Hello,
I have found some games for communication skills. I hope it may help you or give you some ideas on how to conduct games for communication skills. Kindly let me know whether this helps you?
Regards,
Gay3
From India
I have found some games for communication skills. I hope it may help you or give you some ideas on how to conduct games for communication skills. Kindly let me know whether this helps you?
Regards,
Gay3
From India
Dear Colleagues,
There is no problem with the Word document and PPT attached by Ms. Gayathri, except that they are in Ms. Office 2007 version. I was able to open both of them. You may have had trouble opening them, possibly due to your use of earlier versions of MS Office.
For the benefit of our colleagues, I have converted them to earlier versions of MS Office and am attaching them. Please try to open them now and provide feedback.
Best wishes,
R. Sundararajan
From India, Madras
There is no problem with the Word document and PPT attached by Ms. Gayathri, except that they are in Ms. Office 2007 version. I was able to open both of them. You may have had trouble opening them, possibly due to your use of earlier versions of MS Office.
For the benefit of our colleagues, I have converted them to earlier versions of MS Office and am attaching them. Please try to open them now and provide feedback.
Best wishes,
R. Sundararajan
From India, Madras
Very nice games...
Well, just reading those games reminded me of a game we used to play in our school days. It can be used for enhancing communication skills.
I'll name it "Very Filmy."
Team of 8-10 employees (2 Writers) = 10-12 Employees.
Content:
1) Make up a story in English (preferred language).
2) Genres included: Action, Horror, Comedy, Romance, Suspense, etc.
3) Story Time: 5-6 minutes.
Note: More rules can be implied based on conditions.
Rule: 1 employee -> 1 line; Can speak after 4 attendees (if needing to include more).
The first series will be done in serial order and then randomly, so that everyone will have a chance.
It's similar to a group discussion; however, once you speak, no one can judge your point, and others must continue the story.
The goal is to create a creative and humorous story.
This activity promotes understanding of "listening" and group communication.
Folks, I would like to hear your views on this activity.
From India, Nagpur
Well, just reading those games reminded me of a game we used to play in our school days. It can be used for enhancing communication skills.
I'll name it "Very Filmy."
Team of 8-10 employees (2 Writers) = 10-12 Employees.
Content:
1) Make up a story in English (preferred language).
2) Genres included: Action, Horror, Comedy, Romance, Suspense, etc.
3) Story Time: 5-6 minutes.
Note: More rules can be implied based on conditions.
Rule: 1 employee -> 1 line; Can speak after 4 attendees (if needing to include more).
The first series will be done in serial order and then randomly, so that everyone will have a chance.
It's similar to a group discussion; however, once you speak, no one can judge your point, and others must continue the story.
The goal is to create a creative and humorous story.
This activity promotes understanding of "listening" and group communication.
Folks, I would like to hear your views on this activity.
From India, Nagpur
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