Wednesday, December 16, 2009

A Wide Brown Land For Me


In the Thinking Caps book there is a piece about 'Calling Australia Home' and the values of mate ship, giving things your best shot and a fair go for all. Each year I fly over Australia 30 or 40 times and this wide, red dirt land disappears in 5 or 6 hours of reading, doing a crossword or two and having a meal. It has been many years since I drove across Oz (I hitched across several times in younger years when the World was a different place) and it really is a wonderful thing to do. In a slow drive across this land you notice subtle changes, hues of color, diversity of landscape and you sense the rugged and ragged beauty. You also appreciate some of the great challenges of distance that rural and remote Australian communities face. I am so glad we are not just all cities and I am so glad that we have taken this slower time (Coo-ee Time) to journey. To dip our toes into various beaches, to sense the heat of 45 degree days when the wind can cook you and then to enjoy the spray of a late sea breeze.

Years ago Macca and I wrote a song called Cooee Child based on a poem I wrote as Marc Diffen and I sat on the granite rocks outside of Mt Magnet. 'Go gently within the morning, go slowly within your day, go with your eyes wide open, Cooee Child the word is spoken... let's walk about this wondrous untouched land...' As we walk about this wide and wondrous land I am reminded to breathe deeply in nature, particularly when so much of our lives is in cities and on planes.

Thinking Caps on www.glenncapelli.com

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Multiple Personalities



It's funny but I bumped into someone recently who said 'Glenn Capelli, weren't you the footballer?' In my early years my 'identity' was that of the kid down the oval kicking a footy, the young bloke leading a side onto a field, Capa the Captain. Two knee operations later and I have to conclude my days of kicking a footy, so I get my knees to take up marathon running. For years I ran a minimum of 10KMs a day and usually far more. My best Marathon time was 3 Hours 15 Minutes and I was aiming to break the magic 3 hour mark when (as might be guessed) the knee collapsed again.

From 'identity' of Footballer, to Runner and then to Hobo. For a lot of the 1980s my possessions were all rolled into a backpack as I chucked laps of the World - kibbutz in Israel, four summers of Camp in North Carolina, months in Kenya, trains in Europe: sleeping rough and sometimes not sleeping at all.

It's funny how many identities we are tagged with throughout life - footballer, runner, hobo, husband, business person, teacher, guy on radio, speaker... but I hope whatever identities we are tagged with, no matter how the world sees us, that we maintain the identity of being a Learner at our core. To experience diversity and continue to learn from it, to experience others beneath their 'identities' and to continue to learn from them.

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Sir Richard Branson Event


2010 holds a lot of good things already in place for my presenting - the NESA International Conference in Melbourne in March, the Capricorn Conferences in Fremantle, Spectrum Education in Christchurch (Jan), Life Education in Auckland (Jan), Independent Schools Conference at the Crown in Melbourne to name a few.

In March there is also the opportunity for me to meet and share the stage with Sir Richard Branson through the work of Shane Kempton. Not only do I present but also I will ask Richard some questions as part of a panel. If you had the chance to ask Sir Richard Branson something, what would you ask?

Tickets for tables are available. Double click the picture for details.

Chumbawamba Well


The musical co-operative Chumbawamba are mainly known for their world hit Tubthumping (I get knocked down and I get up again) though to me they exemplify what it means to be creative. Their songs and example teach us that creation is a process of good ingredients, good blending and working in layers. Whether we are creating through designing presentations, cooking a feast, writing pieces for radio, creating a novel or weaving practical art through textiles - we need to get the right ingredients (quality produce), get the right mix for the context and have layers of discovery in the taste and learning. Chubawamba well.

For more on Chumbawamba get the Thinking Caps book (Piece 14) www.glenncapelli.com

Monday, November 23, 2009

Many Lands of Smart - Brave Souls


Brave Souls with Bernadette Young is where we flip normal talk back radio and people call in but do not know what they will be asked to talk about. In November 2009 I devised a Brave Souls around how we teach the Multiple Intelligences Model of Professor Howard Gardner - The Many Lands of Smart.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The People You Meet On Stage


The Conference Speaking World is an interesting one and you get to meet and be team-mates with a host of fascinating folk, some who become your mates. I once was flown to Miami to speak and the evening entertainment was three of the former Doobie Brothers performing now with a 7 piece band; a magic combo.

Other joyful collaborations include Conference cards with Professor Howard Gardner, Harvard's wonderful David Perkins, Moira Kelly (founder of Children First), Edward de Bono (in Canada and Malaysia), astronauts, Everest climbers, Gold Medalists, scientists, Prime Ministers, Senators, street choirs and a vast array of CEOs. Not to mention the magic of other Professional Speakers.

One joy for me is when I get to interview folk on stage and turn interviews (and panels) into activities of thoughtfulness (for the audience) and involvement. Two years ago at the National Employment Services International Congress I was able to interview David Bussau regarding his life (from being an abandoned child) and his work in micro-lending championing the lives folk in need of livelihood. David's story as told by Philippa Tyndale in Don't Look Back is a touching and meaningful read. In 2008 David was named Senior Australian of the Year.

In March 2010 I will get to theme weave (and conduct other interviews) at the next International NESA in Melbourne. Magic.

Friday, November 13, 2009

Spreading Little Arrows of Magic


Leapy Lee's original name was Graham Pulleyblank and we can understand why he went with Leapy. In 1968 my radio kept playing Leapy's song (penned by the prodigious Albert Hammond and Mike Hazlewood) 'Little Arrows'. The tune, like an arrow, can get stuck in your head.

