Research Methods- Interviews Flashcards
What is an interview?
A conversation between researcher and an interviewee when researcher asks a set of questions
What do you have to do for an interview?
Pick a sample, organise interview, select/train interviewer, ask questions and record answers
What are structured interviews?
Ask closed questions, like questionnaires but researcher is present to ask questions
What kind of data do structured interviews give?
Quantitative and reliable data
When are structured interviews used?
For large-scale social surveys
What is the advantage of structured interviews?
Interviewer can explain and clarify the questions
What are disadvantages of structured interviews?
- More expensive
- Interviewers have to follow list of questions so can’t ask for more detail
What kind of data do unstructured interviews give?
Qualitative data
What are advantages of unstructured interviews?
- Informal
- Flexible
- Good for researching sensitive topics
- Valid
What are disadvantages of unstructured interviews?
- Interviewer needs skill
- Smaller samples so not very representative
- Time-consuming
How can interviewers have an effect on people’s answers?
- Demand characteristics
- Interviewers can give subtle direction often without realising it