COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT FOCUS GROUP
(Refer to Checklist – Conducting a Community Focus Group)Checklist – Conducting a Community Focus Group)
Focus groups can generate in depth information regarding specific issues. A community focus group can be a useful strategy at various stages in the development of the alternative education program;
- to gauge community support, or
- identify potential program partners,
- to map community resources for the program, or
- as a program evaluation tool.
Preparation
- Identify focus group goals
- What do you want to know/explain?
- Who do you want to obtain information from/inform?
- Select a time (not longer than 2 hours), venue, catering, technical aids that are appropriate
- Use ‘user –friendly’ language at all times
- Arrange a facilitator to
- introduce participants and outline the purpose of the session
- encourage discussion
- ensure all members have an opportunity to speak
- maintain discussion on topic
- summaries points
- Arrange a scribe to
- obtain permission to record discussion (if appropriate)
- to document summarised points and in depth discussion points
- usually do not participate in discussion
Create a focus group
The purpose of the community focus group will determine the structure of the group session
- To gauge community support
- publicise focus group to relevant community sectors eg potential partner agencies (NSW government sector-Police, Health, Community Services; businesses, non-government agencies, Neighbourhood centre, Service clubs, general community, young people and their families/carers
- outline identified problem and potential solution
- outline School component, DE component
- outline potential for community involvement
- document level and sectors of community interest, suggestions to progress or modify program, and any offers to partner.
- To map community resources
- invite 6-12 interested community members/agencies (eg School cluster, Partnership Group, local Child and Family network or Interagency group)
- target mapping to sectors of the community with potential to assist the program
- value all resources as equal eg handyman skills may be as useful as a business
- use a large visual to map resources and potential suppliers in the relevant sphere; see map below
Groups/
Organisations
Physical community
environment
Adapted from: Central Coast, Making Headway Toolkit: Building Your Community, How to Get Started (2003).
- To evaluate the program
- invite 6-12 participants in each focus group
- composition of group will influence data generated
- select participants with similar interest for each focus group eg students and their family/carers, individual community members, representatives of community agencies
- develop structured questions for discussion and circulate to participants prior to focus group; include how, what, why questions to elicit discussion, avoid questions with yes/no answers , include positive and negative aspects of program in the questions
- as discussion progresses the questions should become increasingly specific
Focus Group Outcome
The purpose of the community focus group will also determine the analysis and outcome of the focus group
- Transcribe discussion (if recorded)
- When identifying community interest for an alternative education in the community
- identify the community support?
- identify the sector/s of the community supportive of the program, and any offers of assistance
- document meeting outcome and circulate to all attendees
- arrange meeting with potential partners
- From the community resources map
- identify potentially useful resources
- identify possible suppliers
- identify possible synergies between the range of resources and suppliers
- document analysis of map and circulate to Partnership Group
- arrange to contact potential suppliers
- Data collected from the evaluation focus group will require analysis
- collate themes of discussion, identifying the themes that generated greatest discussion
- collate suggestions for program improvement, identifying suggestions with greatest support
- Write focus group report and circulate to Partnership Group/stakeholders to inform program review and modifications
- include focus group outcome, program review and modifications in final Program Report.
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