Recently I watched the excellent SBS series Who Do You Think You Are and saw the Australian episode on (also excellent) singer/musician/activist John Butler. John used the example of archery to consider what the journey back into his family tree had done for him. He noted he was quite future oriented with his arrow pointing to where it should go but that the arrow flies better and further when you pull the string of the bow back behind you. Going back helps you go forward better. A beautiful way of seeing the world.

In many ways my radio pieces and the 40 pieces that make up the first Thinking Caps book are little arrows that pull back in order to go forward. Some are reminders of a world we used to know and some of these reminders may help us go forward in a better way. Little arrows of magic that help us to leap(y).

You can order Thinking Caps on www.glenncapelli.com

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Book Launch - The Caps


Our Thinking Caps book is to have a small, amusing, entertaining and possibly even slightly moving launch on Sunday 15th November. Hopefully it will capture all the factors evident in the 40 pieces - ups, downs, laughter, tears and thoughtfulness. Mate, culprit and former Channel 7 on screen personality Keith Geary will MC, my radio buddy (and also culprit) Bernadette Young will engage me in an interview and hopefully my musical mate (co-song writer and culprit) Keith McDonald will sing a tune. PS. Culprits are folk who have inspired bits of the pieces. If you can't make the launch, then Thinking Caps is available at www.glenncapelli.com

Sunday, November 1, 2009

Diversity and Presenting


Jae Rhee from Curtin University interviewed me as part of his Master's Unit on Leadership in a Dynamic Global Environment (Lecturer Troy Hendrickson). The interview was based on 'Diverse Leadership' and covers ideas relating to presenting to diverse groups, diversity in leadership and how my years of backpack travels influenced me as an educator. The article is re-printed with permission. Thank you Jae.

Interview with a Diversified Educator
Profile and Background of Glenn Capelli as an Educator
Glenn Capelli, the interviewee, is the founder of True Learning Centre and a professional educator in thinking and learning skills. He is also known as a writer, songwriter, radio and television presenter, and a public speaking professional. He is a Winston Churchill Fellowship Awardee and also member of MENSA - the High IQ Society.

He travels around the world, working with diversity across and within various cultures and groups. The extent of the diversity that he works with ranges; from five years old students to their teachers, principals and parents; from remote communities in the Australian outback to top private schools in the Perth metropolitan area; and from a group of CEO’s to workers in factories across the globe. Immersed in such diversity, Glenn has learned to appreciate and honour different ways of thinking, living and working.

Born in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia, with an Italian immigrant family background, Glenn Capelli experienced the hardship that his grandparents went through in his early childhood. He reflects that this experience was possibly the cause of his interest in the issues of diversity and social justice.

Key Aspects of an Diversified Educator: Interest and Empathy
With his curiosity seeking to understand cultures other than his own, Glenn appeared to me as a dynamic learner and a thinker who endeavoured to find common cultural threads across various cultures rather than differences. Glenn went on backpacking over seven years in various places across the globe. During this period, he was a fish farmer in Israel, a comedian in LA, a travel writer in Kenya and a summer-camp counsellor in North Carolina. Upon his return to Australia in 1987, he established the True Learning Centre where he focuses on the creativity and quality of learning and thinking skills.

Glenn states that such diverse, rich and hands-on experience was essential for him as an educator, professional speaker and a business owner. He explained that the experience helped him grow as a person who came across extraordinary companionship along the journey and a range of different languages expressing diverse worldviews.

Glenn mentions that curiosity leads to the discovery of the multiple layers of other people and understanding leads to honouring other’s worldviews. Throughout the interview, interest and empathy came across as the key aspects of this educator who is immersed in a dynamic and complex world.

The Role of an Educator in a Diverse and Complex World
Glenn Capelli has, over time, accumulated an extensive knowledge and understanding of people and their skills. He believes that a complex world requires diversified group intelligence rather than individuals with high IQ’s, as IQ is merely a part of the whole concept of intelligence. According to Glenn, group intelligence consists of four different sets of intelligence:
• creative mind
• analytical mind
• practical mind, and
• emotional mind

He considers such a multi-dimensional concept of intelligence, diverse knowledge, capabilities and sometimes ‘odd’ skills are like crayons of different colours. Glenn states that, for an educator of thinking and learning skills, it is important to become aware of what is working for each individual because it is his role to tap into the individual’s authentic colours of crayons and encourage them to utilise those crayons in whatever setting they are situated.

Further, Glenn views that judging and categorising people prevent us from seeing the unique and true colours of individuals. Hence, having a genuine interest and empathy is critical, because it provides us with the opportunity to learn about others individually so that we have the opportunity to honour and accept their skills, personalities and potentials.

Diversity, Flexpertise, Systems Thinking and Leadership
Thijssen (2003) explains that flexpertise is the ability to maintain and apply expert skills and knowledge to diverse areas beyond the area of specialisation, while adapting and changing to dynamic environment. Our discussion about developing flexpertise was insightful as it is in line with the development of one’s capacity to adopt systems thinking approach. As discussed in Part 1 of this paper, the systems thinking approach sees the whole picture where complex and dynamic interactions of parts occur. Thus, the implication of developing flexpertise knowledge and skills lies in the development of one’s ability to understand and work with diversity.

