution methods.
Don't feel that a conflict must be necessarily resolved. Not all conflict is bad. It can be a healthy divergent action, exploring a wide range of thinking as long as the conversation is focused on ideas and not people.
Six Thinking Hats sequences can be effectively used by a facilitator to put the participants into the right frame of mind using the power of Parallel Thinking.

A suggested hat sequence is: Blue, White, Yellow, Black, Red, Blue:
  • [Blue hat]: Set the goal to gain understanding of different perspectives and the amount of time allotted for the session.
  • [White hat]: Share as much relevant information as needed to define the conflict. The opposing views may be an either/or situation or a few identified with a range.
  • [Yellow hat]: Identify the positives in each view. Surface and appreciate the paradigms that underpin each view.
  • [Black hat]: Raise objections and the impacts of negative consequences. Confirm that each person understands the concerns expressed. Go beyond simple head nodding; ask advocates to state in their own words what are the negatives. The aim is understanding, not agreement. It's okay to agree to disagree.
  • [Red hat]: At this stage invite each person to express emotional feelings about the thinking. Do a quick vote on any process improvements suggested.
  • [Blue hat]: Map out the next steps as a hat sequence.
Depending on the outcomes, the next hat sequence may include a Green hat to explore new views and possibilities that emerged. One indicator of progress is a readiness to converge and move into win-win resolution. A request for third party mediation or arbitration is a signal more parallel thinking work is required.

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Special Interest Group
More on Six Thinking Hats
Summary
Forum
topic Resolving a Business Argument: Conflict Resolution
topic Six Thinking Hats is a Synched Team Process
topic Examples of Using Six Hats Thinking
topic Situational Thinking Hats?
topic Telecom Example of Six Thinking Hats
topic Techniques for Real Dialogue in Organisations
topic Other Tools to Instill Constructive Participation: Soliloquy
topic The 6 Thinking Hats Facilitator: Wearing the Blue Hat
topic Facilitating Systematic, Deliberate Thinking is not Easy to Do
topic Conditions for 6 Thinking Hats. Assumptions
topic Tools to Consider and Develop Multiple Perspectives on an Issue
topic Challenging Plans or Ideas: The Ritual Dissent Approach
topic Six Thinking Hats is Parallel Thinking
topic 6 Thinking Hats are Rubbish
topic Avoiding Groupthink with 6 Thinking Hats Process
topic Business Conflict Resolution with 6 Thinking Hats and 7 Habits
topic Taking Advantage of Conflicts in Group Decision Making
topic Seventh Thinking Hat: Grey for Wisdom
topic Everybody Should Wear More than 1 Thinking Hat
topic Example Six Thinking Hats: Response to COVID-19
👀How to Facilitate Mutual Understanding Using 6 Thinking Hats
topic Seventh Thinking Hat: Orange for Results
topic Six Hats Great for Teaching at University
topic Six Thinking Hats for Software Testing at Google
topic Six Hats is Universally Applicable
topic Top Managers Should Switch Thinking Hats
topic Distorted Western Adversarial Thinking
topic Edward de Bono Obituary
topic Can Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Improve Thinking?
topic Six Thinking Hats Status and News
🔥 Using Six Thinking Hats as an AI or LLM Prompt
topic Edward de Bono Stole Six Hats
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Six Thinking Hats



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