-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 150
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Time-boxing agenda items #592
Comments
I agree, and I like this idea. Let's try this out for the next meeting's topics. @tlively, can you give some estimates on your items? |
A complementary suggestion is to order agenda items so that more open-ended items happen after more procedural items. |
@RossTate agreed, though procedural items like polls often require some discussion before, which may need time boxing anyway. |
I'm in favour of time boxing as well. But we'll also need some mechanism by which to allocate an agenda item that requires more time. Not all topics can reasonably be discussed in 15 minutes. My suggestion would be for each proposed agenda item to include an estimated time, and then adhere to that. Once the hour is full (perhaps leaving a 10 minute buffer), no more items can be accepted. It is up to the discretion of the chairs to reject PRs that want to grab unreasonable time slots. |
I really liked the time boxing, and I say that as someone who was leading multiple discussions that got cut off in this morning's meeting. We were able to get to many more agenda items and get many more ideas in front of the CG with time boxing in effect, and followup discussion can still happen on GitHub. |
It should come as no surprise that I liked the timeboxing. :) |
I thought it worked well. |
OK, let's continue to do this for future meetings. |
Timeboxing seems to be successful in making sure that all the scheduled items happen. I think the next step is to carve out time explicitly for discussions after presentations. |
It seems to me that most meetings run out of time regularly, resulting in later items on the agenda being bumped. Instead of doing that, what do people think about assigning agenda items a time limit, around 10-20 minutes? If an item runs out of time we either take it back up at the end if time permits or next meeting otherwise.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: