I have been struggling for a long time thinking about how to teach our sons “character.” They won’t learn it from a book, nor will sending them to Catholic school magically make that happen.
What dawned on me this week, is that I can debrief with them. And really do that intentionally.
I attended a wonderful summer camp in high school, it was “student council camp.” And there were lots of character building-activities, that I still remember and think about often.
When I become a camp counselor, I had the opportunity to facilitate those character-building activities. And what we always said amongst other counselors is that it’s not the activity that teaches anything, “it’s all about the debrief.”
Debriefing - the process of helping others learn from their own experiences - is a hard-earned skill. It’s not easy. But it’s essentially all about asking the sequence of questions that highlight the salient information which lead to a a novel insight.
During a debrief, the goal isn’t to tell anyone anything, the goal is to nudge them along by bringing relevant facts to the debriefee’s attention which causes them to have an “aha moment”. In those aha moments, so to speak, they learn a lesson on their own. Good debriefers don’t teach, they help others teach themselves.
Cutting to the chase, I started putting a list of questions that could be used to debrief, even with young children. I needed to write them down to debrief myself I suppose.
I share that list here in case it’s useful to those of us that are parents or coaches. I also share it here in hopes that others share their own debrief questions. If you’re uncomfortable leaving a comment, please do contact me if you have a thought to share, I’d be happy to append it anonymously.
Debrief Questions for Parents and Coaches
How do you feel right now?
Are you okay?
Can you tell me exactly what happened?
Then what happened?
What were you thinking right before you did X?
How do you think this made [Name] feel?
What can you do to make this right?
Why didn’t X, Y, or Z happen instead?
What were you trying to do by doing X?
What could you have done instead of X?
Was doing X okay, or not okay? Why?
What else happened because you did X?
Do you have any questions for me?
What are you going to do differently next time?
What happens next, right now?
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