Pnadk310
Pnadk310
Pnadk310
Research
Methods:
A D ATA C O L L E C T O R ’ S
FIELD GUIDE
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Family Health International (FHI) is a nonprofit organization working to improve lives
worldwide through research, education, and services in family health.
This publication was made possible through support provided by the U.S. Agency for
International Development (USAID), under the terms of Cooperative Agreement No.
CCP-A-00-95-00022-02. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reflect the views of USAID.
ISBN: 0-939704-98-6
http://www.fhi.org
E-mail: publications@fhi.org
Contents
Acknowledgments v
Introduction vi
Case Study viii
Module 1 — Qualitative Research Methods Overview 1
Introduction to Qualitative Research 1
Comparing Quantitative and Qualitative Research 2
Sampling in Qualitative Research 5
Recruitment in Qualitative Research 6
Ethical Guidelines in Qualitative Research 8
Suggested Readings 12
Module 2 — Participant Observation 13
Overview of Participant Observation 13
Ethical Guidelines 16
Logistics of Participant Observation 18
How to Be an Effective Participant Observer 22
Tips for Taking Field Notes 24
Suggested Readings 25
Case Study Samples 26
Participant Observation Steps 27
Module 3 — In-Depth Interviews 29
Overview of In-Depth Interviewing 29
Ethical Guidelines 31
Logistics of Interviewing 32
How to Be an Effective Interviewer 37
Tips for Taking Interview Notes 44
Suggested Readings 45
Case Study Samples 46
Interview Steps 48
Interview Checklist 49
Module 4 — Focus Groups 51
Overview of Focus Groups 51
Ethical Guidelines 53
Logistics of Focus Groups 54
How to Be an Effective Moderator 59
How to Be an Effective Note-taker 69
Tips for Taking Focus Group Notes 73
Suggested Readings 77
Case Study Samples 68, 70, 74, 78
iii
Steps in Moderating a Focus Group 80
Steps in Note-taking for a Focus Group 81
Focus Group Checklist 82
Module 5 — Data Documentation and Management: Organizing and Storing Your Data 83
Converting Raw Data to Computer Files 83
Organizing Data Storage 85
Suggested Readings 87
Case Study Samples 86, 88
Data Archiving Steps 90
Data Management Checklist 91
Appendix A: Exercises for Training Data Collectors 93
Appendix B: Tools for Data Managers 105
Glossary 115
List of Tables
Table 1. Comparison of quantitative and qualitative research approaches 3
Table 2. Strengths and weaknesses of participant observation 15
Table 3. What to observe during participant observation 20
Table 4. Strengths of in-depth interviews versus focus groups 30
Table 5. Key skills for in-depth interviewing 38
Table 6. Unbiased versus leading questions 42
Table 7. Strengths of focus groups versus in-depth interviews 52
Table 8. Behavioral techniques for building rapport in focus groups 60
Table 9. Suggested ground rules for building rapport in focus groups 61
Table 10. Unbiased versus leading questions 64
We would also like to recognize the conceptual contributions of Betsy Tolley and Lorie Broomhall.
Their emphasis on the importance of allowing for individual approaches to preparing research
teams for data collection served as a reminder that a practical field guide should not portend to be a
training curriculum in and of itself. Rather than a replacement for hands-on interaction between
trainers and data collection teams, we intend our guide to be a useful supplement for each team
member as they learn and use qualitative methods in the field.
Reviewers Betty Akumatey of the University of Ghana, Legon, and Joy Noel Baumgartner of
FHI merit our sincere thanks as well. Their candid evaluations helped us measure our goal of
developing a functional tool against the reality of whether it worked in the field. We thank also
Beth Robinson for her encouragement, enthusiasm, and technical and personal support from the
start of this project to its finish. Thank you to Larry Severy for his all-round backing of the proj-
ect. Merrill Wolf, editor, is due thanks for the manuscript’s organization and flow, as is Karen
Dickerson, copyeditor and designer, for her great attention to detail and consistency. Illustrations
are credited to Denise Todloski. Kerry McLoughlin graciously stepped in at a moment’s notice to
provide assistance with the case study examples. And Lucy Harber, our gentle, smiling produc-
tion manager, was indispensable in ways immeasurable for bringing the project to fruition.
This guide was made possible by funding from the U.S. Agency for International Development
(USAID). We extend our gratitude for their unwavering support.
v
Introduction
Qualitative research methods are gaining in popularity outside the traditional academic social
sciences, particularly in public health and international development research. Whereas quantitative
research methods once dominated these fields, researchers have now begun drawing from a more
diverse repertoire of methodologies as they tackle international public health problems. Qualitative
methods have become important tools within this broader approach to applied research, in large
part because they provide valuable insights into the local perspectives of study populations.
The great contribution of qualitative research is the culturally specific and contextually rich data it
produces. Such data are proving critical in the design of comprehensive solutions to public health
problems in developing countries, as scientists, medical doctors, pharmaceutical companies, and
humanitarian organizations have come to recognize that biomedical solutions are only partial
remedies. Rather, the success of a health intervention – that is, whether it actually reaches the peo-
ple it is intended to help – rests also on how well it addresses sociobehavioral factors such as cul-
tural norms, ethnic identities, gender norms, stigma, and socioeconomic status. Success measured
on this basis has a bearing, in turn, on the cost-effectiveness, efficiency, and efficacy of interven-
tions, concerns not insignificant in the eyes of project managers and funding agencies.
vii
This case study will be used throughout the modules to illustrate the various ways qualitative
research data may be recorded:
CASE STUDY
Study objective:
To assess the acceptability and feasibility of integrating HIV counseling and testing for
non-pregnant women of reproductive age into existing family planning (FP) services in
Capital City, Developing Country.
Background:
In Capital City, an estimated 12 percent of women of reproductive age (15 to 40) have HIV.
This is only an estimate because both women and men in this country are generally disin-
clined toward getting tested for HIV. This reluctance is due to social stigma and discrimina-
tion associated with being HIV infected. They are particularly opposed to getting tested at
the free clinic that was specifically set up for HIV/AIDS-related services five years ago.
Rumors spread quickly in this community, and people who are seen entering or leaving the
clinic are assumed to have HIV. For women this can be especially damaging, because their
husbands or families may abandon them. Therefore, the services offered at the HIV facility,
including antiretrovirals to help prevent mother-to-child transmission, are not being utilized.
In the 1980s, family planning carried heavy social stigma for women, but as a result of pub-
lic information campaigns, community outreach, and health interventions, stigma and dis-
crimination are no longer significant problems for women who wish to use family planning
methods. The rate of contraceptive prevalence is 41 percent.
