@jccampos
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Marko Rillo replied to the topic VAT? in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 4 months ago
Martin – did you manage to clarify the VAT issue? I believe that inside EU you should be able to import/export according to uniform rules whereby the tax is calculated based on the rules of the target country: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_Union_value_added_tax#Intra-Community_acquisition
However, LEGO may have its branches in many…[Read more]
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Marko Rillo replied to the topic Master Trainer for LEGO SERIOUS PLAY in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 4 months ago
Sorry. Per’s post disappeared because of a technical glitch – while removing some spam comments I accidentally deleted it. Uploading it here:
hi Gustavo, the association was formed by Robert Rasmussen and my-self when LEGO launched the community model. Robert and I were the original master trainers in the method for LEGO, we are both former LEG…[Read more] -
Marko Rillo replied to the topic The value of the certification in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 4 months ago
Sorry. Per’s post disappeared because of a technical glitch – while removing some spam comments I accidentally deleted it. Uploading it here:
hi Patrizia, just a couple of quick thoughts: this is a bit like coaching, you dont need a coaching certificate to do coaching, ”it is simple, you just have to ask questions”, but those that have app…[Read more]
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
We are looking for new contributors to the Serious Play Pro website. If you want then you can just start or join a discussion easily on our community forum website immediately after registration.
We would also be happy to publish the materials that our readers would find interesting on the blog front page. For example:
Interesting blog posts about play, playfulness, facilitation,
Case studies – stories, videos or photos of your facilitation events,
Reviews about books on facilitation and playful techniques,
Research review posts – covering interesting new avenues that has been studied recently.We hope that this could bring some new debates to our growing community and provide visibility to new and active bloggers. Just send a message to Marko.
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
Serious Play Pro Website Statistics – Number of Annual Visitors July 2013-July 2014Since the introduction of LSP Open Source we are glad to witness that the number of facilitators has grown steadily. The Serious Play Pro community was established just four years ago and today we are a true community which covers all the corners of the globe.
It is fun to observe that the coverage of the visitors (the table below) is really almost global. See the annual statistics table of the different countries and the annual number of unique visits from that country. All the regions are well represented among the people interested in the Lego Serious Play methodology.
In average, 66.1 unique visitors come to our site every day nowadays (up from 44.1 visitors/day in 2013 and 35.4 visitors/day in 2012). Given that 2/3 of those visitors are new visitors, it means that any post published are likely read in a month by 2000 different people.
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Country
Visitors1
United States
5,7392
Spain
2,2573
Netherlands
2,1684
United Kingdom
2,0355
Germany
1,9076
Mexico
1,8437
Canada
1,3698
Estonia
1,3269
Colombia
1,21010
France
1,17711
Denmark
1,16112
Australia
85213
Singapore
75214
Chile
75015
Italy
64816
Turkey
57217
South Korea
56918
Belgium
56319
Switzerland
50720
Brazil
48121
Japan
46222
Peru
41423
Russia
36924
South Africa
33525
India
32126
Argentina
31327
China
30728
Malaysia
29429
Hong Kong
27330
Sweden
23831
Ecuador
22932
Philippines
22833
Thailand
21734
Venezuela
20735
Austria
20136
Finland
19637
Portugal
18838
Poland
18339
Indonesia
17640
New Zealand
16941
Taiwan
16842
Greece
14343
Israel
13544
Ireland
12745
Norway
12446
Costa Rica
11247
United Arab Emirates
10648
Czech Republic
9349
Slovenia
9250
Romania
8951
Hungary
8852
Kosovo
8853
Lithuania
8754
Saudi Arabia
8355
Guatemala
8056
Bolivia
7657
Egypt
6858
Panama
6559
Ukraine
5160
Slovakia
4461
Croatia
4262
Vietnam
4263
Kazakhstan
4064
Serbia
3465
Cyprus
3066
Iran
2867
Jordan
2868
Pakistan
2669
Puerto Rico
2570
Luxembourg
2171
Bulgaria
2072
Uruguay
2073
Latvia
1974
Qatar
1975
Belarus
1576
Dominican Republic
1577
Kenya
1578
Macedonia (FYROM)
1379
El Salvador
1380
Lebanon
1281
Trinidad and Tobago
1282
Paraguay
1083
Bahrain
984
Honduras
985
Mauritius
986
Nigeria
987
Tunisia
988
Morocco
889
Macau
890
Albania
791
Cote d’Ivoire
792
Ghana
793
Jamaica
794
Malta
795
Nicaragua
796
Iceland
697
Kuwait
698
Sri Lanka
599
Moldova
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
Laura Seargeant Richardson has published an inspiring video about how the rules of the play can be modified and left to the player’s own devices to achieve more proactive results. Something to also contemplate
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
Audioboo.FM has published a Radio Interview with Andy Priestner on Lego Serious Play. You may follow him over twitter at @PriestLib
listen to ‘Andy Priestner on LEGO Serious Play (Week 8)’ on Audioboo
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
During recent days, a couple of new Slideshares have been created on Lego Serious Play methodology. The first one is created by the Assistant Professor Arindam Basu of University of Canterbury at Christchurch, New Zealand. In his presentation he combines design thinking with Lego Serious Play approach and demonstrates how the combination can be used in order to achieve flow in solution finding process.
