Winning an Oscar
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Target group
No. of pax
Environment
Time needed
Materials
- A large piece of paper or poster board for each group
- Markers, pens, or pencils
- Optional: mock award (could be a toy trophy or a handmade paper award)
- Optional: podium or designated “stage” area for final presentations
- Optional: a timer for monitoring the preparation and presentation
Objective/aim
- Help participants envision the successful completion of their project
- Identify the key elements required for project success
- Clarify project objectives, messages, and intended impact
- Build team cohesion through collaborative planning
- Encourage creative thinking about potential challenges and solutions
- Assemble the necessary resources, collaborators, and support networks
Step by step instructions
Step 1
Introduction
15 minutes
• Explain the concept: Participants will imagine receiving a prestigious award for their completed project
• Describe what makes a good acceptance speech (gratitude, acknowledging challenges, sharing impact)
Step 2
Group Formation
5 minutes
• Divide participants into small groups of 4-6 people
• If they already have project groups, use them
Step 3
Speech Planning
30-40 minutes
• Groups discuss and plan their acceptance speech
• They should address:
• Project inspiration and origin of their story
• Main message and goals
• The problem or issue addressed
• Challenges faced and how they were overcome
• Key discoveries made during the process
• People and resources that were essential for the success
• The project’s impact and ideal outcome
• Groups should write out key points or a full script
Step 4
Speech Delivery
25-40 minutes
• Ideally, everyone takes part in presenting the speeches
• Groups present their acceptance speeches (5-10 minutes for each group including a buffer time for logistics – depends on number of groups)
• Optional: A mock award to be handed over to the speakers to intensify the feeling of completing the project successfully
Step 5
Reflection
10 minutes
• Discuss how this exercise helps reveals what is important for their project
• Identify concrete steps they can now take based on their future vision
Tips for the trainer
- Encourage participants to be specific rather than general in their speeches
- Recommend participants to select from a range of the topics to choose the one that was the most important for them, or the one they believe is crucial for the successful completion of the project
- Remind groups to balance ambition with realism in their project vision
- If working with shy participants, emphasise that the activity is about planning, not performance
- For groups struggling with the concept, provide a template with questions or guiding phrases
- Keep the atmosphere playful and celebratory, not competitive
- Take notes during presentations to highlight valuable insights during reflection
Alternative
- For online implementation, use breakout rooms for group discussions and shared digital documents for collaborative writing
- For individual projects, participants can write personal acceptance speeches and share them in pairs
- Film the speeches as time capsules to revisit at the end of the project.
Comment
Source
Adapted from creative visualisation techniques in project planning and theatre-based exercises for collaborative work, written by Ivona Remundová