Social and behavioral changes are clearly needed in this community to reduce stigma and
discrimination associated with HIV/AIDS, but such change can admittedly be slow to
occur. In the meantime, there are free – but little-used – HIV services available that could
reduce transmission rates from infected to non-infected adults and children, and increase
the quality of life for people who are infected. Encouraging greater utilization of these serv-
ices must necessarily start with increasing HIV counseling and testing among the general
at-risk population. Antenatal clinics would be an appropriate place for interventions tar-
geted at pregnant women. For women of reproductive age who are not pregnant, family
planning clinics might offer an opportunity for discreet HIV counseling and testing because
they are well utilized and have little associated stigma.
Therefore, in our study we will assess the acceptability and feasibility of integrating HIV
counseling and testing for non-pregnant women into existing family planning services.
Methods:
(1) Structured participant observation in 4 family planning clinics and the HIV/AIDS clinic.
(2) In-depth interviews with up to 10 family planning service providers, up to 5 providers
and staff members from the HIV/AIDS clinic, up to 10 community leaders, and up to 10
women of reproductive age who use family planning but have not had HIV testing.
(3) Focus groups with 8 to 10 non-pregnant women of reproductive age who use family plan-
ning and 8 to 10 non-pregnant women of reproductive age who do not use family planning.
Module 1
Qualitative Research Methods Overview
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Qualitative Research Methods Overview
OVERVIEW
T
his module introduces the fundamental elements of a qualitative approach to research, to
help you understand and become proficient in the qualitative methods discussed in subse-
quent modules. We recommend that you consult the suggested readings at the end of the
module for more in-depth treatment of the foundations of qualitative research.
Overview 1
issue may not be readily apparent. When used along with quantitative methods, qualitative
research can help us to interpret and better understand the complex reality of a given situation
and the implications of quantitative data.
Although findings from qualitative data can often be extended to people with characteristics sim-
ilar to those in the study population, gaining a rich and complex understanding of a specific
social context or phenomenon typically takes precedence over eliciting data that can be general-
ized to other geographical areas or populations. In this sense, qualitative research differs slightly
from scientific research in general.
Table 1, page 3, briefly outlines these major differences. For a more in-depth theoretical treat-
ment of the differences between qualitative and quantitative research, we refer the reader to the
suggested readings listed at the end of this chapter, especially Bernard 1995.
OVERVIEW
Quantitative Qualitative
General framework Seek to confirm hypotheses about Seek to explore phenomena
phenomena
Flexibility in study design Study design is stable from Some aspects of the study are
beginning to end flexible (for example, the addition,
exclusion, or wording of particular
interview questions)
What is the most important difference between quantitative and qualitative methods?
The key difference between quantitative and qualitative methods is their flexibility. Generally,
quantitative methods are fairly inflexible. With quantitative methods such as surveys and ques-
tionnaires, for example, researchers ask all participants identical questions in the same order. The
response categories from which participants may choose are “closed-ended” or fixed. The advan-
tage of this inflexibility is that it allows for meaningful comparison of responses across partici-
pants and study sites. However, it requires a thorough understanding of the important questions
to ask, the best way to ask them, and the range of possible responses.
Overview 3
Qualitative methods are typically more flexible – that is, they allow greater spontaneity and
adaptation of the interaction between the researcher and the study participant. For example, qual-
itative methods ask mostly “open-ended” questions that are not necessarily worded in exactly the
same way with each participant. With open-ended questions, participants are free to respond in
their own words, and these responses tend to be more complex than simply “yes” or “no.”
In addition, with qualitative methods, the relationship between the researcher and the participant
is often less formal than in quantitative research. Participants have the opportunity to respond
more elaborately and in greater detail than is typically the case with quantitative methods. In
turn, researchers have the opportunity to respond immediately to what participants say by tailor-
ing subsequent questions to information the participant has provided.
It is important to note, however, that there is a range of flexibility among methods used in both
quantitative and qualitative research and that flexibility is not an indication of how scientifically
rigorous a method is. Rather, the degree of flexibility reflects the kind of understanding of the
problem that is being pursued using the method.
Another advantage of qualitative methods is that they allow the researcher the flexibility to
probe initial participant responses – that is, to ask why or how. The researcher must listen care-
fully to what participants say, engage with them according to their individual personalities and
styles, and use “probes” to encourage them to elaborate on their answers. (See the modules on
In-Depth Interviews and Focus Groups, pages 42-43 and 64-65 respectively, for discussions of
probes.)
Overview 5
Sampling in Qualitative Research
Even if it were possible, it is not necessary to collect data from everyone in a community in
order to get valid findings. In qualitative research, only a sample (that is, a subset) of a popula-
tion is selected for any given study. The study’s research objectives and the characteristics of the
study population (such as size and diversity) determine which and how many people to select. In
this section, we briefly describe three of the most common sampling methods used in qualitative
research: purposive sampling, quota sampling, and snowball sampling. As data collectors, you
will not be responsible for selecting the sampling method. The explanations below are meant to
help you understand the reasons for using each method.
OVERVIEW
of purposive sampling. In this method, participants or informants with whom contact has already
been made use their social networks to refer the researcher to other people who could potentially
participate in or contribute to the study. Snowball sampling is often used to find and recruit “hidden
populations,” that is, groups not easily accessible to researchers through other sampling strategies.
In developing recruitment guidelines, it is important to take special care to avoid saying anything
that could be interpreted as coercive. The voluntary nature of participation in research studies
should always be emphasized.
Overview 7
Can we recruit people who are legally under the care of a parent or guardian?
Yes, you may recruit minors, but in most cases you must obtain informed consent (discussed in
detail in this module’s section on Ethical Guidelines in Qualitative Research, page 9) from the
parent or guardian, as well as from the potential participant. Exceptions to the parental consent
requirement include pregnant adolescents and homeless minors, but you should always consult the
guidelines of the relevant ethics review boards before proceeding with recruitment. Moreover,
recruitment of minors must be specifically approved by all relevant ethics review boards. Because
they are considered a vulnerable population, recruiting minors for research studies is a highly sen-
sitive issue, and extra measures are required to ensure their protection.
For example, it may be necessary to develop a new recruitment strategy because following the
original plan has resulted in inadequate enrollment or because researchers determine that they
need participants who meet a different set of criteria. After meeting to discuss alternatives, the
research team should write down reasons why the strategy was not working or needs to be
changed and outline how they would like to change it.
Proposed changes in the recruitment strategy must be submitted to the sponsoring organization,
and some will require submission of a protocol amendment for approval by the ethics committees
that initially approved the research. If new criteria for participation are proposed, for instance,
they must be approved by relevant ethics committees before the new phase of recruitment can
begin. Similarly, increasing the number of recruits would also require ethics committee approval.
