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A facilitator is someone who skillfully helps a group achieve its objectives without personally taking any side of the argument. The facilitator will try to assist the group in achieving a consensus on any disagreements that preexist or emerge in the meeting so that it has a strong basis for future action.
The role has been likened to that of a midwife who assists in the process of creation but is not the producer of the end result.
The basic skills of a facilitator are about following good meeting practices: timekeeping, following an agreed-upon agenda, and keeping a clear record. The higher-order skills involve watching the group, its individuals, and their process, and knowing the art of intervening in a way that adds to the group's creativity rather than taking away from it.
A successful facilitator embodies respect for others and a watchful awareness of the many layers of reality in a human group.
In the event that a consensus cannot be reached then the facilitator would assist the group in understanding the differences that divide it.
The International Association of Facilitators was founded in 1993 to promote facilitation as a profession.
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Some of the things facilitators do to assist a meeting:
Some things that facilitators don't do:
Many people confuse the term facilitator and trainer. Unlike the facilitator the trainer does take an active role and guides the group through an agenda designed to transmit a body of knowledge.
The term facilitator is broadly used to describe any activity which makes easy the tasks of others.
The term facilitator is used in psychotherapy where the role is more to help the group members become aware of the feelings they hold for one another.
The term facilitator is used in education to refer to a specifically trained adult who sits in class with a disabled, or otherwise needy, student to help them follow the lesson that the teacher is giving.
The term facilitator is used to describe people engaged in the illegal trafficking of human beings across international borders.
The term facilitator is used to describe those individuals who arrange adoptions by attempting to match available children with prospective adopters.