From Glenn’s viewpoint, the appreciation of diversity and flexpertise is critical in order to understand the role of leadership because leadership essentially requires the ability to think and behave in a holistic manner (Skarzauskiene 2008). However, although systems thinking is imperative for leadership, Glenn notes that getting people to embrace such a holistic thinking approach is the greatest challenge in his work as an educator. Glenn’s comment, “Nothing gets affected by anything in collections, but everything gets affected by everything else in systems.” illustrates the need for educating people in systems thinking in a dynamic and complex world powered by diversity.

Glenn Capelli’s belief is that building up a rich pool of leadership needs to be encouraged so that more complete and enduring form of leadership can be attained and remembered among members of an organisation. The critical nature of this type of pool of leadership is that leadership needs to occur in each layer of organisations and within individual members, operating in a continuum manner and adapting to various situations and people.

Professional Principles for Excellence and Measuring Excellence
Glenn carries a very strong conviction in achieving excellence in his profession and measuring the quality of his work. He believes that excellence may be accomplished by practicing long, hard and well by attempting diverse methodologies involving some of those yet-to-be-discovered skills. Also, he considers that if his teaching concept has been taken for someone’s children or relatives, then it means his education was of value to someone. Glenn’s statement, “If I work as an educator and if the education is good, it’ll spread. But if you work as a marketer, you don’t know if it’s your advertisement or education” illustrates his belief in word-of-mouth campaign as an educator rather than a commercially driven salesperson.

Faith, Stretching and Embracing: a Way of Honouring and Exploring
Glenn Capelli suggests that we all need to believe in ourselves for what we aim to achieve and try some stretching and embracing by attempting to discover the under-utilised colours of crayons both in ourselves and others. This set of advice appeared to me as a way of honouring who we are and exploring who we want to be.

References
Skarzauskiene, A. 2008. Theoretical Insights to leadership based on systems thinking principles. Organizacijø Vadyba: Sisteminiai Tyrimai (48): 105. ProQuest Databases. http://proquest.umi.com.dbgw.lis.curtin.edu.au (accessed September 13, 2009).
Thijssen, J. G. L. 2003. Evaporated talent? Problems with talent development during the career. International Journal of Resources Development and Management 3 (2): 154 - 170. Inderscience Publishers. www.inderscience.metapress.com (accessed September 15, 2009).

Glenn's book Thinking Caps is available at www.glenncapelli.com

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Super Teachers


Today is World Teachers Day, a good day to ponder who was a super teacher in your life and a good day to send them (or their memory) a 'thank you' and 'good on you'. Piece 28 of the Thinking Caps book is tribute to the folk who have planted good seeds and inspired their students to be life long lovers of learning. It is a special 'thank you' to Mr Duncan McNab my Grade 7 teacher at Doubleview Primary School: 'he never wore a cape or flew over tall buildings but he helped develop young minds and he taught us to soar.' Send a good on you to your Super Teachers.

Thinking Caps is available at www.glenncapelli.com

Thursday, October 22, 2009

Mates


Maxie Walker is a good mate with a wide mind, a big laugh and delightful writing ability with any of the many fine pens he owns. Known for his good tales; whether they be on television advertisements, the wide world of sports or references to kissing crocodiles, Max personifies what it is to be Australian. Play footy, play cricket, love your folks, be good with your mates, stand up for 'a fair go' and laugh long & well. It was a delight to get a message from Max that summed up his thoughts on the Thinking Caps book: 'Like winding down the car window.... insight back, possibility forward'. Thinking Caps is available from www.glenncapelli.com Thank you Mr Walker.

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Thinking Caps Book: A Reader Writes


Received an email from reader Tracey regarding the new Thinking Caps book:

Hi Glenn Fabulous Willy (a reference from Pet Names Piece 22) just a quickie to say thank you so much for the book, I am absolutely loving it. It’s clever, funny and thought provoking and very entertaining. I am racing through it to finish it by tomorrow when we go away, but I will definitely be reading it again when we get home so I can savour every chapter. I took it with me to the hairdressers yesterday and had 3 people asked me what I was reading. Thank you very much for a fantastic read. Cheers,Tracey (Loving, Loyal, Playful & Cuddly………you guessed it, favourite pet was a dog!!!!)

The final sentence being a reference to Piece 16 The Personality Test.
Thinking Caps is available from www.glenncapelli.com
Many thanks Tracey. We are so glad that you - and others - are enjoying, laughing, sharing pieces with others and returning to re-read and re-think.

Saturday, October 10, 2009

We Have a School in Bangla Desh


Karen Blixen penned 'I have a farm in Africa' as opening lines for 'Out of Africa'. It is time for our Blixen moment: 'We have a school in Bangla Desh'. Our school is Bangla Pata on Bhola Island, one of the most impoverished areas of Bangla Desh and 300 girls and boys attend daily. In late 2006 Lindy and I approached the CO-ID group (Fred Hyde http://www.fredhyde.org) after seeing their tale on Australian Story. Our school was built by our funds and is maintained each year, including the salaries of four teachers, by our funds. It is a wonderful thing to know that every book, DVD or CD we sell funds our school and helps our 300 kids.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Thinking Caps Book


One way of looking at the Thinking Caps book (available at www.glenncapelli.com) is which parts and pieces do you read out loud to your partner, mates or kids? So far folk are reading Love Puffs to their partners and mates along with grabs from Sea Squirts (the nature of relationship & marriage). One reader wrote in to tell us she had read The Most Influential Book piece to her teens but then had to explain the old Noddy/Big Ears joke to them again and again. My favorite for reading out loud is Calling Australia Home (the kind of values we can pass on) and Paronomasia - the art of good and bad punning. Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Mao's Last Dancer


How are Professor Howard Gardner, Edward de Bono, Professor Marian Diamond, Harvey Mackay, (some of) the Doobie Brothers, King Constantine II, Ian Lesley, Christine Anu, Dr Stephen Lundin (author of Fish) and author Bryce Courtney all linked? Through the connectivity of Conference Cards. I have had the joy of speaking at Conferences where these good folk have spoken or performed.