Because of the limited time frame for data collection, it is important that the field staff work
closely with the site principal investigator and community gatekeepers to identify and recruit the
new set of research participants.
OVERVIEW
This section briefly summarizes ethical issues relevant to qualitative research. It is intended to
provide a context for discussion in subsequent modules of procedures for safeguarding research
participants’ interests. Qualitative researchers, like anyone conducting research with people,
should undergo formal research ethics training. The material presented here is not a substitute for
training on research ethics. A list of ethics training resources is included on page 12.
Research ethics deals primarily with the interaction between researchers and the people they
study. Professional ethics deals with additional issues such as collaborative relationships among
researchers, mentoring relationships, intellectual property, fabrication of data, and plagiarism,
among others. While we do not explicitly discuss professional ethics here, they are obviously as
important for qualitative research as for any other endeavor. Most professional organizations,
such as the American Anthropological Association, the Society for Applied Anthropology, the
American Sociological Association, and the American Public Health Association, have devel-
oped broad statements of professional ethics that are easily accessible via the Internet.
Between these two extremes lies a balanced approach founded on established principles for ethical
research that are appropriately interpreted for and applied to the qualitative research context.
Agreed-upon standards for research ethics help ensure that as researchers we explicitly consider the
needs and concerns of the people we study, that appropriate oversight for the conduct of research
takes place, and that a basis for trust is established between researchers and study participants.
Whenever we conduct research on people, the well-being of research participants must be our
top priority. The research question is always of secondary importance. This means that if a
choice must be made between doing harm to a participant and doing harm to the research, it is
the research that is sacrificed. Fortunately, choices of that magnitude rarely need to be made in
qualitative research! But the principle must not be dismissed as irrelevant, or we can find our-
selves making decisions that eventually bring us to the point where our work threatens to disrupt
1 National Commission for the Protection of Human Subjects of Biomedical and Behavioral Research. The Belmont
Report. Ethical Principles and Guidelines for the Protection of Human Subjects of Research. Washington, DC:
National Institutes of Health, 1979. Available: http://ohsr.od.nih.gov/guidelines/belmont.html.
2 Weijer C, Goldsand G, Emanuel EJ. Protecting communities in research: current guidelines and limits of extrapolation.
Nature Genetics 1999;23(3):275-80.
Overview 9
the lives of the people we are researching.
OVERVIEW
basis for research ethics.
Respect for persons requires a commitment to ensuring the autonomy of research participants,
and, where autonomy may be diminished, to protect people from
exploitation of their vulnerability. The dignity of all research par-
ticipants must be respected. Adherence to this principle ensures
that people will not be used simply as a means to achieve research
objectives.
In addition to these established principles, some bioethicists have suggested that a fourth princi-
ple, respect for communities, should be added. Respect for communities “confers on the
researcher an obligation to respect the values and interests of the community in research and,
wherever possible, to protect the community from harm.”2 We believe that this principle is, in
fact, fundamental for research when community-wide knowledge, values, and relationships are
critical to research success and may in turn be affected by the research process or its outcomes.
Many people think of informed consent primarily as a form, that is, a piece of paper that
describes in detail what the research is about, including the risks and benefits. This form gener-
ally goes through ethics committee approval procedures, includes legalistic language, and is
signed by the participant, the researcher, and possibly a witness. Such informed consent forms
are appropriate for biomedical and other research – including qualitative – when the risks faced
by participants may be substantial. They may also be necessary for minimal risk research when
the foundation for trust between researchers and participants is weak.
But forms are really only one part of an informed consent process. In some cases, forms may not
be the best way to ensure informed consent. There are also situations where obtaining informed
Overview 11
consent from individual participants may not be feasible or necessary. For example, a researcher
using participant observation to learn about how transactions occur in a public market would
find it very hard to get everyone observed in that setting to sign a consent form and would prob-
ably create unwarranted suspicion about her motives in the process of seeking such consent. Yet
if people see a stranger hanging around, watching, asking questions, and perhaps taking discreet
notes, they may be even more suspicious about why she is there. In these situations, qualitative
researchers must use other mechanisms to achieve the goal of informed consent.
The first task in achieving informed consent is to inform people about the research in a way they
can understand. This can be a multistep process. For example, you may begin by approaching
community leaders and explaining the research to them. The leaders may then facilitate a com-
munity forum where interested people can learn about the research and ask questions. You might
distribute information sheets, advertisements, or brochures, or try to get local newspapers or
radio stations to do a report on the research. A community advisory board might be set up. Or the
researchers might spend a week or two just talking with people one-on-one. If the researchers
will be spending a lot of time in the community setting, or if the research is potentially contro-
versial or sensitive, such efforts can go a long way toward gaining trust as well as understanding.
In some situations, it may be necessary to obtain formal permission from community leaders or
gatekeepers before research can begin.
In general, data collection activities that require more than casual interaction with a person
require individual informed consent from that person, regardless of whether community-level
permissions exist. Examples of such activities include in-depth interviews and focus groups. The
person should be told:
• the purpose of the research
• what is expected of a research participant, including the amount of time likely to be required
for participation
• expected risks and benefits, including psychological and social
• the fact that participation is voluntary and that one can withdraw at any time with no nega-
tive repercussions
• how confidentiality will be protected
• the name and contact information of the local lead investigator to be contacted for questions
or problems related to the research
• the name and contact information of an appropriate person to contact with questions about
one’s rights as a research participant (usually the chair of the local ethics committee oversee-
ing the research)
All this information must be provided in a language and at an educational level that the partici-
pant can understand. Potential participants must be competent to make a decision about being in
Module 2
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
Participant Observation
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Participant Observation
W
hat people say they believe and say that they do are often contradicted by their behavior.
A large body of scientific literature documenting this disparity exists, and we can all
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
likely summon examples from our own lives. Given the frequency of this very human
inconsistency, observation can be a powerful check against what people report about themselves
during interviews and focus groups.
This module presents the basics of conducting participant observation in applied research projects:
• Overview of Participant Observation
• Ethical Guidelines
• Logistics of Participant Observation
• How to Be an Effective Participant Observer
• Suggested Readings
• Case Study Samples
• Participant Observation Steps
Qualitative researchers accomplish this through observation alone or by both observing and par-
ticipating, to varying degrees, in the study community’s daily activities. Participant observation
always takes place in community settings, in locations believed to have some relevance to the
research questions. The method is distinctive because the researcher approaches participants in
their own environment rather than having the participants come to the researcher. Generally
speaking, the researcher engaged in participant observation tries to learn what life is like for an
“insider” while remaining, inevitably, an “outsider.”
