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Harvest

A collective sense-making practice used to capture and consolidate the key insights, decisions, commitments, and questions emerging from a group session. Unlike simple note-taking, harvesting is participatory — the group itself identifies what is most significant. Common in Open Space Technology, World Café, and large-group methods. The harvest gives the work of a session its lasting form.

Duration
15m–45m
Group size
3–100 people
Materials
flip charts, markers, sticky notes
Origin
Community

How to run it

  1. 1

    Near the end of a session, bring the group back together.

  2. 2

    Ask: 'What were the most important insights that emerged today? What decisions were made? What commitments did we hear? What questions are still alive?'

  3. 3

    Record responses visibly on a flip chart or board.

  4. 4

    Use different colours or sections for: Insights, Decisions, Commitments, Open Questions.

  5. 5

    Review the harvest with the group. Add anything missing.

  6. 6

    Photograph or transcribe the harvest and share with all participants.

Tips

  • Distinguish between recording everything (documentation) and harvesting what matters (synthesis).

  • Harvesting is an interpretive act — the facilitator helps the group name what was most significant, not just most talked about.',

Variations

Run a 'visual harvest' with a graphic recorder creating an illustrated summary in real time. Use a 'three words' harvest at the end of short sessions: each participant contributes three words that capture their takeaway.

Where it fits

World Café closingsOpen Space TechnologyAny multi-hour workshopDay-long conferences
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Method descriptions on Workshop Weaver are original content written by our team, based on established facilitation practices.

Harvest — Facilitation Method | Workshop Weaver