One of our proudest accomplishments is having collaboratively designed the "Our Minnesota" Cascading Conversations Tour and hosting young Minnesotans in conversations across the state about their values and visions for the future. While we cannot develop a strategic plan for our generation, we can be strategic about our intentions for the Minnesota we will create together. The Cascading Conversations Tour is an attempt to discover what we have in common, to learn about what’s working in Minnesota that we can build on, and to uncover how we can work individually and collectively to achieve the future we desire.
In celebration of our anniversary, we're excited to share with you over the coming days about the report and our initial findings. To start, today we'll share about how we conducted the research and the demographic background of Tour participants. Keep an eye out next week to learn how this group of emerging leaders views and does leadership in Minnesota! And as the name implies, we are looking to continue cascading these conversations across the state this summer - and invite you to join us. Let us know if you'd like to be invited to participate in a conversation and/or join our Advance Team and help host 3 to 5 conversations this summer!
Methodology and limitations
Methodology and limitations
The “Our Minnesota” Cascading Conversation tour began in
2011 with question development. Influenced by practices from the Art of
Participatory Leadership, designers crafted open-ended questions that first
focus on individual stories and preferences before shifting the orientation
towards communities and the state.
The initial round of conversations came through a
convenience sample that in total yielded 157 responses. Conversations were held
between November 2011 and December 2013. Individuals conducting interviews were
guided by instructions at the start of the conversation guide and those
interviewed were invited at the end of the conversation to interview someone
else. Two individuals trained in qualitative analysis provided the initial
study to iteratively identify the common themes across participants. Little
demographic information about respondents was captured during this time.
Interviewers anecdotally reported that the majority of participants appeared to
be white, college-educated, and employed.
A desire to reach a broader audience led to a revision of
the feedback form which asked for participants to identify gender,
race/ethnicity, highest level of educational attainment, work situation, and
sexual orientation. The conversation questions remained the same. Organizers
planned a second round of conversations to more intentionally collect responses
that better represents the diversity of Millennials in Minnesota. They
assembled an advance team of individuals who identified across a range of
identities and provided training on holding the conversations and reporting the
responses. Their charge was to conduct conversations with individuals from
their communities.
Between June and November 2014, the advance team conducted
and reported results from fifty conversations. The same two individuals who had
conducted the qualitative analysis from the first round of conversations did
the same for the second round. They used the emergent codes from the 2011-2013
sample in addition to identifying new themes unique to the 2014 data set.
It is important to note that the data presented in this report
are not representative of all Millennials in Minnesota. Rather, these data are
meant to be a starting point for dialogue about the thoughts and opinions
regarding the future of Minnesota. Minnesota Rising is continually focused on
seeing whose voices are missing from the conversation and working to invite
greater participation. Additional conversations will continue to engage a
variety of participants in an effort to broaden the pool of responses and
reflect the state’s diversity (e.g., racial, ethnic, gender, sexual
orientation, socioeconomic, and geographic).
Findings: Demographic profile of conversation participants
Looking at the 50 participants from the second round of
conversations (demographic data were not collected from the first round of
conversations), they are primarily between the ages of 23 and 32, are
well-educated, and employed full-time. Eighty-four percent of respondents had
completed a bachelor’s or higher. For employment, 80 percent had a full-time
position at the time of the conversation. About 38 percent of Minnesota
residents age 25-34 have earned a bachelor’s degree or higher. Of all entry
level and early career-age adults (age 16-34), 73 percent are working.[1]
Figure 1: Percentage of
respondents by age in years (N=50)
Figure 2: Percentage of
respondents’ educational attainment (N=50)
Figure 3: Percentage of
respondents’ current employment status (N=50)
Seventy-four percent of respondents identified as female, 24
percent as male, and two percent as gender queer.
Out of the 49 respondents who provided information about
their sexual orientation, four out of five identified as heterosexual.
Figure 4: Percentage of
respondents’ identified sexual orientation (N=49)
All fifty participants provided their race and ethnicity in
an open ended question. The two tables below show all responses. The first
table includes responses which came up more than once and the second includes
those that only appeared once. The three most common responses were Caucasian
or white (32%), African-American or black (18%), Hmong (10%), and Asian (10%).
Table 1: Race and ethnicity
responses identified more than once (N = 50)
Category
|
Number
|
Percent
|
African
|
3
|
6%
|
African-American or black
|
9
|
18%
|
Asian
|
5
|
10%
|
Asian-American
|
3
|
6%
|
Caucasian or white
|
16
|
32%
|
Chinese
|
2
|
4%
|
Hmong
|
5
|
10%
|
Latino/a
|
2
|
4%
|
Multiracial or biracial
|
3
|
6%
|
Table 2: Race and ethnicity
responses identified only once (N=50)
Category
|
Number
|
Percent
|
Cuban
|
1
|
2%
|
Guyanese
|
1
|
2%
|
Haitian
|
1
|
2%
|
Hmong-Ojibwe
|
1
|
2%
|
Indian
|
1
|
2%
|
Indigenous
|
1
|
2%
|
Italian
|
1
|
2%
|
Korean-American
|
1
|
2%
|
Mexican-American
|
1
|
2%
|
Norwegian
|
1
|
2%
|
Sri Lankan
|
1
|
2%
|
In Minnesota, one in four millennials is a person of color,
so this set of respondents over samples that demographic.[2]
[1] Compiled by Minnesota Compass in March 2015
from U.S. Census Bureau, Decennial Census (2010) and U.S. Census Bureau, American
Community Survey (2013) The calculation does not include residents in the armed
forces.
[2]
Minnesota Compass, 6
surprising trends about Minnesota’s millennials, March 2014
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