While in these community settings, researchers make careful, objective notes about what they
see, recording all accounts and observations as field notes in a field notebook. Informal conver-
sation and interaction with members of the study population are also important components of
the method and should be recorded in the field notes, in as much detail as possible. Information
and messages communicated through mass media such as radio or television may also be perti-
nent and thus desirable to document.
Participant Observation 13
What can we learn from participant observation?
Data obtained through participant observation serve as a check against participants’ subjective
reporting of what they believe and do. Participant observation is also useful for gaining an
understanding of the physical, social, cultural, and economic contexts in which study participants
live; the relationships among and between people, contexts, ideas, norms, and events; and peo-
ple’s behaviors and activities – what they do, how frequently, and with whom.
In addition, the method enables researchers to develop a familiarity with the cultural milieu that
will prove invaluable throughout the project. It gives them a nuanced understanding of context
that can come only from personal experience. There is
no substitute for witnessing or participating in phe-
Participant observation in action
nomena of human interaction – interaction with other
In the early 1990s, sharing needles during
injection drug use was a known risk factor for people, with places, with things, and with states of
HIV acquisition in the United States. After being such as age and health status. Observing and
educational campaigns informed injection drug participating are integral to understanding the breadth
users about the importance of using clean and complexities of the human experience – an over-
needles, surveys indicated that needle-sharing
had declined. High rates of HIV transmission
arching research endeavor for any public health or
persisted among this population, however. development project.
An anthropologist’s observation of heroin users Through participant observation, researchers can also
in one state confirmed that users were not uncover factors important for a thorough understand-
sharing needles. In observing the preparation
ing of the research problem but that were unknown
process leading up to injection, however, the
anthropologist noticed numerous opportunities when the study was designed. This is the great advan-
for cross-contamination of the instruments tage of the method because, although we may get
shared in cooking and distributing the heroin truthful answers to the research questions we ask, we
(such as cooking pots, cotton, and needles) and may not always ask the right questions. Thus, what
of the liquid heroin itself. Discovery of this
phenomenon through participant observation
we learn from participant observation can help us not
constituted an important contribution to only to understand data collected through other meth-
understanding injection drug use behavior as ods (such as interviews, focus groups, and quantita-
related to HIV acquisition. The phenomenon tive research methods), but also to design questions
itself is now known as “indirect sharing.”
for those methods that will give us the best under-
standing of the phenomenon being studied.
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
The waiting room of the antenatal clinic was
deserted except for a young girl who had been A third disadvantage of participant observation
abandoned there by her mother. She had been is that it is an inherently subjective exercise,
wedged into the corner behind a chair so she
wouldn't wander off. She glared at us because
whereas research requires objectivity. It is
we were making so much noise. She had probably therefore important to understand the differ-
been crying for a long time. ence between reporting or describing what you
observe (more objective) versus interpreting
what you see (less objective). Filtering out
personal biases may take some practice. One way to practice is to write down objective observa-
tions of a given event on one side of a page, and then offer more subjective interpretations of the
same event on the other side of the page, as illustrated in the box at left. Alternately, in team-
based research, field staff can review one another’s field notes and help identify objective versus
subjective observations. Table 2 below summarizes the strengths and weaknesses of participant
observation in qualitative research.
Strengths Weaknesses
Allows for insight into contexts, relationships, Time-consuming
behavior
Documentation relies on memory, personal
Can provide information previously unknown to discipline, and diligence of researcher
researchers that is crucial for project design, data
collection, and interpretation of other data Requires conscious effort at objectivity because
method is inherently subjective
Participant Observation 15
How are participant observation data used?
In applied research, as in traditional ethnography, participant observation is almost always used
with other qualitative methods, such as interviews and focus groups. It is an integral part of the
iterative research process – that is, the back-and-forth revising and refining – in several ways:
At the beginning stages of a research project, participant observation is used to facilitate and
develop positive relationships among researchers and key informants, stakeholders, and gate-
keepers, whose assistance and approval are needed for
the study to become a reality. These relationships are
Using participant observation to develop essential to the logistics of setting up the study,
interview questions
including gaining permission from appropriate offi-
In a research study on HIV transmission, a cials, and identifying and gaining access to potential
researcher may observe that some men who
approach women in a particular social setting are study participants.
transient truck drivers, whereas others are local
residents. Previously, researchers may not have Researchers also use data collected through participant
known that women had sexual relationships with observation to improve the design of other methods,
men who lived outside the community.This such as interviews and focus groups. For instance, they
information could be used to develop more
help to ensure the cultural relevance and appropriate-
meaningful questions for interview guides. For
example, researchers might now ask whether it is ness of interview and focus group questions.
more or less difficult for women to negotiate
condom use with truck drivers than with men who Participant observation data are invaluable in deter-
live in the community on a more permanent basis. mining whom to recruit for the study and how best to
recruit them.
When acting as interviewers or focus group facilitators, researchers are guided by the cultural
understanding gained through participant observation, allowing them to discern subtleties within
participant responses. Knowing what these culturally specific cues mean allows the researcher to
ask more appropriate follow-up questions and probes.
Participant observation data also provide a context for understanding data collected through
other methods. In other words, they help researchers make sense of those other data. Participant
observation may be done prior to other data collection, as well as simultaneously with other
methods and during data analysis. For example, researchers might follow up on mention of a
neighborhood with a high immigrant population by going there to do structured observation. Or,
they might consult previously collected data that detail interactions between men and women in
a public space, in order to shed light on a cryptic male focus group discussion about how men
meet extramarital sex partners. Frequent consultation of participant observation data throughout
a study can inform instrument design, save time, and prevent mistakes.
Ethical Guidelines
How much should I disclose about who I am and what I am doing?
When conducting participant observation, you should be discreet enough about who you are
and what you are doing that you do not disrupt normal activity, yet open enough that the people
you observe and interact with do not feel that your presence compromises their privacy. In
There are no formal rules about disclosing your involvement in a research project while in casual
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
conversation with community members, but it is usually advisable to do so. If you are at a bar,
for example, you might spend a significant amount of time chatting with other people there. If
someone begins talking to you about a topic related to the research, you might still continue to
talk casually for a while. If it gets to the point where you want to ask specific questions and
direct the conversation, however, then you should reveal your mission. Also, do not neglect to
inform the person or persons of their right to refuse further discussion and of your commitment
to confidentiality if they decide to continue talking with you.
