Are There Study Guides For Yes Theory Books For Groups?

2025-09-04 14:52:58 108

3 Answers

Claire
Claire
2025-09-05 03:41:54
I'm pretty casual about this but I’ve organized a handful of one-off workshops and a mini-series, so here’s a compact take: short answer — yes, both curated guides and DIY templates exist, and they’re easy to adapt for groups.

In practice I mix official content (clips, interviews), fan-created discussion PDFs, and my own handouts. A single session I like is: quick icebreaker, 20 minutes on key ideas from a chapter or video, 25 minutes doing a paired challenge, then 15 minutes of reflection and a tiny homework pledge. Simple prompts I use: 'What made you uncomfortable here?', 'What would you try for one week?', 'How can we make this safe for everyone?' Those three pull out personal insight, action, and structure.

If you want to find guides fast, look on Notion templates, Discord/Reddit community posts, or educators’ resource pages. And if none of them fits, cobble together a 4-question discussion set and a single small challenge — it usually sparks better conversations than overloading with theory. I enjoy seeing what groups invent on the fly, honestly.
Mason
Mason
2025-09-07 04:59:52
I get excited just thinking about group study nights built around a 'Yes Theory' book — there’s something about tackling big ideas with other people that makes them stick. I’ve run a few informal meetups and the short version is: yes, there are both official and fan-made guides, and if you can’t find a perfect one, it’s super doable to stitch together a great plan from available resources.

When I organize a series, I usually pull from three places: the creators' channels (their videos and social posts often include discussion prompts), community hubs like Reddit and Discord where people share printable PDFs or Notion templates, and podcasts/interviews where themes are expanded. For structure, I like a six-week layout — week one for core values, week two for fear and discomfort, week three for consent and ethics in challenges, weeks four and five for practical group challenges, and week six for reflections and accountability. Each session has a 10-minute warm-up, a 30–45 minute discussion using prepared questions, a 20-minute activity or mini-challenge, and a 15-minute reflection. That template keeps things lively and safe.

Tools I lean on are simple: Google Docs for shared guides, Notion for session plans, and a shared Google Calendar for accountability. I also recommend setting ground rules about consent and safety up front, and rotating facilitators so the group feels co-owned. If you want, I can sketch out a printable guide with sample questions and challenge ideas that fits a two-hour session — it’s something I enjoy tweaking for different age groups and vibes.
Ruby
Ruby
2025-09-08 15:34:56
I've run book circles that mix watching videos and reading short chapters, and honestly, group-friendly guides are everywhere if you know where to look. Start by thinking about learning goals: do you want participants to practice saying 'yes' to safe challenges, build empathy, or learn how to design ethical social experiments? Once you pick goals, the guide writes itself.

A practical framework I use is: anchor the discussion in a short excerpt or clip, follow with three targeted questions (one factual, one reflective, one actionable), then move into a paired activity and end with a personal pledge. For example, a session might open with a 5-minute clip, then discuss motivations, fears, and real-life steps each person will try during the week. Activities can be role-plays, small public-facing micro-challenges, or planning a community meetup. I always include safety checkpoints and debrief time — those are non-negotiable.

If you prefer ready-made material, check community forums, educational resource sites, and even teachers’ blogs; people often post downloadable guides and slides. There are also templates for accountability trackers and challenge logs which make keeping momentum easier. If your group is remote, add interactive tech like breakout rooms, shared boards, or a simple challenge-report form so people can post wins and lessons. It makes the whole thing feel more alive and keeps people coming back.
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