Interactivity Foundation

Practical Tips for Citizen Discussion of Possibilities: Part II- Starting the Discussion

In my previous installment on practical tips I looked at recruitment of citizen groups. The who, what, and where of that first step of gathering the bodies exerts considerable influence on how you might want to initiate discussion of policy possibilities.

We will start with the assumption that you want to engage the participants, make the ideas accessible to them, and leave them with both a favorable impression of and appetite for this type of discussion. It almost goes without saying that achieving those goals demands that you develop a plan not only for presentation of the material, but that also anticipates their level of likely understanding and engagement.

When I presented a citizen discussion trial run of the regulation report to a neighborhood group I planned for a discussion set up that gave them a history of the project. I also accumulated some stories describing how the possibilities might play out in some of the very local-scale issues of interest to them. I took an entirely different approach, however, in a day-long discussion of the same report with government lawyers.

IF’s fellows, associated faculty, and contract facilitators have asked and answered many questions about this matter of where to start. Here are some of the items from their responses that grabbed my attention:

The most important piece of advice that I can give you about where to start in discussion is to simply consider the options, have a plan that allows you to respond to both obstacles and opportunities, and let yourself breathe. We have had remarkably few fatalities in this work.

When I first started I was definitely a “paint by numbers” facilitator. Now I am starting to see the channels and the flow in the river. I still get wet on occasion. I apologize for the mixed metaphors.

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