Sometimes, you may develop informal personal relationships with key informants. If that hap-
pens, be sure that no personal information they give you is ever included in the actual participant
observation data. If you are unsure whether information they provide is appropriate for your offi-
cial field notes, ask their permission.
Protecting participants’ confidentiality also requires that researchers do not disclose personal
characteristics that could allow others to guess the identities of people who played a role in the
research. This dictates that you take great care not only in entering participant observation data
into field notes but also when talking with other people in the community, whether for research
purposes or otherwise. People may test you to see whether you disclose information by asking
questions about things you may have seen or heard. Your refusal to divulge confidences will
reassure them that you will protect their confidentiality as well. Participant confidentiality must
also be respected during eventual presentation of the data in public dissemination events, as well
as in printed publications.
Participant Observation 17
How should informed consent be handled for participant observation?
It is not necessary to obtain formal informed consent for participant observation. However, when
talking to people informally about the research and your role in it, it is important to emphasize that
they are not required to talk to you and that there will be no repercussions if they do not. If your
involvement with an individual appears to be progressing beyond participant observation to a for-
mal interview, it is necessary to obtain informed consent before beginning an in-depth interview.
One way to do participant observation is for members of a team to disperse to different locations
individually, or in pairs or groups, to spend time doing focused observation to address particular
questions. They can then reconvene to compare notes. From these notes, they can construct a
more complete picture of the issues being studied. They might then create a map indicating
places where some activity of interest was observed or where certain types of people go at differ-
ent times of the day or week.
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
Participant observation is often done at the beginning of the data collection phase, but the
method is also sometimes revisited later to address questions suggested by data collected using
other methods. The best time to schedule participant observation sessions depends on what,
whom, and where you need to observe. You may need to set up specific times based on when the
particular activity takes place, such as on the day a weekly women’s health clinic is scheduled at
a local health facility. There might be specific times of day when an activity usually occurs, as at
bars or public parks. It may also be important to observe the same population in several different
locations and at different times.
Less structured, unscheduled participant observation may occur any time you are moving about
the community and interacting with people. For example, you might talk to people at a bus stop
while you, too, are waiting for a bus, or observe interactions between people at a market while
you are doing your own shopping. You may wish to carry your notebook and a pen so that you
can take advantage of spontaneous opportunities without relying completely on memory.
It is best to have some questions in mind before beginning participant observation. These topics
and questions are typically provided for you or may be generated from team discussion about the
research objectives. Generally, it is best to focus directly on observing behaviors and other fac-
tors that are most relevant to the research problem. For example, you might be advised to focus
on the behaviors of male substance abusers, interactions between women and men, or the length
of time individuals spend at a certain place. It may be helpful to create a checklist to help you
remember what you are meant to observe. Table 3, page 20, suggests some general categories of
information that are worth observing regardless of the research topic. These include individuals’
general appearance, verbal and physical behaviors, personal space, human traffic at the observa-
tion site, and people who stand out.
Participant Observation 19
Table 3. What to observe during participant observation
Verbal behavior and Who speaks to whom and Gender, age, ethnicity, and profession of speakers;
interactions for how long; who initiates dynamics of interaction
interaction; languages or
dialects spoken; tone of
voice
Physical behavior and What people do, who does How people use their bodies and voices to
gestures what, who interacts with communicate different emotions; what individuals’
whom, who is not behaviors indicate about their feelings toward one
interacting another, their social rank, or their profession
Personal space How close people stand to What individuals’ preferences concerning personal
one another space suggest about their relationships
Human traffic People who enter, leave, and Where people enter and exit; how long they stay;
spend time at the who they are (ethnicity, age, gender); whether
observation site they are alone or accompanied; number of people
People who stand out Identification of people who The characteristics of these individuals; what
receive a lot of attention differentiates them from others; whether people
from others consult them or they approach other people;
whether they seem to be strangers or well known
by others present
The specifics of participating in a given community activity, compared to observing it, depend
on each project. However, effectively participating typically requires blending in, interacting
with people, and identifying individuals who may be good sources of information.
Key informants with personal connections to the study population can be invaluable. They may
not be appropriate study participants themselves but may be willing to serve as liaisons to the
community. For example, in a study involving male homosexual adolescents, an older member
of the gay community could play a significant role in developing recruitment strategies by point-
ing researchers to key social spaces where these adolescents spend time and by explaining rele-
vant social practices among them.
If you eventually want to interview a key informant formally, rather than converse informally in
a participant observation context, you need to follow procedures for conducting in-depth inter-
views, including obtaining informed consent. (See the module on In-Depth Interviews, page 29,
for more information.)
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
How do I document what I learn during participant observation?
Documentation of participant observation data consists of field notes recorded in field notebooks.
These data are records of what you experienced, what you learned through interaction with other
people, and what you observed. Field notes should include an account of events, how people
behaved and reacted, what was said in conversation, where people were positioned in relationship
to one another, their comings and goings, physical gestures, your subjective responses to what you
observed, and all other details and observations necessary to make the story of the participant
observation experience complete. Field notes may be written either discreetly during participant
observation or following the activity, depending on where you go and how much you participate.
Whatever the case, notes should be expanded as soon as possible before your memory of the
details fades. (This module’s section on How to Be an Effective Participant Observer, page 22,
includes more guidance for taking and expanding field notes. See also the Case Study Samples,
page 26.)
You might also sketch a map of your observation site. You could indicate important establish-
ments and locations, mark where certain activities were taking place, and places where follow-up
observation is needed.
Audio and video recordings of participant observation are generally not permissible in applied
public health or international development research activities because of ethical requirements for
obtaining informed consent.
Alternatively, rather than expanding your notes, you might be asked to share your notes with other
members of the research team to produce a joint product, such as an ethnographic map of an area.
Once you have expanded your notes, either you or a typist hired for the project will need to type
your field notes into a computer file. The notebook and hard copy of the typed data should then
Participant Observation 21
be stored in a secure location (along with maps and any other products of participant observation).
(See the module on Data Documentation and Management, page 83, for procedures related to
computer files and data security.)
Team meetings typically take place throughout data collection but are more frequent at the
beginning of a project. At such meetings, be prepared to discuss what you have seen, raise ques-
tions about the meaning or implications of your observations, and suggest how your observations
might be followed up in interviews, focus groups, or in further observation. Also, discuss any
logistical or security concerns that emerge. The local principal investigator will also review par-
ticipant observation data to get a sense of how things are going in the field, identify areas that
may be over- or under-observed, and identify any other issues that need to be addressed. Be sure
to share with the principal investigator any nuances of your participant observation experience
that seem important.
In preparing for the participant observation activity, it is useful to find out as much as you can
about the site where you will be participating or observing and about any activities in which you
might participate. If necessary, visit the scene and make initial observations before you set up
your official data collection time.
