Methods in context - Structured & unstructured interviews Flashcards
Practical issues- disadvantage
young interviewees may be less articulate or more reluctant to talk
- No understanding long, complex questions or some abstract concepts
- Have more limited vocabulary and use words incorrectly or differently from adults
- Have shorter attention spam & poorer memory retrieval and adults
- Read body language differently from adults
- Can lead to misunderstanding and incorrect answers- less valid
- Unstructured interviews may be more suitable than structured
- Schools have very active informal communication channels- can influence response given by later interview- reduce validity
- Time- Either outside of school or disrupt the school day
- Parents may only take part if they see benefits for their child
Reliability and validity
- Structured interview - reliable data but students are unlikely to respond favourably to them due to formal style
- Di Bentley 1987- Overcome this by showing jokey pictures of her and daughter and maintained a relaxed atmosphere by nodding, smiling and making eye contact
- Personal interview style cannot be standardised
Access and response rate
- Hierarchical institutions
- The lower down the hierarchy an interview is the more approval that has to be obtained
- Conducting interviews during lesson time may cause disruption therefore school may not allow this
- Parental permissions required to interview children. Depending on the subject of research may depend on whether parents grant permissions
Interviewer as’ teacher in disguise’
Power and status inequalities can affect the outcome
- Interviewees may see it as in their interest to lie, exaggerate, conceal information or seek to please
- May be less self- confident in their response
- If pupils see the interviewer as a ‘teacher in disguise’ they may seek to win the ‘teacher’ approval by giving untrue but socially acceptable answers
- Social interaction- Inequalities may influence and distort data
- Working class- parents may perceive the interviews as having higher status. Find questions patronising or intrusive.
Improving validity
- use open ended questions
- Not interrupt answers
- Tolerate long pauses to allow thinking time
- Recognise that children are more suggestible and therefore important to avoid asking leading questions
- Avoid repeating questions since this makes children change their first answer
Theoretical advantage
Representativeness: Structured interviews are quick to administer which means the sample population reached by this method will be larger than for unstructured interviews. This means it is possible to make a generalisation from the research findings to the wider population.
-Reliability: Structured interviews are seen as being a highly reliable method of gathering data. This is because the questions have been standardised- every participant is asked the same questions- which makes them objective as there is no researcher to influence the person answers.
Limitation of theoretical
-Limited insight: Interpretivists tend not to use structured interviews. There is no opportunity to probe deeper beyond the limited pre-set answers.
- Restrictive in that they force people to answer closed questions. There is limited choices so people cant answer as they wish
How can this be used in education research?
- Pupil subcultures
-Pupil experience of health and sex
-Class, ethnicity and language
-Gender and identity
-Class and parental choice of schools.