P1 Research Methods - Structured Interviews Flashcards
What are interviews?
Conversations between a researcher and a responder about a topic of sociological interest.
Questions can be opened or close and may not follow a specific interview schedule
What are the different types of interviews?
- Structured
- Face to face from a list of standard questions - Semi structured
- Face to face, structured but with the ability to ask follow up questions - Unstructured
- Face to face, less formal setting, discussion of themes rather than set questions - Group Interviews
- Often referred to as focus groups. They can be structured, semi structured or unstructured
What are structured interviews?
Structured interviews are like questionnaires both involve asking people a set of prepared questions.
Questions are usually closed with pre-coded answers. in interviews the questions are read out and answers are recorded by a a trained interviewer
What is advantages of structured interviews?
Reliability:
- It’s easy for researcher to standardise and control
- They can ensure that each interview is conducted in precisely the same way (same questions in order)
What are disadvantages of structured interviews?
- Validity:
- They produce a false picture of the subjects they are trying to study
- They use closed questions that restrict the interviewees to choosing from a number of pre-set answers
- Gives the interviewer little freedom to explain questions - Response rate
- The people who respond may be untypical meaning it undermines the validity of the generalisations so the data is unrepresentative.