RM Mid Paper 2
RM Mid Paper 2
RM Mid Paper 2
can be used for data on 1. Opinions, feelings, emotions and experiences, Sensitive issues.,
Privileged information.
Types of research interview
Structured interviews
Structured interviews involve tight control over the format of the questions
and answers. In essence, the structured interview is like a questionnaire which
is administered face to face with a respondent. The researcher has a predetermined
list of questions, to which the respondent is invited to offer limitedoption
responses
Semi-structured interviews
With semi-structured interviews, the interviewer still has a clear list of issues to
be addressed and questions to be answered. However, with the semi-structured
interview the interviewer is prepared to be flexible in terms of the order in
which the topics are considered, and, perhaps more significantly, to let the
interviewee develop ideas and speak more widely on the issues raised by
the researcher. The answers are open-ended.
Unstructured interviews
Unstructured interviews go further in the extent to which emphasis is placed
on the interviewee’s thoughts. The researcher’s role is to be as un-intrusive as
possible – to start the ball rolling by introducing a theme or topic and then
letting the interviewee develop their ideas and pursue their train of thought.
One-to-one interviews
The most common form of semi-structured or unstructured interview is the
one-to-one variety which involves a meeting between one researcher and one
informant. One reason for its popularity is that it is relatively easy to arrange.
Group interviews
By interviewing more than one person at a time the researcher is able to dramatically increase the
number and range of participants involved in the research.
A disadvantage of the one-to-one interview is that it limits the number of
views and opinions available to the researcher. Listening to one person at a
time effectively restricts the number of voices that can be heard and the range
of views that can be included within a research project. Group interviews,
however, provide a practical solution to this. By interviewing more than one
person at a time the researcher is able to dramatically increase the number and
range of participants involved in the research.
Increasing the numbers involved can have benefits in terms of the representativeness
of the data.
FOCUS GROUPS
A focus group is best defined as a small group of carefully selected participants who
contribute to open discussions for research.
The focus
The discussion in a focus group is triggered by a ‘stimulus’. The stimulus might
be some shared experience that the participants bring to the session from their
personal background. They might all share an occupation, all suffer a similar
illness or, perhaps, all have watched a particular TV series. They will have this
much at least in common. Alternatively, the stimulus can be something introduced
by the moderator at the beginning of a session
Group interaction
During a focus group session participants are encouraged to discuss the topic
among themselves. This interaction helps the researcher to understand the
reasoning behind the views and opinions that are expressed by group members.
It provides the researcher with a method of investigating the participants’
reasoning and a means for exploring underlying factors that might explain
why people hold the opinions and feelings they do.
Disadvantages
Larger numbers are more difficult to schedule.
Larger groups can become unwieldy and hard to control.
Larger groups cost more.
Larger groups can inhibit contributions from less confident people
Discussions within larger groups are more difficult to record.
How long should a focus group last?
Typically, focus groups last about 1½ to 2 hours. They tend to last longer than
one-to-one interviews mainly because there are more people involved and
more opinions to be aired.
Self-presentation
Conventional advice to researchers has been geared to minimizing the impact
of researchers on the outcome of the research by having them adopt a passive
and neutral stance. The idea is that the researcher:
• presents himself or herself in a light which is designed not to antagonize or
upset the interviewee (conventional clothes, courtesy, etc.);
• remains neutral and non-committal on the statements made during the
interview by the interviewee.
Personal involvement
One line of reasoning argues that a cold and calculating style of interviewing
reinforces a gulf between the researcher and the informant, and does little
to help or empower the informant. Now, if the aims of the research are
specifically to help or empower the people being researched, rather than dispassionately
learn from them, then the approach of the interviewer will need
to alter accordingly.
Choice of informants
In principle, there is nothing to stop researchers from selecting informants on
the basis of random sampling. In practice, though, this is unlikely to happen.
Interviews are generally conducted with lower numbers than would be the
case with questionnaire surveys, and this means that the selection of people to
interview is more likely to be based on non-probability sampling. People tend
to be chosen deliberately because they have some special contribution to
make.
