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Peer Support/Study/Discussion Groups

for people working with The Seven Challenges Workbook


About Local Peer Support Groups

Reconcilation  --  by Meganne Forbes  -- click image to visit galleryYou are invited to start your own local Peer Support Group to practice the skills described in the Seven Challenges Workbook.  Such a group could be located at work, at home or as part of the public service activity of a community service organization or religious congregation.

The Support Group Network is an informal association of people who are studying the Seven Challenges Workbook, and who are helping one another and their communities in whatever ways feel life-enhancing and appropriate. We stay in touch through the free, e-mail Journal of Cooperative Communication Skills (that you can subscribe to by clicking here).

Why Help?

In life it is generally true that the happiness, skill and fulfillment a person gets out of an activity depends on the love, effort and attention the person puts into it. This is deeply true when it comes to learning new communication skills. One of the most powerful ways to help yourself learn is to help others learn. In practicing with, observing and coaching others you can develop a new level of awareness about what unfolds between people in conversation and in conflict. You can then use this awareness every day to guide your own communicating toward greater success, reconciliation and fulfillment.

Peer support helps people develop by focusing on three elements: the time people are capable of giving, the effort people are capable of making, and the clarity and availability of teaching materials; rather than on the money people are capable of spending and the talent or charisma of trainers. Current practices in communication training tend toward brief, expensive, seminars and high-priced professional coaching. These arrangements have two major drawbacks: They exclude many people who could benefit from exploring new ways of communicating. And they do not address the longer term needs of communication skill learners. New communication skills evolve over months and years of practice. People learning new ways of listening and speaking need:

  • ongoing practice partnerships
  • opportunities to grow in awareness through observing and coaching
  • support for practicing new skills by belonging to an extended practice community

Peer practice groups using the freely available (via the web) the Seven Challenges Workbook represent an alternative path to communication skills learning in which everyone capable of making an effort can participate for extended periods of time. As co-learners, people can receive as much attention as they are willing to give. It represents the kind of extended practice support that every communication skills training program needs (but may not have). Participation in a local peer support network is an ideal follow-up activity for courses in businesses, schools, clinics, etc., that use the Seven Challenges Workbook

The lack of communication and conflict resolution skills has drastic consequences all through society. High school violence, workplace shootings and child abuse come to mind immediately as examples. Therefore it is in our own extended best interest to create learning environments that encourage wider rather than narrower participation. We serve ourselves by serving the world, at many different levels.

The suggested participant agreements listed on the following pages, like the rules of baseball, are intended to help people focus and coordinate their efforts. They are promises to oneself, one's teammates, and to the world in which we ourselves want to live happier lives. They were developed by Dennis Rivers after extensive discussions with teachers, therapists and potential peer support participants.  Because peer support groups using the Seven Challenges Workbook are independent and self-governing, it is up to each group to decide what will best meet its needs.  We hope you will consider the following four suggestions as a thoughtful starting place for developing the agreements that will define your particular peer support and learning group.


Four Suggested Agreements/Guidelines
for Peer Support Group Participation

  1. PURPOSE & FOCUS:  In order to bring more fulfillment into our lives and more peace into our world, we commit ourselves to the ongoing study and practice of communicating more cooperatively, creatively, consciously, compassionately, courageously and successfully, at home, at work and in our communities, using the Seven Challenges Workbook as one of our learning resources.
  1. SHARING: In order to increase the amount of encouragement-toward- cooperation in the world, we agree to share our learning experiences, to the best of our ability, as a source of encouragement to others. [The success stories of our peers encourage and empower us in ways that are beyond the reach of even the best teachers and books. The Institute for Cooperative Communication Skills is committed to making communication success stories available for free around the world on the web through the Online Peer-Support Network.]
  1. VOLUNTEERING: In order to deepen our communication skills and to help build a more cooperative, less violent world, we each agree to help at least one other person study and practice the Seven Challenges Workbook curriculum, two hours a week, in one or more of the following co-learner roles:
     
