Interesting Viewpoint about 'Background Conversations'
Notes on professional reading According to Ford, Ford and Randalluch (2001), much of what people know about their world comes from conversations with others, rather than from direct experience.. Three generic types of socially constructed background conversations that engender distinct types of resistant to change. The complacent background - "We will succeed in the future, the way we have in the past". "Just leave things as they are." People continue to practice once-successful strategies. The resigned background - "This probably won't work either", "I can't make any difference". Constructed from historical failure. Normally failure is blamed on someone else. The cynical background - "Who are they kidding? There is no way this will work". "I don't know why they bother". Likely to include references to being let down by more powerful others. Important to bring these conversations into the open, rath