Activity:
“The Bridge Design Pitch”
Time: 25 minutes
Format: Small groups

INSTRUCTIONS
Read the scenario below.
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Each group to write down:
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What immediate judgments or assumptions might be influencing James?
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How could the group make Aisha feel heard without challenging anyone personally?
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Identify moments of bias in the scenario.
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Moments where psychological safety could be threatened.
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Default “pathway addictions”
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Apply the Neuroscience Bias-Challenge 8 Step Process.
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Bias in the Bridge - Evidence & Perspective Challenge
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A group of engineering students is working on a sustainable bridge design for a rural community.
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Aisha, an international student from Nigeria, suggests incorporating bamboo composites into the design. Bamboo is lightweight, sustainable, and used successfully in parts of Asia and Africa.
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James, a UK-born student, reacts quickly:
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“Bamboo? That’s not serious — it’ll snap in half. We need proper materials like steel or concrete.”
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Some group members nod in agreement, while others stay quiet.
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Aisha feels dismissed but knows there’s evidence of bamboo’s strength and sustainability.
1. Psychological Safety
How could the group pause and invite evidence without shaming?
2. Link to Values & Known
What shared values (safety, sustainability) could connect to bamboo?
3. Pathway
Addiction
How to acknowledge default reliance on familiar materials? And support erasing of old habitual thinking?
4. Evidence-Based Thinking
Which data would help validate bamboo’s strength?
5. Reward/Play
What would reward us all - success? Being the first? So, how could the group creatively combine bamboo with other materials?
6. Bite-Sized Change
Digestible chucks of information to support new ways of thinking.
7. Social Norms & Modelling
What team rules encourage exploration before critique?
8. Repetition & Habit
How could this approach become standard practice in group work?