Up to now, you’ve designed the backbone.
Sharp Learning Outcomes.
A realistic timeline.
A solid Skeleton.
Now comes the step that turns “a plan” into a real workshop:
Exercises + a detailed schedule.
Not random activities.
Not “fun bits”.
Exercises that match what you’re teaching.
And a schedule that can survive the day-of.
You don’t design exercises one by one
You don’t pick one exercise, perfect it, move to the next.
That’s how you lose the big picture.
Instead, you work in passes:
- first pass: rough placement
- second pass: sharper prompts
- third pass: facilitation details
- final pass: timing that actually fits
Always zooming in… without losing the whole shape.
Start from your Skeleton
Your outline already contains your content:
every line is a takeaway.
Which means every line can be supported by a format:
discussion, try-it-now, scenario, etc.
So the first move is simple:
scan your Skeleton and choose the right format for each part.
The K / S / W shortcut
My shorthand is:
- K = Knowledge → lecture (short, sharp)
- S = Skill → “Try it now”
- W = Wisdom → scenario challenge (judgment, decision, trade-offs)
Go through your outline and mark each line with K / S / W.
Then:
- For every S: what’s the smallest safe task where they can try it immediately?
- For every W: what’s the scenario where they must decide what to do?
- For every K: what discussion question would make it personal and relevant?
Because without S and W, you’ll do the classic fail:
teaching yoga through a lecture.
Redraw the schedule. This time with exercises
Take the timeline you already built…
And redraw it with where exercises will land.
Most exercises look like “5 minutes” on paper.
In real life they’re often 10–15 minutes once you include:
- forming pairs/groups
- explaining the prompt
- doing the task
- sharing takeaways (“stand & share”)
- your commentary / debrief
So place them honestly.
Hunt down long lecture stretches
Now look for danger zones:
20+ minutes of lecture in a row.
That’s where energy dies.
Even if you’re brilliant.
Fix options:
- reorder sections (so an exercise or break splits the lecture)
- insert an optional mini-exercise that supports the nearby outcome (discussion is the easiest tool here)
The goal isn’t “zero lecture”.
The goal is: no lecture that kills the room.
Place your Q&A springs
Now add Q&A, not as “interactivity”.
As schedule control.
Aim for ~15 minutes per 90-minute chunk.
Two good patterns:
- 1 block right before a break
- or 5 minutes after each Learning Outcome
Q&A is your pressure valve.
You can stretch it.
Or delete it.
And nobody will cry.
Add lightweight support activities
If you like formats like:
- post-up,
- dot-vote,
- or quick stand-and-share...
This is the moment to place them.
They’re small, but they add rhythm.
Final sanity check
Look at the whole schedule and ask:
1. Do the formats match the outcomes?
2. Is there enough variation to keep energy alive?
If yes, congratulations:
You now have a detailed schedule —
the final ingredient of a finished Workshop Skeleton.
At this point you can already feel what the day will be like.
And only now… you earn the right to build the supporting materials:
first the exercise details,
then the slides.
Because design carries you.
Not charisma.
Thank you.
And Free Palestine.