Conducting Professional Focus Group Research

Training Workshop

 

Janet Mancini Billson, Ph.D., and Norman T. London, Ed.D.

Group Dimensions International

 

DAY I

8:30-9:00 a.m.

Welcome and Continental Breakfast

•  Registration and Submission of Questions

 

9:00-10:00 a.m.

DEMONSTRATION FOCUS GROUP

•  Preamble   

•  Introductions

•  How should focus groups be used?

•  Advantages and disadvantages compared to other methods.

 

  

10:00-10:30 a.m.

Uses of Focus Groups

•  A social scientific approach to focus groups

•  Ethical issues, technical issues, defining the purpose of research

•  Relationship between focus groups, surveys, and other methods

•  Limitations and generalizability

 

 

10:30-10:45 a.m. Break

 

10:45-11:30 a.m.

Research Design Issues

•  Survey first or focus groups first?

•  Breaks and number of groups

•  Homogeneous vs. heterogeneous groups

•  Sample size and types

•  Maximum/minimum size of the groups

•  Duration and timing   

•  Recruitment and screening of participants

 



11:30-12:30 noon

Teams Develop Research Design for DAY II Mock Focus Groups

Tasks:   1. Select a key research question

    2. Create an appropriate research design to answer the question

    3. Decide on population, sample, recruitment, and number of groups

    4. Write a screener

 

12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch and Critique of Research Designs

 

1:30-2:00 p.m.

Development of the Moderator's Guide (Protocol)

•  Refining the research question (outcomes/hypotheses)

•  Mapping the flow of questions

•  Designing productive questions   

•  Idea generation versus debate generation

•  Probes and elicitation techniques

•  Building in flexibility and reliability

 

2:00-3:00 p.m.

Teams Develop Moderator's Guide

3:00-3:15 p.m. Break and Trainer Critique of Team I Moderator's Guide

 

3:15-4:30 p.m.

Moderation Theory and Techniques

•  Ice-breaking procedures

•  Facilitating toward even participation

•  Controlling dominants and dealing with difficult participants

•  Keeping on task and ensuring even coverage of questions

•  What to do when a question has been answered in a previous question

•  Coping with complex questions

•  Deflecting questions about "facts"

•  Avoiding politicization of the process

•  Termination procedures

 

Communication Theory

•  One-way versus two-way communication

•  Listening for meaning

•  Modes of listening

 

DAY II

 

8:00-8:30 a.m. Continental Breakfast and Critique of Moderator's Guides

 

8:30-9:00 a.m.

Logistical Issues

•  Working with community-based groups; working in different and multiple languages

•  Using interpreters, simultaneous translation

•  Informed consent agreements

•  Single vs. co-moderators

•  Note taking, audio vs. video-taping; GroupWare; Using laptops in the field

 

 

9:00-9:50 a.m.

FOCUS GROUP: TEAM I (2 moderators @ 25 minutes each)

 

•  9:50-10:20 a.m. . Processing Focus Group I

 

10:20-10:35 a.m. Break

 

10:35-11:00 a.m.

Working with Qualitative Data I

•  Debriefing sessions

•  Using transcripts

•  The place of quantitative data in focus groups

•  Structuring, coding, blocking, reorganizing data

•  Using the word processor in qualitative data analysis

•  Types of computerized text data analyzers

 

 

11:00-11:50 a.m.

FOCUS GROUP: TEAM II (2 moderators @ 25 minutes each)

 

•  11:50-12:30 p.m. . Processing Focus Group II

 

 

12:30-1:30 p.m. Lunch

 

 

1:30-2:20 p.m.

FOCUS GROUP: TEAM III (2 moderators @ 25 minutes each)

      

•  2:20-2:50 p.m. Processing Focus Group III

 

2:50-3:00 p.m. Break

 

3:00-4:00 p.m. Report Writing and Presentation

•  Structuring the report

•  Executive summaries vs. in-depth reports

•  Highlights and recommendations/implications

 

4:00-4:15 p.m. Wrap Up Focus Group and Workshop Evaluation

 

Saturday's clinic day schedule to be determined in consultation with those participants who will attend.