Icebreaker (facilitation)

An icebreaker is a facilitation exercise intended to help a group to begin the process of forming themselves into a team. Icebreakers are commonly presented as a game to "warm up" the group by helping the members to get to know each other. They often focus on sharing personal information such as names, hobbies, etc.

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Introduction or warm-up exercises

Examples of these kinds of facilitation exercises include:

The exercises are particularly popular in the university setting, for instance among residents of a dormitory hall or groups of students who will be working closely together, such as orientation leaders, perhaps, or peer health teachers.

Group-interaction exercises

More difficult icebreaker activities will also prepare the group for its assigned activities. For example, if the team's objective is to redesign a business process such as Accounts Payable, the icebreaker activity might take the team through a process analysis. The analysis could include the identification of failure points, challenging assumptions and development of new solutions - all in a simpler and "safer" setting where the team can practice the group dynamics which they will use to solve the assigned problem.

Examples of these kinds of facilitation exercises include:

See also

External sources