Another Slideshare is in French language. Published by a SlideShare user “Chinkie75” – it shows some photos of tower and bridge building exercise and a number of metaphors as well.
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 4 months ago
The following article was published on the website of Independent Free Press Canada.Chances are you grew up with LEGO. Perhaps it was your favourite toy, or a building tool that invoked your imagination to
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Marko Rillo replied to the topic In search for THE definition in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 4 months ago
Patrizia and Per,
Thanks to both of you for a great discussion. It might be indeed a good idea to gather in September and even spend some time on definition building. However, if we are unable to define the LSP for our purpose more precisely then I would say that there is nothing wrong with that either. If we are not too strict in our expression…[Read more]
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Hi Mark,
sorry for the late reply!
I would make a distinction between LSP core and its derivative applications. Legoviews (which I have been doing in several context different from the initial experiments in Palestine) in NOT LSP, it’s a derivation as it lacks many elements of a workshop.Perhaps we don’t need a definition, but perhaps defining…[Read more]
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
After the post where the Lego Serious Play Starter Kit (art.no. 2000414) was unpacked, recently another video has been uploaded to YouTube where a Dutch facilitator Rick Lindeman demonstrates the contents of the -
Per Kristiansen replied to the topic In search for THE definition in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 5 months ago
hi Patrizia
Indeed
Could perhaps also be topic for a building exercise at a break out session at the LSP days later this year…
A presto
Per -
Per Kristiansen replied to the topic In search for THE definition in the forum Serious Play Pro Forum 10 years, 5 months ago
hi Patrizia
Your question is far from stupid, however it may have two sides to it:Do you mean what defines something as LEGO SERIOUS PLAY – in that case we would often turn to the core process. If one does not adhere to the core process, then it is not LSP
Do you mean defining what it does or is, ie a method etc – in this case we often talk…[Read more]
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
Dotti Toellner and Cori Moore Video on Lego Serious Play Facilitation workshop at Lift 2014 conference. They wrote about the event the following.
What happened at Lift14: Well, we sure had some serious fun – it’s amazing what you can do with such energetic and inspiring participants! The fully booked session kicked off with some skill building exercises, teaching our lively liftonians how to (literally) build metaphors, express abstract ideas with 3D models and collaborate through storymaking. Then the real work started as we addressed the question: “What does it take to be a change agent”. (We couldn’t believe how committed these guys were – talk about “flow moments”.) Putting their new skills into action, our lifters experienced rapid action prototyping and shared sense making as they probed and encouraged their fellow team members, drawing out meaning with plenty cheers and laughter!
They also reflected upon their experience at their blog and at their company website.
Doerte ‘Dotti’ Toellner is co-founder and managing director of Point-Blank International. In nearly two decades as a qualitative researcher, design thinker and change agent she has founded two companies and travelled the world on the behalf of ‘her’ brands. Catching sparks and crafting new ways of looking, thinking & doing keeps her inspired and passionate – in research, design, innovation & life in general. Make sure you set aside some time to chat with her about her hobby horses, such as 5 senses research, haptic think and the role of magic in the qualitative approach!
