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Focus Groups

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Title: Focus Groups


1
Focus Groups
2
Understanding Focus Groups
  • Focus groups are group interviews with a
    moderator guiding the interview. The small group
    discuses the topics the interviewer raises.
  • Groups may be divided along a number of
    categories of interest ie. Race, gender, age,
    interest, class

3
Advantages
  • The natural setting allows people to express
    opinions/ideas freely.
  • Open expression among members of marginalized
    social groups is encouraged.
  • People tend to feel empowered, especially in
    action-oriented research projects.
  • Survey researchers are provided a window into how
    people talk about survey topics.
  • The interpretation of quantitative survey results
    is facilitated.
  • Participants may query one another and explain
    their answers to each other.

4
Limitations
  • A polarization effect exists (attitudes become
    more extreme after group discussion)
  • Only one or a few topics can be discussed in a
    focus group session.
  • A moderator may unknowingly limit open, free
    expression of group members.
  • Focus group participants produce fewer ideas than
    in individual interviews.
  • Focus group studies rarely report all the details
    of study design/procedure.
  • Researchers cannot reconcile the differences that
    arise between individual-only and focus
    group-context responses.

5
Strengths
  • Exploration and Discovery- focus groups are
    frequently used to learn about either topics or
    groups of people that are poorly understood.
    Because the group carries on most of the
    discussion, the researcher does not need to know
    a great deal about the topic under study.
  • Context and Depth-focus groups allow you to
    understand the background behind peoples
    thoughts and experiences. You have access to a
    wide range of experiences and opinions.
  • Interpretation- helps in understanding the why
    of things. Their process of communication can
    yield valuable data.
  • Access to tacit, experiential knowledge- you
    can observe the process of interaction between
    your participants.

6
A Few Examples of Focus Group Research
  • A corporation wanted to ensure the success of the
    new employee child care center that it was
    building. A series of focus groups helped the
    company develop flexible policies that employees
    felt were truly family friendly.
  • A graduate student wanted to understand the
    experiences of high school students with lower
    grade-point averages. Her thesis used focus
    groups to explore why these students limited
    their goals to not flunking out.
  • A large nonprofit organization wanted to increase
    its activities in the African-American community.
    Through a nationwide series of focus groups, the
    organization learned that it was virtually
    unknown in this community, despite an advertising
    campaign that it thought was geared to African
    Americans.

7
Examples Continued
  • A self-help program for recent immigrants wanted
    to design a community center. The program hired
    a trainer who taught its counselors how to do
    focus groups among its members, eventually
    leading to a center that people in the community
    truly claimed as their own.
  • A hospital wanted to learn why some new parents
    attended free childbirth classes while others did
    not. Focus groups showed that those who did not
    attend had inaccurate stereotypes about the
    nature of the classes, so a special brochure and
    publicity plan were developed to correct this.

8
The Process of Communication
  • It is important to remember that the focus group
    occurs as the midpoint in a larger three part
    process of communication
  • 1) The research team members decide what they
    need to hear from the participants
  • 2) The focus groups create a conversation among
    the participants around these chosen topics
  • 3) members of the research team summarize what
    they have learned from the participants.

9
Who Controls a Focus Group?
  • While it may be your focus (you picked the
    topic), it is their group.
  • This means that you have to take what they say
    into account.
  • If they seem unable to answer your question, the
    problem may be with your question itself, maybe
    it doesnt really get at the issue.

10
How is a focus group different than an interview?
  • Group Dynamics- Interaction is a complicated
    phenomenon. It is more than personalities
    mixing.
  • Groups have leaders. By having a moderator, you
    eliminate an in-member as the leader.
  • The moderator can structure discussions rigidly
    with detailed questions.
  • Or the moderator can simple facilitate
    participants explorations of wide ranging issues.

11
Success
  • Focus groups work best when what interests the
    research team is equally interesting to the
    participants in the groups.
  • In the ideal case the questions that you ask
    produce lively discussions.
  • The groups are easier to analyze, and the final
    product captures the excitement of the groups.
  • Example Jhally and Lewis were interested in how
    people of different ethnic groups perceived
    depictions of race differently. They had
    subjects view episodes of the Cosby Show and
    discuss issues around race.

12
How do you make sure the interests are well
matched?
  • Just imagine yourself in the focus group and ask
    yourself
  • What kinds of things do you want to say about the
    topic?
  • What kinds of things do you expect the other
    people in the group to talk about?
  • What would you like to learn about the other
    people in the group?
  • How would you like the people in the group to
    treat you?
  • How would you like the moderator to treat you?
  • How do you want to feel when the group is over?

13
Projects that Use Focus Groups
  • Problem Identification
  • Planning
  • Implementation
  • Assessment

14
The Usual Focus Group
  • 8 participants
  • Sometimes they know each other, sometimes they
    dont
  • 1-4 hours
  • Have a moderator
  • May be audio or videotaped

15
All Focus Groups Have Three Things in Common
  • 1) Qualitative research method for collecting
    data
  • 2) Focused efforts at data gathering
  • 3) Generate data through group discussions

16
What Isnt a Focus Group
  • Three basic reasons why something might be called
    a focus group even if it is not
  • 1) It might not be a research effort to gather
    qualitative data.
  • 2) It might not be focused. If there is no
    central theme of interest, it is not a focus
    group.
  • 3) It might not involve group discussion. Just
    gathering people does not guarantee that a
    meaningful discussion will occur.
  • People can go off on tangents, ramble etc.
  • One person might dominate and control the
    situation.

17
Considerations
  • Cost
  • Time
  • Moderators
  • Facilities
  • Strangers or Friends
  • Sensitive Topics
  • Is conformity produced
  • Can They Stand Alone?
  • Can They Tell You How People Will Behave?

18
Make Sure You
  • Are Skeptical
  • Have High Quality Moderating
  • Learn from the Participants
  • Are Creative

19
When Should One Avoid Focus Groups
  • Avoid Focus Groups When the Imply Commitments You
    cannot Keep
  • Avoid Focus Groups if the Participants Are not
    Comfortable With Each Other
  • Avoid Focus Groups when the Topic is not
    Appropriate For Participants
  • Avoid Focus Groups When A Project Requires
    Statistical Data

20
Resources Required to Do Focus Groups/The Basic
Components
  • Planning
  • Recruiting
  • Moderating
  • Analyzing and Reporting

21
Focus Groups and Sensitive Issues
  • How can one promise anonymity and confidentiality
    if other participants are untrustworthy?

22
Hidden Costs
  • Equipment
  • Compensation
  • Space
  • Moderators
  • Transcription

23
Radical Methodology
  • Focus groups make subjects into agents in the
    production of data. Subjects can bring up
    topics, ask questions, argue key points and voice
    opinions.
  • Collective Testimony

24
An Empirical Example
  • Easter Madriz and Latina womens fear of crime.
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