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Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group.

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Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group. / Myers, Greg.
In: Text and Talk, Vol. 27, No. 1, 01.2007, p. 79-105.

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Myers G. Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group. Text and Talk. 2007 Jan;27(1):79-105. doi: 10.1515/TEXT.2007.004

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Myers, Greg. / Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group. In: Text and Talk. 2007 ; Vol. 27, No. 1. pp. 79-105.

Bibtex

@article{1eef04b8706e4e7d8f38bd7abca42938,
title = "Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group.",
abstract = "Contemporary democratic politics involves, not just constitutions, elections, and representative bodies, but complex processes of more direct consultation with the public. The value of these processes depends on their openness to voices, topics, and styles of expression that might be excluded from other forums. In this paper I analyze focus group discussions, one of the genres used for public consultation, and the ways that discussions are framed by facilitators. The facilitators' turns are seldom in the form of free-standing questions or statements requiring a response from the participants. Instead, the kinds of interventions they make—probes, prompts, formulations, and metacomments—can be understood in terms of what Sacks (1992) called second-speaker tying rules; that is, they construct coherence by presenting the facilitators' turns as following from what has already been said by a participant. These turns signal that participants are entitled to speak and the facilitator is listening; they also signal the kind of additional response that is wanted. These additional responses call for wider range, greater specificity and personal context, or further reflection on the wording or form of the statement. I argue that a forum does not extend consultation with the public just by removing institutional constraints to allow opinions to be spoken; it should also enable talk that would not otherwise have had an occasion to happen.",
author = "Greg Myers",
note = "RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Linguistics",
year = "2007",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1515/TEXT.2007.004",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "79--105",
journal = "Text and Talk",
issn = "1860-7349",
publisher = "Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co. KG",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Enabling talk: How the facilitator shapes a focus group.

AU - Myers, Greg

N1 - RAE_import_type : Journal article RAE_uoa_type : Linguistics

PY - 2007/1

Y1 - 2007/1

N2 - Contemporary democratic politics involves, not just constitutions, elections, and representative bodies, but complex processes of more direct consultation with the public. The value of these processes depends on their openness to voices, topics, and styles of expression that might be excluded from other forums. In this paper I analyze focus group discussions, one of the genres used for public consultation, and the ways that discussions are framed by facilitators. The facilitators' turns are seldom in the form of free-standing questions or statements requiring a response from the participants. Instead, the kinds of interventions they make—probes, prompts, formulations, and metacomments—can be understood in terms of what Sacks (1992) called second-speaker tying rules; that is, they construct coherence by presenting the facilitators' turns as following from what has already been said by a participant. These turns signal that participants are entitled to speak and the facilitator is listening; they also signal the kind of additional response that is wanted. These additional responses call for wider range, greater specificity and personal context, or further reflection on the wording or form of the statement. I argue that a forum does not extend consultation with the public just by removing institutional constraints to allow opinions to be spoken; it should also enable talk that would not otherwise have had an occasion to happen.

AB - Contemporary democratic politics involves, not just constitutions, elections, and representative bodies, but complex processes of more direct consultation with the public. The value of these processes depends on their openness to voices, topics, and styles of expression that might be excluded from other forums. In this paper I analyze focus group discussions, one of the genres used for public consultation, and the ways that discussions are framed by facilitators. The facilitators' turns are seldom in the form of free-standing questions or statements requiring a response from the participants. Instead, the kinds of interventions they make—probes, prompts, formulations, and metacomments—can be understood in terms of what Sacks (1992) called second-speaker tying rules; that is, they construct coherence by presenting the facilitators' turns as following from what has already been said by a participant. These turns signal that participants are entitled to speak and the facilitator is listening; they also signal the kind of additional response that is wanted. These additional responses call for wider range, greater specificity and personal context, or further reflection on the wording or form of the statement. I argue that a forum does not extend consultation with the public just by removing institutional constraints to allow opinions to be spoken; it should also enable talk that would not otherwise have had an occasion to happen.

U2 - 10.1515/TEXT.2007.004

DO - 10.1515/TEXT.2007.004

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 79

EP - 105

JO - Text and Talk

JF - Text and Talk

SN - 1860-7349

IS - 1

ER -