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Corresponding Author

Bruce Behringer

behr320@hotmail.com

Author Affiliations

Bruce Behringer

Associate Vice President and Director of the Office of Rural and Community Health and Community Partnerships (retired), East Tennessee State University (Johnson City TN)

Deputy Commissioner for Continuous Improvement and Training (retired), Tennessee Department of Health (Nashville TN)

Author Area of Expertise

Public health

Rural community development

Group process and facilitation

Abstract

Involvement of community and organizational groups is fundamental to most public ventures. Most social, health, economic, and educational improvements in Appalachia have been characterized by successfully integrating community input and finding ways to encourage organizational change and collaboration.

Managing group process and related facilitation skills are fundamental competencies for public health professionals and others guiding change efforts. Groups from communities and organizations can get stalled in their deliberations; a facilitator frequently must think quickly to diagnose the situation and propose alternative approaches. Creative and flexible approaches, learned through practice experiences, can blend with theories and frameworks learned in academic preparation from multiple disciplines in order to effectively encourage group progress.

Over a 50-year career (1972–2022), sets of three related concepts were formed as trilogies and used during work with groups of diverse compositions, in multiple locations, and addressing varied topics. The trilogies proved helpful in encouraging group tasks related to assessment, planning, monitoring, and evaluation. Trilogies also were deployed as a facilitation technique to pose thoughtful options as groups considered difficult issues and maneuvered through stagnant or conflict-prone situations. This paper presents twelve trilogies organized around six common group-process questions. A reference for the source of each trilogy is provided, and several Appalachian-specific examples of how trilogies were deployed are described.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.13023/jah.0601.10

Creative Commons License

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Recommended Citation

Behringer B. Trilogies: Lessons from 50 years facilitating community-based health assessments and planning in Appalachia. J Appalach Health 2024;6(1):148–162. DOI: https://doi.org/10.13023/jah.0601.10

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