Brainstorming
1.Mind Map β Organize Your Thoughts
Write your topic in the middle and draw lines to connect subtopics, like:
π‘ school β money β time β stress β experience β future
Add short notes or examples to each subtopic.
This helps you see which ideas belong together.
2. Think in Roles β Different Perspectives
Sometimes it helps to think from different points of view.
What would other people say about this topic?
A student: βI can earn my own money.β
A teacher: βItβs hard to focus on schoolwork.β
A parent: βIt teaches responsibility.β
3. The βIfβ¦β Trick β Use Your Imagination
Creative questions can bring new ideas!
Example:
If you had a part-time job, what would it be?
If nobody worked during school, what would change?
4. Take one possible argument and ask βWhy?β five times.
Example: Fast food should be banned in schools.
- Why? Itβs unhealthy.
- Why? Too much sugar/fat.
- Why? Doesnβt keep you satisfied.
- Why is that a problem? Leads to obesity.
- Why is that important? Affects concentration and school performance.
5. βSPECSβ to find different arguments
Social β how does it affect people and relationships?
Political β how do governments / laws react?
Economic β what about costs, jobs, money?
Cultural β traditions, values, identity?
Scientific / Environmental β technology, research, planet?
Handy sentence to remember: Strong People Explore Creative Solutions
1 Brainstorming π
Use the Why?-method and brainstorm βDiscuss if table football should be placed in general areas of schools.β
- Why? ______________________________________
- Why? ______________________________________
- Why?
- Why is it a problem?
- Why is it important?
| Source AG Englisch |