Interactivity Foundation

Cultivating a Willingness to Play

Photo by Mia Anderson on Unsplash

Using play to unleash new ways of thinking

Dear collaborative discussion friends,

This week we are highlighting a fun activity that helps participants suspend their seriousness and analytical thinking. Participants are encouraged to play with ideas, using their creativity and imagination to develop solutions and persuade others to support the changes needed to address sticky problems. This activity demonstrates how play can help uncover new perspectives and ideas.

This activity is contributed by Lori Britt, Professor at the School of Communication & ICAD Co-Director at James Madison University, and is one of the many activities in the Creative Collaboration Module.

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This week’s activity:

Activity 2.5 – Cultivating a Willingness to Play


Using the power of play to practice different ways of thinking and develop new ideas

This activity introduces participants to a familiar method for selling an idea or product often seen in advertising. Participants then develop pitches for solutions to address a particular issue and present these pitches to the whole group. Participants are encouraged to have fun and be silly while developing their pitches, helping them gain a deeper understanding of how play can be used to energize a group and explore new avenues for solving a particular problem.

Select a Topic

Begin this activity by selecting an issue that is important to your discussion group, something they are passionate about. This could be a civic issue where they see the need for change. As preparation for this activity, consider Activity 5.1 Identifying Your Civic Passion.

Introduce Monroe’s Motivated Sequence

Next, introduce participants to Monroe’s Motivated Sequence, a common recipe for persuasive pitches that is often used in ads or infomercials. Provide participants with the following description of the five steps in this sequence:

Tip: To help participants, provide an example of this sequence by showing them a silly or playful commercial, such as the Old Spice ads with the man on the horse.

Break into Small Groups and Develop Pitches

Invite participants to break into small groups (4-6 ppl). Ask participants to quickly develop a product or idea that solves the selected problem and come up with a creative, catchy name for this solution. Then, ask them to create a 2-minute pitch in the form of an ad or infomercial using the structure of Monroe’s Motivated Sequence with the goal of persuading others to support the proposed solution. Remind participants that their pitches do not need to be serious. They should have fun with this and stretch their imagination to think of something original, unique, funny and/or silly. Explain to them that they will each be playing a part in the commercials they create.

Present Pitches to the Full Group

Invite each small group to perform their pitches for the whole group. To make it more fun, the full group can vote on the top pitch.

Debrief as a Full Group

Discuss the following questions:

In addition to these debriefing questions, the full description of Activity 2.5 Cultivating a Willingness to Play includes reflection questions and a practice journal prompt to help participants dive deeper.


If you try out this activity, please share with us what you think:

Rate Activity 2.5

We hope this toolkit activity helps participants engage their playful side to explore topics from a fresh perspective, energize the group and unleash the power of creativity and imagination in developing solutions to complex issues.


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Looking forward to collaborating,

Ritu Thomas & the Collaborative Discussion Team

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