Group Facilitation: Book Review Guidelines
Writing the review
When writing a review, please include:
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overall impression of the book
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the highlights and structure of the book
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for whom the book would be appropriate
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what you found particularly helpful, unclear, weak
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your personal learning, if any
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particular benefits to you in your facilitation, if any
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value of the book for facilitators, if any
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significant contribution of the book, if any, to the field of facilitation
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your recommendation of "must read" portions of the book, if any
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a summary or wrap-up of your reading experience.
In addition:
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provide definitions of terms, acronyms, references, and background summary statements where appropriate.
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where necessary, be sure to include complete citations and attributions.
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identify specific texts (usually a sentence or phrase) for possible use in pull quotes.
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publisher; ISBN designation; price ($US)
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background about the book author: facilitation experience and/or other writings.
What we are looking for
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people familiar with the conceptual and practical sides of facilitation and who are willing to spend the time required to write interesting and thought provoking reviews.
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reviews of books that address facilitation and related issues, such as consensus decision making, participatory problem solving and group decision-making.
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in-depth and critical reviews that help readers decide whether or not the books reviewed are ones that they should consider reading.
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comparative reviews of two or more books that differentiate, compare and contrast the books and thoroughly examine the strengths and weaknesses.
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reviews that place the book in the context of other literature.
Submitting a review
Reviews are typically between 1,000 and 3,000 words. Submissions should be made via email in Microsoft Word or Rich Text (RTF) format. If you are interested in reviewing a book for the Journal, please contact:
Stephen Thorpe
Editor-in-Chief
journal.editor@iaf-world.org