Week 2-Qualitative Interviewing Flashcards

1
Q

What’s one broad category of data?

A

Unobtrusive: generally, data which exist before research begins e.g., physical traces, archival data

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2
Q

What is qualitative interviewing?

A

■ One to one semi-structured interviews are the most common form of qualitative data collection
■ A focussed conversation between a researcher and (usually) a single participant, where the researcher has a set agenda regarding issues to be discussed
■ Researcher has a role in encouraging participants to provide rich detail
■ More personal form of research than questionnaires

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3
Q

Why use qualitative interviewing?

A

■ Generate rich and detailed data
■ Particularly useful for getting the story behind people’s experiences– the personal meaning and value
■ Arguably, easier for respondent than questionnaires, Mutually beneficial? e.g.,
Bereavement research (Bennett, 2005)
■ Chance for the researcher to develop
rapport
■ Flexible, interactive and gives participant control over what they say (rather than researcher choosing IV and DV.)

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4
Q

What are the disadvantages of qualitative interviewing?

A

■ Time-consuming and effortful (but rewarded with rich data)
■ Demands on interviewees time can make recruitment difficult (but typically a small sample)
■ Relies on self-report– accurate information? (researcher’s role; participants’ truth often most important)
■ Cannot be generalised to the wider population (but not its aim)
■ Interviewer effect/ bias (but can consider this when planning and reflexivity also a core feature)

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5
Q

How would you plan the qualitative interview?

A

■ Decide on your topic of investigation
■ Consider and account for ethical issues
■ Identify your target group
■ What resources do you need?
■ Decide on the format of your interview
■ Design your interview guide/schedule
■ Prepare by piloting the interview guide
■ When ready, start collecting data

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6
Q

What kinds of ethical considerations might be unique to qualitative interview research?

A

-Researcher - participant relationship
-Data interpretation (e.g., risk of misappropriating data)
-Data management e.g., storage, participant anonymity
-Potential harm e.g., emotionally difficult topics, vulnerability
-Legal requirements of disclosure

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7
Q

What are the different types of interviews?

A

1.Structured: No/ little freedom of direction, typically closed questions, generating short, specific responses
2.Unstructured: Very open and interactive, with questions created around a broad theme as interview proceeds
3.In-depth, semi-structured: Researcher guides discussion using an interview guide or ‘schedule’ containing a series of flexible questions and prompts

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8
Q

How will data be collected?

A

■ Interview format varies by type of interview
– Structured: No/ little freedom of direction, typically closed questions, generating short, specific responses
– Unstructured: Very open and interactive, with questions created around a broad theme as interview proceeds
– In-depth, semi-structuredIn-depth, semi-structured: Researcher guides discussion
using a interview guide or ‘schedule’ containing a series of flexible questions and prompts
*most often used in scientific research

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9
Q

How is sampling used in qualitative interviewing?

A

■ Typically a smaller sample
– As many people as you need to find out what you need to know
■ Recruitment can be challenging
■ Sampling is important but varies depending on methodology
– e.g. Theoretical sampling in Grounded Theory
– Homogeneity in Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis (IPA), whereas maximum variation and use of extreme or ‘deviant’ cases in Grounded Theory

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10
Q

How can you prepare for an interview?

A

■ Effective interview questions are open ended; neutral; sensitive; and easy to understand (Britten, 1999)
■ Better to avoid questions that are closed; biased or leading; confrontational; overly complicated or long; unrelated or nosey
■ Prompts can work really well e.g. What was that like for you? Could you tell me more about
that? What do you mean by ___? Could you give me an example? How so?
■ Embed questions into longer sentences and encourage stories:
Tell me the story of how you became friends
May generate more than:
How did you become friends?
■ Why questions can feel quite direct and invite rationalisations
Why did you choose to get married?
Could become :
What was it about being marriage to X that appealed to you?

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11
Q

What are the practicalities of interviewing?

A

■ An appropriate venue
■ Arriving on time
■ Awareness of lone worker policy
■ Good quality equipment to record the interview (and batteries!)
■ Pen and paper for brief notes
■ Setting the interview up – ethics, recording, what the purpose is

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12
Q

Generating data and eliciting information at interview

A

■ Interview guides provide a flexible map – a way of making sure you address the important issues
– You know where you’re going but you still need to explore the route!
■ Active listening for significance, using paraphrasing, and following up all very important
■ Be ready for silence

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13
Q

What’s the Interviewer – Interviewee dynamic?

A

■ A key ingredient to getting rich data
■ Developing interview skills through practice
– Value of conducting a pilot interview to get a sense of how your interview guide works and to examine your role as a researcher
■ Break the ice and develop rapport – first few minutes are crucial
■ Be yourself, but don’t give your views
■ Probe, not cross examine. Draw out, not pump!
■ Be clear about your purpose, how the information will be used etc
■ What factors might influence an interview situation to limit or distort the information obtained?
– Consider interviewer characteristics
– What does the research say about this?

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14
Q

Give an example of good qualitative interviewing

A

“. . . the interviewer is instructed to be friendly but not too friendly and to develop a balance between the warmth required to generate rapport and the detachment necessary to see the interviewee as an object under surveillance” (Oakley, 1981)

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15
Q

How do you prepare for qualitative data analysis?

A

■ Analysis process depends on the specific methodology you are using
– Different recipes for arriving at a set of preliminary findings
■ Generally, all involve coding and theme development
– What are participants saying?
■ A focus on depth, detail, context, complexity

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16
Q

What’s Reflexivity?

A

“The process of a continual internal dialogue and critical self-evaluation of the researcher’s positionality as well as active acknowledgement and explicit recognition that this position may affect the research process and outcome” (Berger, 2015 p. 220)
■ About acknowledging how aspects of our identities (such as race, class, and gender), histories etc. and how they affect data, analyses, and conclusions
■ Good practice to keep a reflexive journal, logging reflections on potential influence as a researcher
– Sensitises the interviewer to their prejudices, assumptions and subjectivities

17
Q

How do you transcribe interviews?

A

■ Literature recommends audio recording interviews, above all other methods
■ Need to convert audio into text based data, ready for analysis
■ Time consuming! Approximately 5-6 hours per 1 hour audio
■ Various ways to present transcripts, depending on methodology
– ‘Play script‘ transcript– orthographic transcription
– Jeffersonian transcription – prioritises paralinguistic features of a transcript
■ More appropriate for looking at operational features of an interview such as pauses, intonation, overlap
■ Need to think about handling confidential or sensitive information

18
Q

How do you know if your research is ‘good’?

A

■ General standards for “good” research: Controlled, rigorous, reliable, validated, quantitative, experimental
■ But, should qualitative studies be evaluated by the standards of quantitative research?
■ Remains a lack of agreement among qualitative researchers about how quality should be defined and evaluated
■ In qualitative, we think about ‘trustworthiness’
– Credibility - confidence in the truth of the findings
– Conformability – extent to which findings are shaped by respondents, rather than researcher bias
– Transparency – audit trail from sampling to conclusions
– Usefulness - that something can be done with the outcomes