Serious Play
At Gennova last week, we continued our storytelling theme. Our guest was Robert Rasmussen, one of the main architects of Lego’s Serious Play. I’m hopeless with construction toys and score very low on spatial abilities (I failed Johnson O’Connor’s Wiggly Blocks test), but even I got it that there’s something very powerful once you get your hands to think for you. As Robert puts it, the hands unite the right and left sides of the brain which have been traditionally separated. They have, he says, “their own intelligence” and are better connected to what we really know. (I did wonder at this point whether the fact that my hands have been connected, pretty much 8 hours a day for over 30 years to a computer keyboard, has pretty much wired me away from visual thinking).
The session led us all into serious reflection about what is present for us in our lives right now, things that are not completely clear, and validated some of the insights about Serious Play:
- Playing with blocks (and the Serious Play kits are specifically designed to include elements that support this kind of investigation) “makes new pathways in the brain” that you can later follow. That is, it opens up thinking in new ways.
- Serious play lets everyone in a group be 100% present in contributing to a problem. Everyone works on their own construct, and then the conversations that follow start the flow of ideas and cross-connections. This is better than the traditional brainstorming because traditional brainstorming requires listening to others and that takes away from active creativity.
- Working with the hands means that you are not “having a meeting with yourself” and over thinking a problem when the answer can emerge from the play
- The hands “act as a search engine”
Serious Play is a serious way to tap into collective intelligence, giving people equal time to find what is deep inside their own heads and sharing what emerges with others.
1Julia Styles Hastie
wrote on 23 July 2007 at 14:05
Is Serious play supposed to help us come up with ideas for design or anything at all? Is it just so that our hand have something to do? I like the idea. Please tell me more. We brainstorm all the time at BrainReactions and believe there are many tools that can help people be creative. We have collages, toys and phrases all over our office to help us generate ideas, but we have never had people build things while they brainstorm.
2Patti
wrote on 25 July 2007 at 5:58
Hi, Julia,
I think you can find better and more complete information than I can provide by looking at the Serious Play web site. (Click on “Applications” for a short list)
And, the answer to your question is “yes” it can also help you come up with ideas for design! It is in fact used in many design settings.
/patti
3Azam
wrote on 25 September 2007 at 17:42
I went to the website also but it seemed to focus too much on what the effect is supposed to be as opposed to what the methodology is. What exactly are they building? Is it what they are thinking or building anything to help think.
4Patti
wrote on 28 September 2007 at 15:12
(I cannot tell who you are as you have not published your profile…}
The methodology is to engage people in creating structures, objects, animals, people, environments with the LEGOs and to use the building process both to illustrate potential end states and to spark dialogue about the thinking process.