Hawaiian Style Introductions
Each participant introduces themselves following the traditional Hawaiian order: place (where you're from), family (genealogy/roots), and self (who you are). This format recognises that identity is collective and contextual — not just individual — and reveals unexpected connections across the group.
Come eseguirlo
- 1
Explain the structure: each person will introduce themselves in three parts — Where are you from? Who is your family? Who are you?
- 2
Model the introduction yourself as facilitator, following the same structure.
- 3
Go around the circle. Allow approximately 5 minutes per person.
- 4
After each introduction, allow brief reactions or questions from the group — especially when connections emerge.
- 5
Close by reflecting on the threads and connections that appeared across the introductions.
Suggerimenti
Frame 'family' broadly — it can mean immediate family, community, team, or heritage.
'Place' often unlocks richer stories than asking 'what do you do?' — try it.
Works especially well in multicultural groups where different relationship-to-identity perspectives coexist.
Variazioni
Adapt the structure for a professional context: 'Where in your career are you from? What team or organisation shaped you? Who are you as a professional?'
Casi d'uso
Metodi correlati
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Workshop Weaver ti aiuta a combinare metodi come Hawaiian Style Introductions in un'agenda completa e temporizzata in pochi minuti.
Prova gratisMethod descriptions on Workshop Weaver are original content written by our team, based on established facilitation practices. This method was inspired by work from University of Hawaii.