Co-create clear agreements that honor respect, curiosity, and confidentiality, using simple statements learners can remember and revisit. Invite contributors to suggest additions, define what constructive comments look like, and decide together where work will be shared. Visible agreements reduce uncertainty and transform participation into collaborative stewardship of learning.
Explain why visual notes are being exchanged and how critique will help thinking mature. Clarify whether goals include comprehension, synthesis, or storytelling, and how success will be recognized. When learners understand purpose, they calibrate expectations, choose suitable formats, and embrace feedback as a path toward meaningful progress.
Design for different devices, bandwidths, languages, and abilities. Provide alternative text, captions, and downloadable templates, and welcome multiple modalities such as typed annotations or audio reflections. Normalize flexible deadlines and private submission options, ensuring contributors can participate without exposure risks while still benefiting from communal dialogue and recognition.
Adopt familiar structures such as Plus/Delta, Glow/Grow, or Situation-Behavior-Impact to guide conversations. These frames limit vague judgments and focus attention on specific moves within the visual note, including hierarchy, metaphors, and connective lines. With shared language, feedback becomes repeatable, teachable, and less dependent on individual charisma or confidence.
Adopt familiar structures such as Plus/Delta, Glow/Grow, or Situation-Behavior-Impact to guide conversations. These frames limit vague judgments and focus attention on specific moves within the visual note, including hierarchy, metaphors, and connective lines. With shared language, feedback becomes repeatable, teachable, and less dependent on individual charisma or confidence.
Adopt familiar structures such as Plus/Delta, Glow/Grow, or Situation-Behavior-Impact to guide conversations. These frames limit vague judgments and focus attention on specific moves within the visual note, including hierarchy, metaphors, and connective lines. With shared language, feedback becomes repeatable, teachable, and less dependent on individual charisma or confidence.
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