Also, take some time to rehearse how you will describe or explain yourself and your purpose, if
necessary. Similarly, establish in advance your own personal shorthand conventions – that is,
how you will indicate and abbreviate the words and concepts you are likely to use in your note-
taking. Know how you will separate your objective observations from your interpretations; how
you will indicate men, women, and children, and their ages; and so forth. (More information on
taking field notes is presented later in this section.)
Field staff engaged in participant observation always need to use good judgment in determining
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
whether to participate in certain types of activities. You should not engage in illegal or sexual
activities with study participants, for example. You should exercise caution about the amount of
alcohol you consume in a social setting. It may be socially appropriate to buy a beer for someone
or to accept their offer to buy you one, but it may not be necessary to actually consume alcohol
in any quantity.
It is important to document what is actually taking place rather than what you were expecting to
see and to not let your expectations affect your obser-
vations. The purpose of participant observation is
partly to confirm what you already know (or think Distinguishing interpretation from
you know) but is mostly to discover unanticipated observation
truths. It is an exercise of discovery. A North American researcher is hired to observe
the behavior of young men in an African country.
Also, avoid reporting your interpretation rather than He notices a lot of handholding and displays of
an objective account of what you observe. To interpret mutual affection between these men. Because of
his American background, he interprets these
is to impose your own judgment on what you see. For data to mean that many young men in this coun-
example, an interpretive description of a street corner try are homosexual. Although this might be a
might be that it was “dirty and overly crowded.” An logical interpretation in North America, it is not
objective description would be that “there was logical for the African country. Thus, the observa-
garbage everywhere and there were so many people tions are correct, but his interpretation is not, and
any policies or programs based on his interpreta-
around that it was difficult to move.” The danger of tion would be invalid.
not separating interpretation from observation is that
your interpretations can turn out to be wrong. This
can lead to invalid study results, which can ultimately be damaging for the study population. You
can work on reporting neutral observations by questioning yourself often about your assertions.
Ask yourself, “What is my evidence for this claim?”
Participant Observation 23
How do I expand my notes?
Following each participant observation event, data collectors need to expand their notes into rich
descriptions of what they have observed. (See the Case Study Samples, page 26.) This involves
transforming your raw notes into a narrative and elaborating on your initial observations, a task
most conveniently done using a computer. If no computer is available within a day or so, you
should expand your notes by hand. Eventually, all expanded notes should be typed into computer
files using a specific format, as discussed in the module on Data Documentation and Management,
page 83.
TIPS
Leave space on the page for expanding your notes, or plan to expand them on a separate page. (See the section
above on “How do I expand my notes?”)
Take notes strategically. It is usually practical to make only brief notes during data collection. Direct quotes can
be especially hard to write down accurately. Rather than try to document every detail or quote, write down
key words and phrases that will trigger your memory when you expand notes.
Use shorthand. Because you will expand and type your notes soon after you write them, it does not matter if you
are the only person who can understand your shorthand system. Use abbreviations and acronyms to quickly
note what is happening and being said.
Cover a range of observations. In addition to documenting events and informal conversations, note people’s
body language, moods, or attitudes; the general environment; interactions among participants; ambiance; and
other information that could be relevant.
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
or on a separate page. If you use additional pages, be sure to
clearly cross-reference new notes with the original pages in
case another staff member types your notes.
Suggested Readings
Bogdewic SP. Participant observation. In Crabtree BF, Miller W (eds.). Doing Qualitative
Research. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1992.
DeWalt KM, DeWalt BR, Wayland CB. Participant observation. In Bernard HR (ed.). Handbook
of Methods in Cultural Anthropology. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira Press, 1998.
Handwerker WP. Quick Ethnography. Walnut Creek, CA: Alta Mira Press, 2001.
Johnson J. Selecting Ethnographic Informants. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1990.
Spradley J. Participant Observation. New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1980.
Winstein RM. The mental hospital from the patient’s point of view. In Gove WR (ed.). Deviance
and Mental Illness. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1982.
For additional information on this topic, refer to Chapter 4. Collecting Qualitative Data: The
Science and the Art in these companion guides:
Qualitative Methods in Public Health: A Field Guide for Applied Research
Qualitative Methods: A Field Guide for Applied Research in Sexual and Reproductive Health
Participant Observation 25
Sample Participant Observation Field Notes
CASE STUDY
Archival #: CCP001
Site: Capital City Hospital
Data collector: Anna S.
Typist: Brian L.
Date: 14-6-04
Start: 08:00 a.m.
End: 10:15 a.m.
them.
PARTICIPANT OBSERVATION
4 Investigate possible sites for participant observation.
5 Select the site(s), time(s) of day, and date(s), and anticipate how long you will collect participant
observation data on each occasion.
6 Decide how field staff will divide up or pair off to cover all sites most effectively.
7 Consider how you will present yourself, both in terms of appearance and how you will explain your
purpose to others if necessary.
8 Plan how and if you will take notes during the participant observation activity.
9 Remember to take your field notebook and a pen.
Participant Observation 27
28 Qualitative Research Methods: A Data Collector’s Field Guide
Qualitative Research Methods: A Data Collector’s Field Guide
Module 3
In-Depth Interviews
INTERVIEWS
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
In-Depth Interviews
I
n-depth interviews are one of the most common qualitative methods. One reason for their
popularity is that they are very effective in giving a human face to research problems. In
addition, conducting and participating in interviews can be a rewarding experience for partici-
pants and interviewers alike. For participants – whether members of the study population or
someone related to the population in a professional capacity – in-depth interviews offer the
opportunity to express themselves in a way ordinary life rarely affords them. Many people find it
flattering and even cathartic to discuss their opinions and life experiences and to have someone
listen with interest. For their part, interviewers engaged in in-depth interviews are offered the
privilege of having people who are virtually strangers entrust them with a glimpse into their per-
sonal lives.
This module covers the basics of using in-depth interviews in applied research projects, including:
• Overview of In-Depth Interviewing
INTERVIEWS
• Ethical Guidelines
• Logistics of Interviewing
• How to Be an Effective Interviewer
• Suggested Readings
• Case Study Samples
• Interview Steps
• Interview Checklist
In-depth interviews are usually conducted face-to-face and involve one interviewer and one par-
ticipant. When safety is an issue for the interviewer, the presence of two interviewers is appropri-
ate. In these situations, however, care must be taken not to intimidate the participant. Phone
conversations and interviews with more than one participant also qualify as in-depth interviews,
In-Depth Interviews 29
but, in this module, we focus on individual, face-to-face interviews.
might be reluctant to discuss in a group setting. Table 4 below summarizes some of the strengths
of in-depth interviews in comparison to focus groups.