Recently I glanced through my old journals and found notes taken at the Schwarzkopf Conference in Borneo 2005. I had the joy of topping and tailing the card with Li Cunxin (Mao's Last Dancer) and Gregory David Roberts (Shantarma) being the wonderful filling. My notes of the start of Li's presentation are pictured.

Thursday, September 24, 2009

Music Zen



'Taint what you do it's the way that you do it... that's what gets results'. Written by jazz artists Sy Oliver and Trummy Young, released by Ella Fitzgerald (and others) in 1939 and re-released by Fun Boy Three and Bananarama in 1982 this is the anthem of Music Zen: the rhythm of design and presentation. This workshop looks at the use of song, music, rhythm and melody in designing and delivering workshops, keynotes and conferences. There are layers to be explored including suggestology, music for mood, meaning, evocation and provocation of learning. It will mean more of a thing when it's (your presentations) got the swing.

Slidezen


Good teachers can create environments of learning without Power Point, Keynote, laptops, flip charts or chalk boards but if they are using slides then the slides should add art, science and magic to the learning experience. Slide Zen is a workshop about the philosophy of suggestion and how each slide design (the look, the sound, the feel, the transition) should add layers of learning to each lesson, workshop, conference or keynote speech. This small group workshop will shift (and sift) the way you design and present.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Frozen Shoulder Syndrome - Living in Pain


After many months of intense pain my wife Lindy was told she had Frozen Shoulder Syndrome (FSS). Over the next two years of partial treatments, semi relief at times, one step forward and two steps back at others, we learned more and more about this 'most common unheard of thing'. Listen with empathy to the piece, the Professor talking about Pain Management and living with those living with pain. Listen also to caller Clinton talking of his FSS. If you know of anyone with FSS or living with chronic pain, please have them listen to this piece. It may not provide a full answer but it may provide empathy, partial possibilities and the fact that they are not alone.

Wednesday, August 12, 2009

HOPS - Higher Order Presentation Skills


The HOPS - Higher Order Presentation Skills. A presentation for Australian Institute of Training & Development. Double click image for details and go to the www.aitd.com.au site to register. It will be an exciting night.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

Dr Evelyn Gateva Visual Notes


Seattle 1991. After the SALT Conference I joined 100 or so others for three days with Prof. Georgi Lozanov and Dr Evelyn Gateva to experience their methods of teaching and learning. Towards the end Dr Gateva ran a half day lesson on the teaching of some Italian vocab words and grammar. A vibrant introduction using songs to introduce some words & meanings, Active Concerts, playful exploration through discussion, games, readings, debate (Elaboration phase) and a Passive Concert to finish. My notes tried to track the rich layers of methodology. Sadly Dr Gateva passed on some years ago. It was an honor to be in the class.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

Presentation Skills: Boomerangs


A Boomerang is any approach you use to return the participants' attention back to the front of the room. So a Boomerang is used after you set up a discussion, activity, chat... and then need the group to stop, pause or return their attention to you. Often teachers and presenters use the volume of their voice to Boomerang but this can deplete energy. Boomerangs are what skilled teachers and presenters do without even knowing they might be doing it and there are a whole range of Boomerangs to play with. Enjoy the audio piece explaining the variety of Boomerangs.

Sunday, July 26, 2009

Bed Making


When a bloke makes a bed, certain things should happen, starting with wild applause. Thinking caps piece aired on ABC with Bernadette Young July 2009. Great talkback from callers regarding their bed making skills - ranging from nurses, prisoners at Freo Jail and people from the armed forces. More Thinking Caps on itunes

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Iron(ing) Man


A 2009 radio piece about the Super Hero Ironing Man - far better than Iron Man. Other Thinking Caps pieces are available on itunes.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

A Hank Thank


Many thanks to Hank B Marvin, lead guitarist with The Shadows, for being on Brave Souls radio with Bernadette Young and me (July 10 2009). After the show I asked him whether a new tune came to him in his fingers whilst strumming or in his mind - a mental humming. He replied both and that he had written one song whilst on a plane after seeing the book cover of Rachel Carson's Silent Spring at an airport bookshop. The song was Silvery Rain later recorded by Olivia Newton-John and others:

Butterflies danced on invisible strings
Showing wings they borrowed from a rainbow
And a blackbird on high sang a praise to the sky
While a light aeroplane sprayed the fields
With a silvery rain...


Could have interviewed Hank for hours and chatted for days. Lovely bloke.

Saturday, July 4, 2009

Our Attitude Affects Our Interconnections


Macro-Mind Motivator from Youth Mastermind - the youth and family program we ran for 7 years. This and others available on Magic Brain CD on itunes.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

A Listing Brainstorm - Respond


What do you believe are some of the most important skills for youngsters to learn toward our complex future? Respond.

