30 Circles Challenge
10 min |
Team |
Game
Creativity Value creation
What can students learn from this?
Besides being a great warm-up exercise, Thirty Circles offers a quick lesson about ideation.
When we have to generate ideas, two goals are balanced: fluency (the speed and quantity of ideas) and flexibility (ideas that are truly different and distinct).
We know from experience that it’s easier to have a great idea when there are many ideas to choose from. But if there are a lot of ideas that are just variations on a theme, it might be possible to really have only one idea with twenty-nine other versions.
When fluency and flexibility are combined, it is then possible to generate a rich array of concepts to choose from.
How can I do this in class?
Step 1: Give each participant one 30 Circles sheet of paper and something to draw with.
Step 2: Turn as many of the blank circles as possible into recognizable objects in three minutes (think clock faces, billiard balls, etc.)
Step 3: Compare results.