While data is still being collected, researchers use expanded interview notes:
• during interviews, to remind themselves of questions they need to go back to, where they
need more complete information, etc.
• during debriefing sessions with other field staff and investigators
Ethical Guidelines
How do I explain the purpose of the interview?
You should explain the purpose of the interview to study participants within the broader context
of the research study. In doing so, it is important that
you be truthful and straightforward about the study
objectives and the anticipated risks and benefits to the
Obtaining informed consent before an
individual participant and the community, and that
in-depth interview
you identify the organizations involved in the study. It
1. For less literate populations, read the con-
is also important not to create false expectations in sent form aloud to the participant. Be sure
order to obtain a participant’s cooperation. Be cau- you are using the appropriate language
tious about making even small promises, such as say- version of the form. Speak slowly. Ask the
ing a staff member can give a participant a ride participant often whether he or she under-
stands what you are saying, and explain any
home after the interview, unless you know for certain
terms or sentences in your own words as
that they can be fulfilled. necessary. For more literate populations,
give the participant time to read the form.
INTERVIEWS
What should I say about confidentiality? Then review each section with him or her
and check for comprehension.
Assuring participants that what they say will be kept 2. Once you are satisfied that the participant
in confidence is important for earning their trust and fully understands the research and his or her
thus for eliciting good data. You should understand rights as a participant, ask for his or her con-
the procedures outlined in the study protocol for pro- sent to be interviewed. In some studies, a
comprehension and evaluation tool may be
tecting participants’ privacy and be able to explain
used to ensure that participants understand
those steps clearly. If the participant raises concerns the information explained to them. If the
about confidentiality that you cannot address, offer to research presents greater than minimal risk,
postpone the interview until you can respond to the then the study team needs to consider addi-
stated concerns. You might also refer the participant tional options for ensuring that the partici-
pants understand the risks as well as their
to the study officials whose contact information is rights, especially if they are illiterate.This may
include the use of witnesses or advocates, as
is commonly done in biomedical research
Modeling respect for confidentiality that presents greater than minimal risk.
In-Depth Interviews 31
provided on the informed consent form.
You should also show how you will protect confidentiality by stating that you will not reveal
anything you learn to other participants or members of the community. It is very important to
adhere to this commitment. During the interview or in casual conversation beforehand or after-
ward, be careful not to make incidental comments about other people you have interviewed, as
this behavior may suggest that you cannot be trusted. As with participant observation, people
may test you by seeing if you will tell them what others have said; your refusal to disclose any
information about others will reassure them about your commitment to protecting confidentiality.
In addition to informing participants about the voluntary nature of the study, a key purpose of
informed consent is to ensure that they understand the risks and benefits entailed in participation.
As noted in the Qualitative Research Methods Overview module, page 10, informed consent
documents should also provide participants with information on how the interview data will be
used, who will have access to the data, and whom they may contact for questions.
Logistics of Interviewing
What are my responsibilities as an interviewer?
The interviewer is responsible for fulfilling the following roles, tasks, and obligations before,
during, and after the interview:
INTERVIEWS
while your memory is still fresh.
The work plan for each site should outline policies and strategies for recruiting participants.
However, it is common for realities in the field to necessitate creative revision of these strategies.
When developing a recruitment strategy, it can be helpful to consult with local people who are
active in or have connections to the study population. They may be able to offer ideas about how to
gain access to the population, how best to approach people, and possible obstacles to recruitment.
When two field staff are present, they should decide on their roles before the interview. One per-
son should take the role of conducting the interview (interviewer), while the other concentrates
on taking notes (note-taker). (The interviewer can also take brief notes.) The note-taker should
not interrupt or intervene in the interview unless invited to do so by the interviewer or asked a
question by the participant.
In-Depth Interviews 33
Once finished with the questions, the interviewer should ask the note-taker if any points require
clarification before the interview comes to a close. Both staff members should then debrief with
each other (that is, discuss what happened and what was learned) either immediately after the
interview or within a day. The note-taker should take detailed notes during the debriefing. These
notes may then be reviewed and supplemented by the interviewer.
When selecting a location for interviews, be sure to consider local implications of male-female
interactions. For example, it would probably be inappropriate for a male field worker to conduct
an interview alone with a female participant in her room at a women’s boarding house.
The questions you should ask during the interview will be suggested or specified in an interview
or question guide created in advance by the research team. The interview can be conducted with
varying degrees of structure, however, depending on what the project calls for. For example,
some interview guides specify the exact questions researchers should ask, along with follow-up
questions and probes. Other guides simply contain a list of topics to be covered over the course
of the interview, leaving the wording and order of questions up to the individual researchers.
It is common to conduct in-depth interviews with several different categories of people as part of
a single study. This often involves a separate question guide for each category. For example, in a
study about maternal health practices, in-depth interviews might be conducted with health care
providers, pregnant women, and women who have given birth within the last year. Some ques-
tions in the three guides may overlap, but each guide will be tailored to elicit information spe-
cific to the category of participants being interviewed.
Ideally, the interview will flow like a conversation and end naturally, but this is not always the
case. Be aware of signs of impatience, annoyance, and boredom from the participant. These are
cues that the interviewer needs to be more attentive and engaging, or that it is time to wrap up
the interview. It may also be appropriate to take a break, which may actually result in the partici-
pant providing additional information. Even though the tape recorder may be turned off during
the break, you can take brief notes that you expand later.
When an interruption occurs, stop the tape recorder and note the time in your field notes. While
INTERVIEWS
you wait for the participant to return, review your notes, consider what other questions you
would like to ask, and note observations. When the participant returns, resume recording and
again write down the time. You may want to prompt the participant to resume the discussion by
recapitulating the last point and then asking a question about it.
If repeated interruptions make it difficult to keep the discussion going, you might ask if there
would be a more convenient time or place where you could talk more privately. Offer to resched-
ule the interview if necessary.
In-Depth Interviews 35
How should I handle reimbursements?
Policies on reimbursements vary from study to study. In accordance with local practices and with
approval from relevant ethics committees, some studies provide financial compensation to partic-
ipants. When this is the case, researchers should not refer to this compensation as “payment” or
“incentive” for participation. Instead, use the term “reimburse-
ment,” which acknowledges that the participant has taken time
away from other obligations and may have incurred expenses –
for transportation or child care, for example – to meet with you.
