Below are different ways you can frame and reframe thoughts and information about a subject, circumstance, or situation.
Learning how to frame and reframe is a skill worth exploring. You can use it many facets in your life. It allows you to explore your thoughts, change your point of view, extract different information, create more choices, and help you to acquire a deeper understanding subject matter.
See: What Is Information Framing and Reframing? and What Are Thinking Prompts and What Can They Do for Your Knowledge and Understanding of a Subject?
- [[The Frame of Action]]
- The Frame of Alternatives
- [[The Frame of Appearance]]
- The Frame of Association
- [[The Frame of Assumption and Inference]]
- The Frame of Before and After
- [[The Frame of Belief]]
- [[The Frame of Cause and Effect]]
- [[The Frame of Cost and Benefit]]
- [[The Frame of Comparison and Contrast]]
- [[The Frame of Conditions]]
- [[The Frame of Degree, Extents, Range, and Limitation]]
- The Frame of Direction and Orientation
- The Frame of Distance and Proximity
- [[The Frame of Emotion and Feelings]]
- The Frame of Environment
- [[The Frame of Fact or Fiction and True or False]]
- [[The Frame of Importance]]
- [[The Frame of Inclusion and Exclusion]]
- [[The Frame of Insight]]
- [[The Frame of Instruction]]
- The Frame of Location
- [[The Frame of Personal Experience]]
- [[The Frame of Personal Preference]]
- [[The Frame of Point of View or Perception]]
- [[The Frame of Relevancy]]
- [[The Frame of Reference]]
- [[The Frame of Resources]]
- The Frame of Situation or Circumstances
- The Frame of Time
- [[The Frame of Utility and Function]]
- [[The Frame of Value]]
- The Frame of What If and Possibility