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Recent Reading


I once asked Edward de Bono whether he still finds time for reading. He replied that he did and that he read broadly and randomly. By randomly he explained that he would ask others what they were reading and then read whatever it was they answered. 'We get stuck in our own kind of patterns' he said. Diverse recommendations can break the patterns. I agree and read eclectically, mixing Fiction and Non-Fiction, poetry and prose, adult books and kids books. Recent recommends include:

Play: How It Shapes the Brain, Opens the Mind and Invigorates the Soul by Stuart Brown M.D. A book that adds layers of good reasoning to the philosophy of Neoteny (see Neoteny piece and pieces/song on itunes)

Peter Temple novels including his Jack Irish series. I never read much crime fiction so it was a sideways step to embrace all of Peter Temple's works. Love the Melbourne settings, the nostalgia of how Jack Irish follows the Fitzroy Football club and the fact that when reading the Jack Irish series I picture my mate Keith Geary as Jack Irish - a man who loves horses, woodwork and bucking the establishment. For mainly Non-Fiction readers, reading fiction can expand the imagination.

Any poetry of The Mersey Poets; Roger McGough, Brian Pattern and Adrian Henri. Had a chat with speaker mate Roy Miller (shalom) and we talked about some of these works. It re-kindled my desire to read the wonderful lines of each of these poets. I still have the copy of The Mersey Poets book that travelled in my backpack for many of my hobo years. In fact, for the many years of backpacking (on and off for 7 years in the 1980s) the books that stayed with me all the way were The Complete Writings and Drawings of Bob Dylan and a book of poetry by William Butler Yeats.

Finally I believe kids' books are not just kids' books. The dementors in Harry Potter books could be a metaphor for the Toxic Environments Dr Stephen Lundin writes of in Fish or for the Psychic Vampire folk my mate Amanda Gore talks of in her presentations.

Read broadly and randomly and deeply.

Monday, June 29, 2009

Thinking!


The 14th International Thinking Conference held in June 2009 in KL Malaysia was a Laksa. Great ingredients, diverse blend of tastes and layers of long lasting flavor. An honor to present at it and learn from it. Memorable paraphrased lines include:

Try crossing the street in Kuala Lumpur and see what kinds of smarts you use. Howard Gardner
It's never too late to nurture the good worker with the ENA triple helix of Excellence, Engagement and Ethics HG
Good thinking includes identifying assumptions and looking for invalid ones - A Constraints Theory Approach
No-one anywhere really knows what the hell is going on, we're all just making it up as we go along. My mate Colin James
Dr John Edwards reminding us of Daniel Kim's Systems Thinking work - move up from Events & Patterns of Behavior towards Systems, Mental Models and Vision.
Develop Flexpertise. Experts have specialised understanding within a field. Flexpertise is to understand the applications in a wide scope beyond the field. The wonderful David Perkins
Re-think thinking, re-word words. Dr Shameen Rafik-Galea
Trigger + Thought = Emotion + Action = Consequence. Dr Tom Mulholland
Seek novelty in the mundane. Andrew Lees.

And to Tony Buzan, Edward de Bono, Lane Clarke, Karen Boyes, Kevin Warwick, Reg Polson, the Malaysia 1 Team, Dave Koutsoukis, Dr Yvonne Sum, Dr Neil Carrington and the 990 others who presented or participated - magic.

World Thinking Conference - Pen Grippers


Had the joy of presenting a Plenary and Workshop session at the World Thinking Conference in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (June 22-26th). With Keynotes by Prof. Howard Gardner, David Perkins, Tony Buzan, the former Prime Minister of Malaysia Dr. Mahathir bin Mohamad and Edward de Bono it was a learning & thinking joy.

Often at Conferences some really great learning moments occur in the conversations and the smaller sessions you choose to attend. At the wonderful Malaysia 1 session 20 folk from a variety of nations enjoyed a wonderful process of group tasks and discussions. I happened to find myself in a small group with 17 year old Malaysian student Nur Hafizah whose Mum was one of the key facilitators. When I saw how Nur gripped her pen I asked her if she had ever got in trouble for holding it that way. 'From my Mum all the time' she said. I then told her how I had got into trouble at school for holding my pen the same way as her and how I had been told I would never be able to write neatly. Later in life i was told my hand writing was so neat I could get a job as a typewriter!

After the Conference I received a lovely email and photo from Nur saying 'Thank you' because her Mum now no longer reprimanded her for her pen grip. A coincidental Conference outcome of good learning. Magic.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

Cap Maps- Anableps


It is natural for me to take notes anableptically! I explain the anablep in The Thinking Learning Classroom - a central American carp fish with four irises and lenses - two for looking above the surface of the water and two for looking beneath. For learners & teachers, above the surface can represent the notes we take on the content covered, beneath the surface can be notes we make on methodology and ideas the presentation sparks for us that may not be related to the content being covered. I often get ideas for songs to write whilst listening into and Cap Mapping (taking Visual Notes) a presentation.

Sometimes the methodology stimulates me to think of ways I might teach concepts, likewise sometimes the lack of methodology can stimulate thoughts on how to present the speaker's content in a variety of different ways. Such note taking & making helps keep me actively engaged in presentations and actively engaged in learning.

In our Born To Learn USA cable television series made for Mind Extension University we had a little song that went 'You gotta actively engage your mind, bring yourself to learning all the time'. Visual Notes and anablepping (now, there's a word for you) help keeps the mind alive and learning.

CapMaps DVD and Thinking Learning Classroom book are both available on www.glenncapelli.com in The Shop.

Wednesday, May 27, 2009

The Poet in Me


I found an old poem today
And looked back
On the lad I used to be
He inspired me
All ideals and absolutes
All passion and poetry
All Che revolutionary
Out changing the world

I found an old poem today
And looked back
On the lad I used to be
And couldn't help but feel
That some of it -
The plea & posturing
To change the world -
Was partly an effort to try and attract some girls.

Sunday, May 24, 2009

What We Can Learn From Adam Hills


Theme:

Do you have a favourite comic? What makes them good? Can comedians do more than make us laugh?

The Inflatable Adam Hills

Each week on ABC radio Bernadette Young and I have a little thing we do called Brave Souls where people ring in to have a conversation. The only thing is they do not know what the topic of the conversation will be, thus they need to be Brave Souls, folk prepared to think on their brave feet.

As part of Brave Souls we also have Brave Thumbs where the not quiet as brave folk get to text through a comment on a topic we give them.

Recently we incorporated another body part into Brave Souls – the Brave Bum. This is where a studio guest gets to sit their brave bum in the hot seat and be prepared to think and join in on the general playfulness of this talkback radio FLIP.

Our first Brave Bum was host of the wonderful ABC television program Spicks & Specks, comedian Adam Hills. Apart from the fact that I love Adam’s work and looked forward to meeting him, there was an added bonus in that he arranged two complimentary tickets to his live show called Inflatable. I had already seen some of Adam’s other shows and welcomed the chance to see him again.

As a professional speaker myself, there is a lot to be learned from Adam Hills.

The Sub-Start

On taking stage Adam does ‘stuff’ before he starts the guts of his show. Often the stuff is a response to something or someone he sees in the crowd. He tells us (in a nice frame) that he has a show prepared and eventually that we will get to it but there are some things he just has to do first. In his final Australian tour show at Perth’s Octagon Theatre show he did several things:

1. He spotted two girls wearing t-shirts saying ‘Was it a Shark?’ a reference to one of Adam’s gags from another show
2. He then drew attention to 11 girls sitting together who have made singlets saying ‘We Love Adam Hills’. He brings them on stage for a photo
3. He introduces us to Maria a woman who has seen 12 of his shows in a variety of states this year and who has seen Adam 70 times in the past two years. He calls Maria his ‘resident stalker’ and she seems to love him even more for it
4. He introduces us to his AUSLAN sign interpreter and the joys of signing
5. He spots a young lad and asks him his age and name. The lad is an eleven-year old named George. It turns out that one of the t-shirt girls is named Georgina and another lass he has chatted to is Gina – short for Georgina. Plus there is a guy in the front row that is also a George. Adam delights in the Georgeness of the crowd and night and now has a spontaneous running gag.

The Involvement

Adam’s sub-start has set up the premise that this is a night where members of the crowd, and sign language itself, are as much the stars of the show as Adam. Involving a crowd can be risky but the risk gives the show a chance to bounce spontaneously.

When Adam was in the studio for Brave Souls we chatted that our radio FLIPPED talkback had at its core a belief that everyone has a story and that people will come through – basically we had faith in folk. Adam’s comedy has the same foundation belief.

The Premise

Adam’s show’s title is based on an old and popular joke about the Inflatable Boy who let’s his school down and himself down… Adam is able to make the joke work because of the story he tells building to the gag (meeting a perky 19 year old), the second punch line (the 19 year old lass tells him it is a ‘Dad Joke’) and where he then takes it all.

Author Dale Carnegie outlined his ideas in public speaking fifty years before Adam Hills was born. Carnegie believed that great speakers tell stories that have a point that link to the theme that they are on about: Story-Point-Link.

Adam’s Inflatable show does Old Gag-Point-Link. He makes the gag his own by then relating it to a pretend duologue with his future son. The point being that our purpose on the planet is to inflate others so they swell up and feel good as opposed to deflating others. This then links to an on-going Adam Hills theme: his comedy has compassion.

Finally, A Foot To Stand On

The ‘Was it a Shark?’ t-shirts the young women wore refers to the fact that Adam has a prosthetic foot and when people outside of Australia hear this they ask ‘Was it a shark?’ It wasn’t.

Adam was born without a right foot. Perhaps this is why he made such a great commentator for the Para-Olympics and why he is such a great commentator on the human spirit.

Perhaps being sans a right foot has taught Adam a deeper level of empathy. Or maybe he was just raised to have a sense of humour balanced with a sense of respect. Whatever, it helps his shows touch people deeper than a series of continuous belly laughs – they uplift and inflate. They help us become better people (and have fun at the same time).

Everyone can benefit from an Adam Hills stage show. Professional and public speakers can get another layer of benefit from watching they way Adam weaves his prepared show and his spontaneous ‘thinking on his foot show’ together as a living organism.

Adam finished (teaching us about climax) with his Advance Australia Fair anthem to the tune of Jimmy Barnes Working Class Man. As he did so, the t-shirt girls, the singlet lasses, Maria, Gina and 11 year-old George joined him on stage holding big purple inflatable balloons.

It was simple, memorable and beautiful: the music, respect and humour were in deed alive with the sound of Adam Hills.

