Collaborative Thinking

Collaborative thinking refers to the process by which two or more people engage in shared cognitive effort to solve a problem, make a decision, or generate new ideas. It is not just simple cooperation or teamwork but involves joint reasoning, mutual understanding, and often, the co-construction of knowledge.

Key characteristics of collaborative thinking include:

Examples of Collaborative Thinking in Practice

Building Collaborative Thinking

Design principles

Principle Description
Psychological safety People must feel safe to disagree, ask questions, and make mistakes.
Cognitive diversity Involve people with different backgrounds, roles, and thought styles.
Structured dialogue Use facilitation methods that encourage balanced participation.
Shared purpose Anchor collaboration in a clear, common goal or problem.
Transparent reasoning Make thought processes and assumptions explicit.
Visible co-creation Use whiteboards, templates, or digital tools to externalise thinking.

Practical Methods and Tools

Method Use Case Tips
Think-Pair-Share Ideation or early framing Encourages quieter voices to speak before group discussion.
Round-Robin Sharing Generating multiple perspectives Everyone contributes in turn; prevents dominance by extroverts.
Affinity Mapping Clustering ideas visually Group contributions into themes to develop shared understanding.
Six Thinking Hats (de Bono) Structured multi-angle reasoning Helps explore ideas from emotional, logical, creative, risk perspectives.
Dialogue Mapping Complex problem solving Uses visual logic trees to track and link contributions.
Tools Function
Miro / Confluence Whiteboards / Mural Virtual whiteboarding and mapping of ideas
Confluence Collaborative documentation of shared reasoning
Google Docs + Comments Co-authoring and lightweight critique
Loom + Threads Asynchronous video + discussion for remote input

4. Developing routine collaborative thinking

Teams

Projects

Organisation

Be careful of:

Pitfall How to Address
Over-reliance on consensus Make disagreement acceptable; use "disagree and commit" when needed.
Hidden power dynamics Use anonymous inputs or rotating facilitators to flatten hierarchy.
Idea convergence too soon Schedule deliberate divergence before narrowing options.
Unstructured sessions Always use a purpose-led agenda and process map.
Lip service collaboration Ensure input has real influence on outcomes β€” avoid token consultation.