Paraphrasing

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The following is an excerpt, taken with permission, from Sam Kaner’s book: Facilitator’s Guide to Participatory Decision-Making (New Society Publishers, 1996).


Why How
  • Paraphrasing is a fundamental listening skill. It is the foundation for many other facilitative listening skills, including mirroring, gathering and drawing people out.
  • Paraphrasing has both a calming effect and a clarifying effect. It reassures the speaker that his or her ideas are worth listening to. And it provides the speaker with a chance to hear how his/her ideas are being heard by other.
  • Paraphrasing is especially useful on occasions when a speaker’s statements are convoluted or confusing. At such times, the paraphrase will help the speaker gauge how well his/her ideas are getting across.
  • In sum, paraphrasing is the tool of choice for supporting people to think out loud.
  • Use your own words to say what you think the speaker said.
  • If the speaker’s statement is one or two sentence, use roughly the same number of words when you paraphrase it.- If the speaker’s statement is many sentence long, summarize it.
  • Preface your paraphrase with a comment like one of these: “It sounds like what you’re saying is…”; “This is what I’m hearing you say…”; “Let me see if I’m understanding you…”
  • When you have completed the paraphrase, look for the speaker’s reaction. Say something like, “Did I get it?” Verbally or nonverbally, s/he will indicate whether or not s/he fells understood. If not, keep asking for clarification until you understand what s/he meant
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