Forum Design: [Future of Urban Transit]
Version: 1.0 | Date: October 28, 2025
1. Executive Summary and Core Objectives
This forum is designed to bring diverse members of the public together to engage in **informed, structured, and constructive dialogue** regarding [Specific Policy Area or Topic, e.g., options for sustainable city transportation]. The primary goal is to generate actionable, legitimate, and public-centered input that will directly inform [Decision-Making Body/Policy Outcome, e.g., the City Council's 5-year transit plan].
This interactive document outlines the plan. Use the navigation bar above to jump to specific sections detailing the forum's format, participant strategy, logistical needs, and evaluation plan.
Core Objectives
| Objective | Goal |
|---|---|
| Information | Ensure all participants understand the core facts, trade-offs, and competing perspectives related to the topic. |
| Deliberation | Facilitate high-quality, reasoned exchange where participants actively listen, weigh evidence, and revise initial preferences. |
| Output | Produce a clear report detailing points of consensus, core areas of disagreement, and specific public recommendations. |
2. Format and Process Flow
The forum follows a structured schedule alternating between large group (plenary) sessions for information sharing and small group discussions for in-depth deliberation. This ensures both common understanding and diverse perspectives are addressed.
Phased Structure
The visual timeline below illustrates the sequence and focus of each phase. Detailed activities and expected outcomes are listed in the table following the visual.
| Phase | Duration | Activity | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| A. Plenary Introduction | 45 min | Welcome, grounding in shared facts (expert testimony/briefs), and statement of the central choice/problem. | Shared factual base and understanding of the scope. |
| B. Small Group Deliberation (Part 1) | 90 min | Participants discuss the first set of options/trade-offs (facilitated groups of 8-10). | Identification of preferred values and initial compromises. |
| C. Mid-point Plenary | 30 min | Facilitators report key themes and challenges from small groups. Participants vote/poll on core values to surface aggregate shifts. | Public recognition of diverse viewpoints. |
| D. Small Group Deliberation (Part 2) | 90 min | Participants dive deeper into implementation specifics, feasibility, and resource allocation. | Refined, nuanced group recommendations. |
| E. Final Plenary & Synthesis | 60 min | Presentation of synthesized group reports; final participant confidence polling and feedback survey. | Finalized public mandate and evaluation data. |
Small Group Deliberation Structure
| Role | Description |
|---|---|
| Facilitator | Maintains adherence to time limits, ensures balanced participation, and captures key arguments. Neutral role. |
| Note Taker | Records policy preferences, justifications, and areas of consensus/dissent (focused on content, not individual speakers). |
| Participant | Engages actively, listens respectfully, and critically assesses the provided information. |
3. Participant Strategy
A successful deliberation relies on engaging a representative cross-section of the public. This section covers recruitment goals and the information provided to participants.
A. Recruitment Goals
The recruitment strategy must aim for **demographic and viewpoint diversity** to ensure legitimacy.
- 🎯 **Diversity Targets:** Aim for proportional representation across [e.g., Age, Geographic Region, Income Level, Education Level, Political Viewpoint].
- 👥 **Total Participants:** [Target Number, e.g., 80-100] individuals to form [e.g., 8-10] small groups.
- 💰 **Incentive:** [Specify compensation/gift, e.g., $150 gift card] provided upon completion.
B. Training and Materials
Ensuring participants are well-informed is critical for meaningful deliberation.
- 📖 **Pre-Read Material:** A **non-partisan, balanced primer** on the topic must be sent 1-2 weeks prior, clearly outlining known facts and policy trade-offs.
- 🎙️ **Expert Briefings:** Short, impartial presentations (5-10 minutes each) by experts representing diverse policy viewpoints during the introductory plenary.
4. Logistics and Technology
This section details the practical requirements for running the forum, whether in-person or virtual, including the tools and staffing needed.
A. Venue/Platform
| Type | Specification | Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| In-Person | [Specific Location] | A main hall for plenaries, separate breakout rooms for small groups, and robust A/V support. |
| Virtual | [Platform Name, e.g., Zoom/Miro] | Robust breakout room management, interactive digital whiteboards for note-taking, and secure polling features. |
B. Deliberation Tools
- 🗳️ **Polling/Voting:** Use an instant polling tool ([Tool Name, e.g., Mentimeter, Slido]) to gauge shifts in opinion after information sessions.
- 📝 **Note-Taking/Synthesis:** Use a standardized digital form/template (e.g., Google Forms, Miro template) for note-takers to ensure data consistency.
- 🤝 **Ground Rules:** Clearly display and verbally reinforce rules emphasizing respect, "speak for yourself," and "listen to understand."
C. Facilitation and Moderation
- ⚖️ **Ratio:** Maintain a 1:10 ratio (1 facilitator per 10 participants).
- 🎓 **Facilitator Training:** All facilitators must undergo mandatory training focused on neutrality, managing conflict, and synthesizing ideas, not advocating positions.
5. Output and Evaluation
Defining clear deliverables and evaluation metrics ensures the forum's impact can be measured and communicated effectively.
A. Deliverables
| Deliverable | Description | Target Audience |
|---|---|---|
| Public Report | Synthesis of final recommendations, points of consensus (70%+ agreement), and minority viewpoints. | Policy Makers, Media, General Public |
| Raw Data | Anonymized transcripts of notes and small group reports. | Research/Academic Partners |
| Process Metrics | Documentation of participation rates, demographic balance, and facilitator feedback. | Project Sponsors |
B. Evaluation Metrics
The success of the deliberation process will be measured by two key metrics:
- 📈 **Opinion Change (Pre vs. Post):** Did participants’ preferences change after engaging with the information and dialogue? (Measured via initial and final anonymous polls.)
- ✅ **Perceived Quality:** Did participants feel the process was fair, informative, and inclusive? (Measured via a post-forum survey rating fairness, balance of information, and respect among participants.)
