Truth
: Teachers use "Find the Truth" activities to practice writing, where students write true sentences and peers must guess which one is theirs. 2. Communicating "Your Truth"
This view treats truth as an absolute or a fundamental reality rather than a subjective experience. : Teachers use "Find the Truth" activities to
: Stick to safe but "rad" prompts like "Which of the 12 Apostles do you think is the cutest?" (for religious groups) or "What’s the most childish thing you still do?". : Stick to safe but "rad" prompts like
: This involves removing the conflict between what you feel and what you portray to others. : Teachers use "Find the Truth" activities to
: Experts like Mary Karr suggest writing "the truth" by drafting letters about embarrassing events to different people to see how your "voice" changes. 3. Philosophical & Religious Perspectives
: Use prompts to build intimacy, such as "What was your first impression of me?" or "What is your favorite memory of us?".
Speaking Your Truth in the Workplace: Part 1 - CEO of Your Life