    • being a learning companion or "study buddy" for a single individual,
    • starting and coordinating a study and practice group at home, at work, at school or in other appropriate community settings,
    • supporting other Peer Volunteers to develop both their personal communication skills and their mentoring abilities,
    • presenting the Seven Challenges approach at meetings and conferences as an example of publicly-shared knowledge that is available to everyone,
    • teaching introductory classes on a donation basis or through low-cost adult education programs (class participants may be charged for the cost of reproducing the Workbook and related class materials), and
    • other public service activities appropriate to my life circumstances, such as volunteering in jails, prisons, juvenile detention facilities, hospitals, etc., or translating communication training materials into other languages. 
  1. JOURNAL KEEPING: In order to bring both our communication learning and our life stories into better focus, we agree to keep personal journals of our thoughts, feelings, hopes, disappointments and experiments in living.

    [One of the most important aspects of journal writing is that we can only guide as much of our life and action as we can observe.  Journal writing is a practice of observing ones own life.  If you are not familiar with journal writing, you might begin by writing letters about your life journey to real or imagined friends.  Keeping a journal will give you a safe place in which to privately express, explore and clarify your feelings and wants before publicly expressing them. Also, learning to observe your life through journaling will help you learn to observe more of your moment-to-moment conversational interaction.]
     

Suggested Next Steps in Peer Support Group Participation

Costs: Please make participation in your local Peer Support Group as inexpensive as possible by using community rooms in public libraries as meeting places.  (the Seven Challenges Workbook and a large library of related study material is available free of charge at www.newconversations.net.)

How to stay in touch: In order to keep mailing costs down, please use our e-mail message form to communicate with the Cooperative Communication Skills Online Resource Center. Please be sure to subscribe to the Journal of Cooperative Communication Skills to receive the latest news and views.  As the Peer Support Network evolves, we will eventually have a newsletter of our own. Please write to us with your learning and volunteering experiences. You can use the message form or write to Dennis Rivers, author of the Seven Challenges Workbook, at 1563 Solano Ave. #164, Berkeley, CA 94707, USA.

How to get known in your community: You are welcome to develop your own local web site listing your activities, and develop you own e-mail lists. Many newspapers will list study and support group activities for free. As the encourager of the Peer Support Groups, The Cooperative Communication Skills Online Resource Center strongly suggests that if you are going to make your name available to the general public, that you schedule meetings in public settings: library community rooms, restaurants or coffee shops for small groups, and bank or school community rooms for larger groups.

A note about paid teaching: Anyone with the appropriate teaching and coaching credentials and/or experience is welcome to use The Seven Challenges Workbook as a curriculum for teaching and coaching in schools, colleges, businesses, social service organizations, in-service training programs, and in psychotherapy and social work settings. You are welcome to make as many copies of the Workbook as you need without payment of any licensing or royalty fees.  (The Workbook is already in use around the world as a training guide in English, Spanish and Portuguese editions.) At the same time, for the various reasons stated above, we hope that everyone using the Workbook will participate in the development of peer support networks available at low cost or no cost, so that more people can stay engaged in the communication skills learning process on an ongoing basis.

Liability: Because we have no control over independent local groups, and the Seven Challenges Workbook is offered to all groups, organizations and persons free of charge, Dennis Rivers and the Cooperative Communication Skills Online Resource Center cannot accept responsibility or liability for the activities of local study and practice groups. Dennis Rivers and the Cooperative Communication Skills Online Resource Center permit everyone to use the materials found on the New Conversation web site, but do not endorse any particular teacher, coach or organization.  As a condition of the use of such materials, all groups, organizations and persons using teaching materials from the New Conversation web site agree to accept responsibility and liability for their activities and use of such materials.

 

Copyright 2007 by Dennis Rivers.
Permission to make copies granted by author. May be included in course readers.
See copyright page for details.

 

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