Where to from here:

• Which comedians have you seen live on stage?
• Do you have a favourite comic or two? What makes them good?
• What have you noticed about how comedians craft their shows? Do they have a plan and stick to it or do they bounce spontaneously? Do they blend the prepared with the spontaneous?

Wednesday, May 20, 2009

Mistakes - I Wrecked 'Em


Thinking Cap piece that cheekily aired on ABC radio in May 2009. The concepts of mistakes and rectums weave throughout, plus I get to tell a very old joke. Many thanks to my pal Genia Landa for 'Pervi Blin Comom' also available as a song on Magic Brain CD itunes.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Poem Of Brothers in Arms - Garry & Glenn


My brother and I
Threw rocks at each other
Tossing, then diving
Ducking for cover

He once hit me
In the back of the head: It bled
A good shot
Ten stitches sealed the lot

I once hit him right
Between the eyes
He was 28
I was 25
Just a mighty concussion
(It's not as if he died)

My brother and I
Through throwing rocks at each other
Eventually found time to finally discover
A HUG is as good as a boulder
If you both live long enough
To get older.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Cap Maps - FISH


Had the pleasure of presenting Now, More than Ever, The people Revolution for the Australian Institute of Management with best selling business author Dr Stephen Lundin (Fish, Fish Tales, Cats...) plus Social Researcher and Demographer Mark McCrindle. I took notes!

There are hundreds of things you can do in Visual Note Taking (Cap Mapping) - use of colors, different types of hand writing, playing with size, symbols, techniques... The idea is to capture what is being said and what it sparks in your mind. Things to look for in this page include:

1. The Word Toxicity - Use of Concrete Word: making the word look like what it means
2. The Drawing of Stephen - It doesn't have to be accurate (sorry Stephen!) just enough of the features to help recall his look
3. Borders - Simple circles, rectangles and such can help the information Stand-Out
4. Design- You can read it in chunks or follow it right to left, up to down... could have used a Mind-Map or many other design possibilities

The beauty of Cap Maps is that there is a freedom of choice just as Stephen writes about in his work. Stay tuned for more example pages and 'tips'. Meanwhile, check out our CapMaps DVD at the shop www.glenncapelli.com

Sunday, April 26, 2009

A Lengthy Issue


Twitter is an instant, Facebook a bonding moment and relationships take time. As the girth span of we human beings seem to grow, the attention span seems to shrink. Aired on 720 ABC in March 2009. More Thinking Caps are available on itunes.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Scridoodling


A scridoodle is a mix of scribble and doodle. The mind starts and the pen takes off and forms some image or collection of lines on a page. Sometimes it forms into a coherent whole (Pool Boy 2 semi self-portrait), other times it resembles a mess in ink or a rough collection of thought images. Some up coming scridoodles will demonstrate this theme. The thing with a scidoodle is that when I start to draw or muse I have no outcome in mind. I start and it continues. Then something emerges. Sometimes, it is in the looking back that meaning is made and innovation becomes apparent.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Songs and Days


Wednesday's Child aired on ABC radio Australia in 2007 - a lament for Wednesdays and Thursdays when it comes to music. More Thinking Caps can be found on the Thinking Caps CD on itunes.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Slide Zen


It is interesting that Powerpoint and general use of slides in presenting and educating is copping a bit of stick at the moment and the answer for a lot of presenters/educators is to not use the approach. I prefer the Ella Fitzgerald philosophy from the 1939 penned tune when she sings 't'aint what you do, it's the way that you do it'. Use slides (I prefer Keynote rather than Powerpoint) in such a way that they add value to your presentation and help to reach and teach folk in deeper layers. Therefore, slides as a teaching and reaching tool take thought and time in how you design, how you introduce them and what they can bring to certain learners that other elements of your design and delivery can not.
Perhaps it is easier to not use slides or to use slides that detract from the message and layers of meaning but easier may not be the best choice. I love the creative approach in designing slides (visuals, imbedded audio, original art work, thought of font, choice of transition...) that add layers of depth, meaning and entertainment. Slides are so much more than Bullet Points or videos stolen from youtube.
After I presented at the National Master Class for Professional Speakers in Sydney (March 2009), Paul Wallbank wrote Interestingly, at the National Speakers Convention over the weekend, I noticed most professional speakers have given up the use of PowerPoint or Keynote altogether. Most are going back to using butcher's paper and relying on simply their knowledge and passion for their topics. That's not to say PowerPoint is completely dead. One speaker who used the medium very well was Glenn Capelli, but his use of Apple Keynote was a far cry from the "heading-bullet point- bullet point-bullet point-corporate logo-next heading" type presentation we've all suffered through. Which showed the right tools used well can have stunning results. From http://www.smartcompany.com.au
Many thanks Paul for your words and more so your thinking beyond the words. Last year I ran a Slide Zen worshop and thoroughly enjoyed the way the attendees have taken to creative use of slide design to enhance learning. We will run more Slide Zen workshops this year in WA, Victoria and NSW. Maybe other states too.

