Graphic Recording Workshop with M
April 14-15, 2007 | Half Moon Bay, California
Day One: Introduction to Graphic Recording
Day Two: Advanced Skills in Graphic Recording
Mariah Howard is a visual recorder, artist and educator. Her work with groups includes facilitating The World Café and bringing improvisational theater into the work place as a way to build awareness, relationships and teams.
Basically, this service allows you to upload photos of whiteboards, business cards or documents, and scanR cleans the images or converts the business cards to electronic text.
With the current UPS advertising campaign, the visual language of graphic facilitation is being used to explain the company's new value proposition. In recent years, UPS has made the move to position itself away from competing with FedEx and DHL for fast overnight delivery services, to positioning the company as a key asset in a business' supply chain.
In this video thought piece hosted on YouTube, Kansas State Anthropology professor Michael Welsch uses the simple, cheap digital tools at hand to weave an engaging narrative of the birth of Web 2.0.
Working all but alone from his hardware-strewn office, Jeff Han is about to change the face of computing. Not even the big boys are likely to catch him.
Boston-based artist and graphic facilitator, Kelvy Bird, appears on local cable to explain her work.
This advance level public workshop is for facilitators, trainers, consultants and budding graphic recorders who want to take their interactive graphic skills up to the next level. Designed for both graphic recording and graphic facilitation focuses (although emphasis is on building recording repertoire first). A prerequisite is the introductory Meeting Graphics course (or equivalent experience).
This Periodic Table of Visualization Methods was created in Switzerland by the Visual Literacy
folks.
In the January edition of Neuland's newsletter, Master Facilitator, Steve Davis, discusses the pros and cons of the the emerging pratice of virtual facilitation. His article, Balancing Technology with Touch, emphasizes that with everything that is given by technology (ex. connectivity across distances) something is lost (ex. body language).
Bruce Flye, a newbie graphic facilitator with a day job at East Carolina University, is introducing the potential of images to the Society for College and University Planning, otherwise known as SCUP.