Authorization
In many, if not most, research situations it will be necessary to get approval
from relevant ‘authorities’.
Field notes
Under certain circumstances researchers will need to rely on field notes written
soon after the interview or actually during the interview
Field notes need to be made during the interview itself or, if this is not
feasible, as soon afterwards as possible. They need to be made while
events are fresh in the mind of the interviewer.
Audio recording
In practice, most research interviewers rely on audio recordings backed up by
written field notes. Initially, interviewees can feel rather inhibited by the process
of recording but most participants become more relaxed after a short while.
The process of selecting extracts involves a level of judgement and discretion on the
part of the researcher.
Depth of information
Equipment. Interviews require only simple equipment
Flexibility.
High response rate.
Validity.
Direct contact at the point of the interview means that data can be
checked for accuracy and relevance as they are collected
Therapeutic. Interviews can be a rewarding experience for the informant.
Disadvantages of interviews
Time-consuming.
Data analysis. The interview method tends to produce non-standard responses.
Semi-structured and unstructured interviews produce data that are not pre-coded and have a
relatively open format.
• Reliability. The impact of the interviewer and of the context means that consistency and
objectivity are hard to achieve.
Interviewer effect. The data from interviews are based on what people say rather than what they
do. The two may not tally.
Inhibitions. In the case of face-to-face interviews, the audio recorder (or video recorder) can
inhibit the informant.
Invasion of privacy.
Resources. With face-to-face interviews the costs of interviewer’s time and
travel can be relatively high.
OBSERVATION
Direct observation. The obvious connection is that they both rely on direct
observation. In this respect they stand together, in contrast to methods such
as questionnaires and interviews, which base their data on what informants
tell the researcher.
Two researchers looking at the same event ought to have recorded precisely
the same things. Yet in practice this might not be the case. It is
possible that the two researchers will produce different records of the thing
they jointly witnessed.
Selective recall:
Selective perception
Accentuated perception. (pa hgha wakht k sa jazbat de zamong, ya generally zamong sa khas
sezuna ta emetions der badal we)
there is a tendency to highlight some information and reject some other, depending on:
• Familiarity.
Past experiences.
Current state.
To achieve these three aims, observation schedules contain a list of items that operate something
like a checklist. The researcher who uses an observation schedule will monitor the items
contained in the checklist and make a record of them as they occur. All observers will have their
attention directed to the same things.
Creating an observation schedule
Literature review
Initially, the possible features of the situation which might be observed using a
schedule can be identified on the basis of a literature review. Such a literature
review will present certain things as worthy of inclusion, and should allow the
researcher to prioritize those aspects of the situation to be observed.
Frequency of events
Events at a given point in time.
Duration of events
Sample of people
Ethics
Self, identity and participant observation
Equipment for research: the ‘self’
One of the attractions of participant observation is that it hinges on the
researcher’s ‘self’, and does not call on much by the way of technical back-up
in the form of gadgets or software. Nor does it tend to produce data that call for
statistical analysis. The key instrument of participant observation methods is the
researcher as a person.
Access to settings
Access is not necessarily a matter of getting approval from relevant authorities
or getting a ‘gatekeeper’ to help open doors to the necessary contacts and
settings. As well as these, when engaging in the total version of participant
observation there is a special, peculiar issue affecting access. If the researcher
is to adopt a role in the setting then he or she needs to have the necessary
credentials – both personal and qualifications.
ADVANTAGES:
1. Basic Equipment
2. Non-Interference
3. Insights
4. Ecological Validity (The data produced by participant observation has the potential to be
particularly context sensitive and ecologically valid.)
1. Holistic
2. Subjects' Points of View
DISADVANTAGES:
1. Access There are limited options open to the researcher about which roles to adopt or
settings to participate in.
2. Commitment
3. Danger
4. Reliability
Dependence on the ‘self’ of the researcher and on the use of field notes as data leads to a
lack of verifiable data.
5. Representativeness of the Data
6. Deception (ethical issues)
Records of meetings