The Return of the Passion Bum


A Thinking Caps radio piece featuring my love of a good Caesar Salad and the passion of a tattoo on a bum. It aired (the piece, not the bum) in April 2009. A piece for understanding benchmarks, service and getting that get up and give it your best shot feeling. Passion - pass it on. PS. The Caesar Salad restaurant I first mention is The World Southbank Melbourne, a regular eatery for my wife Lindy, our mate Colin James and I.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Visual Journal


Visual note taking is an eclectic combination of words, stick figures, shapes and designs to take notes and make notes. Taking notes is when you transcribe what a presenter or author is saying/writing. Making Notes is when you note down something for you that the speaker or writer has sparked in you. Often my Note Making is when something I have heard or read has sparked the idea for a song - either a song that the presenter can use in their presentation or a song that I might write myself. Sometimes my Note Making is related to methodology of presenting - how has the presenter portrayed their information? What methods have they used (or not used) in getting their messages across? Then, importantly, what does this mean for me as a learner and an educator? My Visual Journals started when I was around 12 years of age and continue to continue. They are my favourite resources and a document of a learning life in action (potholes and all). Check out our CapMaps DVD at The Shop www.glenncapelli.com

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Smarty Pants


David Perkins of Harvard fame wrote a book called Outsmarting IQ. I find Intelligence such an interesting and fluid concept - what my work is about is that Intelligence is a mix of Creative, Analytical, Practical and Emotional Smarts - a chumbawamba of a brew of a soup. Smarty Pants aired on ABC radio in 2008 and explores genes and the germs of beyond IQ. More Thinking Caps are on itunes CD.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Think Big. Start Small. Act Now.


In Thomas Friedman's thoughtful and most recent release Hot, Flat and Crowded he quotes Governor Suebu of Papua as having a motto of Think Big, Start Small and Act Now. His reference is regarding the protection of tropical forests but I think it is a pretty nifty motto as a foundation philosophy for most things. Perhaps we could all play around with and extend the philosophy too. How about - Think Big. Start Small. Act Now. Head in the right direction. Or Think Big. Start Small. Act Now. Head in the right direction. But no need to skite about it. As Kev Carmondy and Paul Kelly remind us, from little things, big things grow. From big ideas, little actions start that become pathways to the future; a future where we may look back and say 'Thank God , we did something about it then'. As the collaborative eco team called the Vehicle Design Summit group say 'We are the people we have been waiting for'. Another nifty motto!

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Budapest Conference


Visual note taking can make for wonderful summaries of information. I spoke at a Conference in Budapest and created a variety of wall summaries for the participants. Check www.glenncapelli.com shop for our DVD CAPMAPS on how to create a variety of visual notes.

Wednesday, February 25, 2009

Jottings


A journal is a beautiful thing. Ink, heart and thoughts become one. Sometimes a scribble can say something better.

Monday, February 23, 2009

CAPMAPS - Visual NoteTaking


I was at a National Speaker's Meeting listening to London based Frank Furness CSP talk about aspects of this Speaking Life and some of his approach to spreading his word. The attached picture is page one of my notes and apologies to Frank for my art work of his moustache! I have kept journals since I was 12 and what has emerged in my journaling is a visual note taking approach we call Cap Maps (Creative, Analytical and Practical). Such a visual note taking system is based on a variety of Visual Approaches (Tony Buzan's wonderful Mind-Mapping is one of hundreds of visual techniques) and some of the principles of how memory works (Stand-Out Effect, Association, Chunking...) Check www.glenncapelli.com Shop for our DVD set on How to CAPMAP.

Thursday, February 12, 2009

Leonard Cohen - Thinking Caps


As a lad I read them all - the poems, the lyrics, the novels. Leonard Cohen saved me on a night or two. My mates couldn't understand - EMO hadn't been invented then. I wrote this piece for ABC 720 radio in Western Australia and it aired early in 2008. Last weekend Lindy and I watched Augie March (superb), Paul Kelly (beautiful) and the great man and band of Leonard Cohen. It was inspired and I wear my tour t-shirt proudly. May we all find beauty in the cracks that let the light in. More Thinking Caps can be found on itunes - Thinking Caps CD.

Sunday, February 8, 2009

There Are Artists Within


Sometimes we do not know what talent (what crayons) rest within until there is a spark.

A friend of mine started sculpting after she gave birth to her first child. Said that something was born within as she gave birth. Another friend (Botts - Andrew Belotti) discovered he could paint when he was doing Physical Therapy as part of his recovery with Guilliane-Barre Syndrome (GBS). Ironically, I received this letter from another old mate, Kiwi Mark Godwin, and his private artist within became public after his wife contracted GBS. He wrote:

Bron got sick with GBS in August 2007 which saw her in hospital from August 2007 until January 2008. I spent the first few weeks not knowing what to do with myself (as you know I dont drink..........much).

I was cleaning out my daughters wardrobe and found a blank canvas and some paints which at the time begged me to paint on it. I started my first masterpiece which just happenned to be the very first painting on my blog.

My daughter came home that night and said where did you buy that and I said that I had painted it. I am afraid my daughter didnt believe me and I arrived home the following night to find another blank canvas and a wee note saying prove it and the rest is history.

I have never had lessons and didnt know I could paint but I know that each of us can rise above our grief and problems to create things of beauty or things that we can stand back and say with self pride....................I did that!


When we fall we can use the ground beneath to help us, and those around us, to rise up. May all kinds of artists within - find a way out, an expression. Enjoy. Mark's blog is www.pictureitponderitpaintit.blogspot.com

Thursday, January 8, 2009

Fitness Machine - igallop!


When presenting in India I came across a newspaper article about a fitness machine called the igallop that guaranteed all users fitness, good looks and even a brighter personality. It set me thinking about all the fitness machines that live unused in sheds everywhere. This Thinking Caps piece aired on ABC 720 mid 2008. Other Thinking Cap pieces are available on itunes.