Cori Moore is stationed at Point-Blank’s idea workbench and communication hub, better known as Spark & Craft. A multitasking octopus, she devotes her time to running workshops, attending conferences and events, writing blogs & articles, tweeting, occasionally doodling and bringing new sparks of inspiration & people into the company. A cultural sponge, with a passion for trying new things, her bag of tricks incorporates her experience in the diverse fields of research, communication, event management & mixology – she can make a mean cocktail if you ask her nicely.
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
The following post on how Lego Serious Play is not just a game was written by the Liquid Agency Chief Creative Officer Alfredo Muccino
Lego Serious Play is a hands-on, experiential process designed to
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
An interesting post from Get West London about the use of Lego Serious Play in therapy
A Harefield woman is among a new breed of therapists encouraging grown men and women to stop working and start playing –
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
I found this 2 year old post about Lego Serious Play by Agile Partnership consultant Ellen Grove from her blog. There is also a great team facilitation case study that includes an interesting responsibility game –
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 5 months ago
LEGO Serious Play Transcript by Massimo Mercuri
Lego Serious Play facilitator and our community member Massimo Mercuri has published an interesting post on LSP Facebook group showing how he has transcribed the models that they have built. It is an interesting concept and can add useful perspective to the client. Probably a good idea to report back upon the LSP session. Look at the two pictures closely. Have you done something similar – what do you think of his approach?
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Marko Rillo wrote a new post 10 years, 6 months ago
Schoolkids playing with legos. From: fastcoexist.com
Fast Co Exist has published this article about the linkages between Lego and creativity.
By: Jessica Leber
Creativity is in decline around the world. But a new school built by the toy block company that focuses on play might unlock the secret to a solution.
If successful companies and societies of this next century are defined by their ability to innovate–a trope repeated constantly in business seminars, surveys, and speeches–then the U.S. may be headed for a rough time: On average, Americans’ ability to think creatively has declined.
This trend has been called “the creativity crisis,” and was defined by a major study in 2011. Researchers looked at a common measure of creativity in 300,000 kids and adults over time and found that, unlike IQ scores, creativity had been declining since 1990. The effect was most marked in elementary-school-age kids.
Why exactly creativity measures are declining is still anyone’s guess, although evidence and intuition points to the growing emphasis on testing in education as a factor. Kids are taught to learn by understanding “the one right answer” they need to find, and what they need to do to find it. (On tests of how kids do at brainstorming ideas, 98% of three-year-olds register as “creative geniuses.” By the time they are 25? Only 2%).
“There’s an immense and growing pressure to be able to standardize approaches in the school to ensure quality. And this is an interesting contradiction, because standardization never leads to quality when we talk about learning. We’re not producing products. We’re trying to educate children,” says Randa Grob-Zakhary, CEO of the Lego Foundation.
The foundation, endowed by the Lego Group, is now focused on revamping education systems to try to shift this dynamic at all ages–mainly by incorporating structured, hands-on “play” that fosters creative thinking. “A lot of work is focused on how can we better teach and more quickly teach reading and math–literacy and numeracy,” she says, speaking with Co.Exist at the United Nations’ Global Compact summit in New York City last month. “There’s still a very big gap in defining how can we better equip our children with creative and critical thinking skills to equip them to face tomorrow’s challenges.”
Last month, the Lego Foundation opened its own international school in Billund, near the company’s headquarters in Denmark, where the foundation will attempt to rigorously test and measure some of these ideas by incorporating “hands-on learning” into the curriculum wherever possible–with Lego bricks, but also with other toys, building materials and even robotics technologies. The school will build on the work of the foundation’s existing projects around the world. One, in South Africa, is where today 40,000 kids in grades K to 12 at 25 schools are working with a curriculum that includes play. Anecdotal evidence from this project shows that tests scores have gone up and teacher turnover has been “transformed,” says Grob-Zakhary, though no rigorous studies have been done.
She envisions a key role for the foundation in building a network that moves educational and psychological research on the topic of play and creativity out of academic journals and into the hands of teachers and policymakers. She is also looking to attract buy-in from the business world, which often invests in workforce training in college programs but rarely focuses on early childhood.
She believes that businesses need to start taking a longer-term view. “If we don’t start in those first five years, we have much less possibility to create that workforce we need. And yet very few businesses who would benefit from that kind of agility and adaptiveness built in the early years actually invest in it. It’s a really significant issue.”
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Great Job Mark!
Love it! Much faster and nicer, thank you for your work!