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Thinking Tools

By Debbie Carter (September 2008 Issue)
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The ability to see values is a central part of creativity: without being able to recognise value in your ideas, they have no point. Once that value is established, you then need to be able to communicate that value to ensure others see the importance of the idea too.

Exercise 1

The values in this first exercise might relate to a person, organisation, the environment etc. The thing to bear in mind is that they should be as direct as possible.

Obtain five random words and then find values in each word – there may be more than one value in each word. Group the words according to the dominant values and explain the value groupings. You can include a word in two different groups if the word shows two values.

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