This document provides an overview of the mediation process and skills. It discusses key steps including introductions, storytelling, identifying issues and needs, problem-solving, and reaching agreements. Important mediation skills are also covered such as active listening, effective questioning, feedback, reframing, managing anger, separate sessions, summarizing, and negotiations. The goal of mediation is to assist conflicting parties in resolving issues through facilitating communication and helping them find mutually agreeable solutions.
2. Topics to be covered
1. What is Mediation?
2. Mediation Principles
3. Mediation Process
4. Active listening
5. Effective Questioning
6. Feedback
7. Reframing
8. Managing Anger
9. Separate Sessions
10. Summarizing
11. Reaching to Solution
12. Negotiations
13. Agreements
14. Monitoring
3. What is Mediation?
Mediation refers to a third-party conflict
resolution process whereby people trained in
mediation skills work with parties in conflict.
It aims to assist the parties in resolving the
conflict through help facilitate
communications between the parties.
The mediator may suggest solutions, but no
solution shall be imposed on a party; the
parties must agree before any compromise
or solution shall take effect.
4. Mediation Principles
Voluntary Participation in Good Faith
Confidentiality
Safe Environment
Self Determination
Mediator Impartiality
Cultural Appropriateness
Harmless process
7. STORYTELLING
Each person has a chance to tell their side of the
story
Listen without interrupting
Use active listening to provide feedback to the
speaker
8. Active Listening
• Attentive listening without interrupting.
• Attention focused on the speaker.
• Maintain eye contact, use encouraging
comments
• Convey empathy
• Paraphrasing reflects both facts and
feelings in your own words.
9. Effective Questioning
Use Open Ended Questions
Make sure questions don’t sound like accusations.
Probe for additional information by reflecting what the
parties have said and then asking:
Can you tell me more about that?
How ? When? Where? What else?
Clarify by asking questions to find out more about what
they have said.
How did you feel about that?
10. Conflict Analysis Questions
What is the conflict? (What is it all about?)
Who are the (primary, secondary) parties
involved?,
What are the (underlying) issues involved in the
conflict?
How complex is the conflict? Is there one focal
point or are there many levels? How long has it
been going on?
What is causing or has caused the conflict to
occur?
What do the parties want? How do they see it
being resolved?
Do the parties want the conflict resolved?
11. Feedback
When the speaker pauses, there is an opportunity for
you as the neutral to confirm that you have been
listening; you understand what has been said. This is
called “Feeding Back”.
Feeding back is also a good way to check that your
perception of what you think you heard/observed is
accurate, as well as a way to validate for the speaker
what he/she is feeling.
12. Feedback
• Repeat or paraphrase what the speaker has said (or
displayed as unspoken feelings)
Examples:
“So, when that incident happened, you felt like….”
“It sounds like an important issue for you is how to deal
with…”
“What I think I’m hearing is that you really need….”
“I can see that you really have strong feelings about that…”
Note: A common sign that you’ve done this correctly is the
speaker will not vigorously or respond, “yes, that’s right!”
13. Feedback
• Do not repeat what the speaker says verbatim.
That will become annoying - paraphrase instead.
However, remain conscious of particular words that
seem important to the speaker and use them, if
appropriate, in your paraphrasing.
14. REFRAMING
Reframing is a special way of feeding back, and is one of
the MOST important tools a third-party neutral
intervener can use. It serves 3 important functions:
1) to restate what a party has said to capture the essence;
2) remove negative overtones; and
3) move the process forward.
Reframing is also a way to translate a positional statement into
a statement of interests or needs.
15. REFRAMING
Example:
A member of the XYZ says angrily, “She’s so irresponsible!
We can never depend on her to show up for meetings on
time.”
Simple FEED BACK might be:
“So…it really bothers you when she is not on time for
meetings.”
While a REFRAMED response might be:
“So…it is really important to you that members adhere to our
established meeting schedules.”
The difference is subtle…but important!
17. Managing Anger in Mediation
It is important that you understand and manage
anger, especially if you are being asked to intervene in
a dispute as a neutral. Anger that is poorly
managed…or not managed at all will likely:
Cause positions to become increasingly rigid;
Lead to escalation (anger begets anger);
and
Cause parties to withdraw from the process all
together
18. Acknowledge the anger
Validate the feelings
Invite further talk
Reframe the content
Direct parties to talk only to the mediator
Enforce ground rules
Call time out.
Use separate sessions.
Managing Anger in Mediation
19. Separate Sessions
Mediators meet with each party separately
Try to equalize time
Can be used if one party seems to be uncomfortable, or
is emotional
Helps with impasse
Parties can also request
Confidential
20. SUMMARIZING
Summarizing is used in case of major transitions in a conflict
resolution or mediation session, such as after one party has
told his/her story and before you turn to the other party.
When summarizing:
• Hit the key points
• Focus on the “interests” not the “positions”
• Use neutral language but do not “sugar coat”
• Ask for confirmation, e.g., “Do I have that right?”
21. REACHING TO SOLUTION
Brainstorm solutions
Look at issues and needs
Check for agreement
Ask what each party would be willing
to do
Clarify and restate
23. NEGOTIATION
The process of making joint decisions
when the parties involved have different
preferences.
24. NEGOTIATION STYLES
POSITION BASED NEGOTIATION (PBN)
The theory of Position Based Negotiation or PBN is
where each party’s gain is in proportion to the other
party’s loss. This is referred to as the “FIXED PIE”
concept and disputing parties naturally engage in this
style of negotiation.
25. NEGOTIATION STYLES
INTEREST BASED NEGOTIATION (IBN)
The theory of Interest Based Negotiation or IBN is
that a “win-win” solution to the dispute (allowing both
parties to have their interests met by the same
settlement) is POSSIBLE. This is referred to as
“EXPANDING THE PIE”
26. AGREEMENT
Review brainstormed solutions and check for
agreement from both sides on all points.
Nail down the solutions.
Ask questions USING SIX HELPERS:
WHO? WHAT? WHEN? WHERE? HOW?
WHAT IF?
SPECIFY EXACTLY WHAT EACH PERSON WILL
DO.
27. WRITING THE AGREEMENT
State the problem.
Write down what each person will do.
Have the disputants sign the agreement.
Remind the disputants that this is a contract.