Partnership for Kentucky Schools Turn Up the Volume: The Students Speak Toolkit
Students Speak Toolkit  >  III. Appendices  >  Appendix F. Facilitator Training Materials  >  Sample agendas for facilitator training

Jessamine County Public Schools
Focus Groups on School Climate and School Safety, Fall 1998
Agenda for Facilitator Training

12:00       

Welcome

Quick purpose: We're here to get you ready to facilitate focus groups: (total of 13 groups, four in middle school will have high school facilitators)

Introductions

More detailed purpose

  • The "charge" to complete research for school board by 10/26
  • Longer-term interest in school-community capability to conduct research and dialogue (not everyone trained today will get to facilitate in the first round; the skills will still be useful in other settings and you will have more opportunities for focus groups as well)
  • Facilitation as one piece of a whole process (metaphor: If the whole research project were building a house from scratch, other people would have picked the location, dug the foundation, and put up the basic structure; as facilitators you're like the electrical crew, coming in to do a specific job that is essential - get those lights on - for the four middle school groups)
  • Short training time frame means we won't be explaining much of the other parts of the whole building project; if you want to know more, we brought some materials and there will eventually be wider roles for interested students.
12:15

Preview the training

  • Experience - Description/Teaching - Practice
  • Like a meal eaten in stages, with time to talk about each stage, learn a little about the recipes
  • At the end of the training you will have seen key aspects of a focus group, and you will know the most important aspects of focus group facilitation.
  • We will select the facilitators for the school climate/school safety middle school focus groups by drawing lots later in the training. We will draw two female facilitators and two male facilitators from this group.
12:20

Creating/observing the opening of a focus group

  • Get students to help figure out an introductory question that would work well with middle school students [Note: In Jessamine County, the high school students chose "Tell us your favorite food" as a good opening question for helping middle school students introduce themselves.]
  • Draw a random sample of eight students from the group to participate in model focus group (NOT to be confused with drawing the facilitators at the end of the training) - remaining students will be the observers
  • Explain the participants' role (to relax and be in the group) and the observers' role (to watch and learn from the facilitators)
  • Run the opening through asking Interview Question 1 (may need to run a shortened version)
12:40

Learning about facilitation from the opening

  • What did anyone notice about the facilitators?
  • Underscore neutrality
  • Underscore warmth, hospitality, comfort
  • Underscore ground rules
  • Underscore willingness to ask questions and wait
1:00

Creating/observing the heart of a focus group

  • If enough people are present, draw a different sample of eight
  • Remind both participants and observers of their roles
  • Run shortened versions of Interview Questions 2, 3, and 4
1:30

Learning more about facilitation

  • What did people notice?
  • Underscore neutrality
  • Underscore balancing participation, including "going around the room"
  • Underscore follow-up questions
  • Underscore trial-and-error approach to getting conversation going
  • Be sure people understand how to pick up the cards in order from Question 2, write numbers on them, and put a band around them to give to the senior researchers
1:45

Creating/observing the final stages

  • If it seems appropriate, create a new participant group
  • Remind both participants and observers of their roles
  • Run shortened versions of Questions 5, 6, and closing
1:55

Learning from final questions and closing

  • What did people notice?
  • Underscore participants trusting the facilitator to know what to do (so they can relax)
  • Underscore providing people a sense of contribution and closure
2:10

Practice

  • Draw names of two female and two male facilitators plus an alternate female and male (these will be the actual facilitators)
  • Set up two practice groups (with observers if groups have more than eight members)
  • Coach the chosen facilitators to practice getting started and do a little bit of work on some interview questions
  • Stop the practice and ask the facilitators to talk about what they need to know to do their work; provide coaching
  • Restart the practice; keep repeating until time is up
  • If practical, arrange for others in the group to take a turn as facilitators
2:40

Closing and clearing up questions

  • Ask what questions people have; answer as many as possible
  • Underscore neutrality, hospitality, equity/balance
  • Get contact info for the identified facilitators and alternates
  • Share Roberts & Kay, Inc. contact info
  • For the chosen facilitators and alternates, deal with logistical questions (date and place, tape recorder, arrival time, etc.)
3:00

Adjourn


Materials needed:


Fayette County Schools Facilitator Training
November 30, 1999

12:30 - 12:35
Preview the training: some observation, lots of practice


12:35 - 12:55
Creating/observing the opening of a focus group


12:55 - 1:05
Learning about facilitation from the opening


1:05 - 1:35
Distinguishing between good facilitator behavior and less than ideal facilitator behavior

1:05 - 1:15
Model scenario involving a really awful, obnoxious facilitator, using question: "Where in your school do you feel the safest?"

Ask students to comment on whether they think this was good facilitation or bad facilitation. Why?


1:15 - 1:25
Model scenario involving a facilitator with neutral verbal skills but highly expressive body language, using question: "What kinds of things do you dread about school?"

Ask students to analyze the strengths/weaknesses of this scenario.


1:25 - 1:35
Model good facilitation, using question: "Tell us some of the things your teachers do to make learning interesting."

Ask students to comment on what they saw in this scenario. Emphasize that this is the one they want to emulate.


1:35 - 1:55
Continue modeling good facilitation, using interview questions from Jessamine County


1:55 - 2:10
Learning more about facilitation


2:10 - 2:15
Break


2:15 - 3:15
Small group practice


3:15 - 3:30
Closing and clearing up questions


Partnership for Kentucky Schools Turn Up the Volume: The Students Speak Toolkit