Through the work of more than 25 Page Center scholars (listed below), these projects will reveal viewpoints from many approaches and communication frameworks. Topics include diversity; employee silence; listening to marginalized publics; rebuilding trust through listening; social listening; and others. One project asks, “What happens when organizations don’t listen?” The projects from this year’s grants will be completed during the summer of 2021.
“I became intrigued by the concept of listening when a public relations executive shared the importance of ‘listening loudly,’” Place said. “This collection of research seeks to understand how listening underscores everything we do in public relations — from engaging in dialogue, fostering relationships or communicating ethically and inclusively.”
This is the 16th year the Page Center is supporting timely and important communication research. Including this year’s call, it has funded hundreds of scholars from universities all over the world and awarded more than $900,000 in research funding since 2004.
For the first time, the Page Center will be inviting its advisory board to hear this year’s group of scholars present their research ideas and results. The first of these sessions is being planned for August when scholars will give the 15-member advisory board the opportunity to see their research in its early stages. Next year, at the end of the term, select scholars will present their results to the board.
"We are lucky to have an advisory board with decades of experience in business, public relations and journalism,” Bortree said. “Connecting their experience and expertise with our scholars’ work and innovation is a partnership that will result in stronger, more practical research.”
The Page Center is a research center in the Donald P. Bellisario College of Communications. Founded in 2004 by distinguished alumnus Larry Foster, the center has become an international leader in research on ethics and integrity in public communication.
The 2020 Page Center Research Grants on Organizational Listening include:
"Developing a Scale of Organizational Listening" — Giselle Auger, Rhode Island College, and Moonhee Cho, University of Tennessee
"A Study of Stakeholders' Conceptualizations of Organizational Listening" — Diana Sisson, Auburn University; Graham Bodie, University of Mississippi; and Debra Washington, Auburn University
"Breaking Employee Silence via Employee Dialogic Engagement: A Model of Employee Silence at Individual, Organizational, and Cultural Levels and a Proposal of Internal Organizational Listening Competency Diagnostic Tool" — Minjeong Kang and Bitt Moon, Indiana University
"In search of representativeness and diversity: Organizational listening in a multi-stakeholder environment" — Lisa Tam, Queensland University of Technology; Helen Hutchings, Philips Group; and Soojin Kim, University of Technology Sydney
"City of Fort Worth’s Efforts to Listen and Re-build Trust Among Diverse and Marginalized Stakeholders" — Julie O’Neill, Jacquie Lambiase, Ashley English, Texas Christian University
"Harnessing the Power of Chatbots for Organizational Social Listening" — Rita Men, University Florida; Alvin Zhou, University of Pennsylvania; and Sunny Tsai, University of Miami
"Ethical Organizational Listening for Stakeholder Engagement and Responsibility" — Marlene Neill, Baylor University and Shannon Bowen, University of South Carolina
"Organizational Social Listening & Corporate Climate Advocacy: What Happens When Organizations Don't Listen" — Ioana Coman and Rosalyn Vazquez, Texas Tech University
"Extending Civic Values in Architectures of Listening: Arendt, Mouffe, and the Pluralistic Imperative for Organizational Listening" — Luke Capizzo, James Madison University
"Listening to Historically Marginalized Publics: Brand Activism and LGBTQ Stakeholders" — Ha Young Lim, Erica Ciszek, Won-Ki Moon, University of Texas at Austin
"Toward a Normative Internal Communication Model for Gender Discrimination in the Workplace: A Cross-Cultural Study" — Yeunjae Lee, Jo-Yun Queenie Li, Wan-Hsui Sunny Tsai, University of Miami
"Assessing Stakeholder Expectations for Organizational Social Listening " — Sarah Maben and Christopher Gearhart, Tarleton State University