Note that all participants should be provided with the full reim-
bursement sum, regardless of whether they complete the inter-
view. This includes:
• participants who arrive for the interview and decide not to par-
ticipate after all
• participants who choose not to answer some questions
• participants who decide to withdraw from the study before or
after they have completed the interview
• participants who turn out to have no knowledge about the
interview topic
Procedures for documenting reimbursement dispersal are study-specific and usually outlined in
the informed consent form. Commonly, in studies that require only verbal (and not written)
informed consent, the interviewer signs a statement certifying that each participant was given the
cash reimbursement. In studies that require written informed consent, participants may be asked
to sign a receipt.
Note that accounting personnel are not always aware of the confidentiality issues related to
research studies. The local principal investigator should be prepared to inform accounting per-
sonnel if the established reimbursement procedures risk compromising confidentiality, so that
alternative procedures may be created. These procedures should be worked out by the on-site
principal investigator before interviews begin and must comply with the ethics committee’s
approved protocol.
INTERVIEWS
A productive interview is one in which participants relate a richly detailed, sincere account of how
the research issues occur in their daily lives. Obtaining superior data requires that the interviewer
be well prepared and have highly developed rapport-building skills, social and conversational
skills specific to the capacity of interviewer, and facility with techniques for effective questioning.
The following steps will help you become comfortable with the interview process:
• Be familiar with research documents. An effective interviewer knows the research material
well and is practiced in the method. As a first step in preparing for an in-depth interview,
become thoroughly familiar with the informed consent documents. Although you will read
the form to or along with participants, you should also be able to explain its contents in your
own words. Be prepared to address any questions participants may have about the content of
the consent form, the terminology used, whom to contact for further information, the pur-
pose of the research, and so on.
Next, become thoroughly familiar with the interview guide. During the interview, you should
not have to search through the guide for the next question. It is important to understand not
only the purpose of each question, but also the purpose of the research as a whole.
Depending on how structured the interview is, you may be called on to rephrase questions
that are unclear to participants, or to spontaneously think of follow-up questions and probes.
You should be able to recognize when a participant has provided a response that fulfills the
intent of the question, when a response contains information that addresses a separate ques-
tion or a scripted follow-up question, and which probes to use to elicit needed information
that was absent in a participant’s initial response. If the protocol permits you to ask questions
out of order, being familiar with the guide also enables you to use it flexibly, taking advan-
tage of natural shifts in the conversation. It is a good idea to review the interview guide
before every interview.
In-Depth Interviews 37
• Practice interviewing. It is also helpful to prac-
tice interviewing techniques. This is best done
through role-playing exercises with other
researchers and study staff, using the actual
interview question guides. (Some suggested
exercises are provided in the Exercises for
Training Data Collectors appendix, page 93.)
You might also conduct pilot interviews with
people in the community who are not partici-
pating in the study. In that case, however, you
must obtain informed consent, just as you
would from someone who was participating in
the study. Informal practice sessions – such as
with friends, family, or support staff or other
researchers – do not require informed consent.
• Practice using the equipment. Finally, practice using the recording equipment and checking it
before the interview. Equipment failure is all too common, but you can sometimes avoid it by
being familiar with how the recorder operates. Before beginning an interview, check the bat-
teries, test the microphone, and make sure that the tape is turning. Know how to use features
like pause and high-low recording. We do not recommend using the voice activation feature
because it may not record the entire dialogue.
INTERVIEWS
Pay attention to what
participants say and follow up
with relevant questions and
probes.
Be aware that what you say,
how you say it, and your body
language can convey your own
biases and emotional reactions.
Use them instead to convey
neutrality and acceptance.
Adapting to different Being able to quickly Every participant has a Different interviewing styles
personalities and adjust your style to suit unique character and may be needed for different
emotional states each individual demeanor. By adopting participants – for example, be
participant an appropriate able to retain control of a
demeanor for each conversation with a dominant
individual, the personality and to animate a
interviewer can help shy participant.
the participant be Know how to tone down
comfortable enough to heightened emotions, such as
speak freely about the when a participant starts
research topic. crying or becomes belligerent.
Adapting to each individual
may require softening the way
you broach sensitive issues,
adjusting your tone of voice to
be more sober or upbeat, or
exhibiting increased warmth
or social distance.
In-Depth Interviews 39
of the information that participants provide. The interviewer must be able to lend a sympathetic
ear without taking on a counseling role; encourage participants to elaborate on their answers
without expressing approval, disapproval, judgment, or bias; keep track of the questions yet let
the conversation develop naturally; and manage the interview while still respecting the principle
of participant-as-expert. The core skills required to establish positive interviewer/participant
dynamics are rapport-building, emphasizing the participant’s perspective, and accommodating
different personalities and emotional states; these skills are described in Table 5 below.
Taking the time to explain how an interview works can go a long way toward ensuring a smooth
and fruitful interview. It will be up to you to decide the best way to do this according to the cul-
tural context and study population. You might start by explaining that, although an interview is a
type of conversation, it is different from typical conversations. You could then explain that you
have a list of questions to which the participant should respond, that the participant should speak
freely in response to each question, and that you will be directing the conversation in such a way
as to ensure that all questions in the interview guide are addressed.
Clarifying roles can also be useful. Explain that while you are ultimately responsible for making
sure that all questions in the interview guide are addressed during the interview, the participant
will play the role of expert and you, the interviewer,
will be the student. Explain that you are there to gain
from the participant’s own knowledge about the It’s not just what you say . . .
research topic, not to dispense advice. Assure the par-
Tone refers to the volume and sound quality of a
ticipant that there are no right or wrong answers; it is person’s voice. It can reveal biases such as excite-
INTERVIEWS
his or her personal opinion and perspective that are of ment, approval and disapproval, scorn, surprise,
interest to the study. and disbelief. Remember that cultural context
affects how tone of voice will be interpreted –
It is important to emphasize the voluntary nature of what is moderate in one context may seem inap-
propriately loud in another. For example,
the interview. Remind participants that they are not depending on where you are, increasing the vol-
obligated to respond to any question. If the interview ume of your voice might indicate that you have
guide includes questions that may be of a personal or become irritated or angered by a particular
sensitive nature, explain this to participants in response, or it could be perceived as a fluctua-
advance. You should emphasize that you would like tion of the voice typical of everyday conversa-
tion. The age, gender, social status, educational
for participants to respond to all questions as fully and background, and economic class of both you and
honestly as possible, but only to the extent that they the participant might also factor into which tone
feel comfortable doing so. you should adopt. Generally, you should aim to
use a friendly tone that will not betray your per-
Another important aspect of managing the interview is sonal opinions or emotional state.
working within time constraints. Before beginning the Body language is the culturally specific interpre-
interview, ask participants about any time limitations tation of what it means to move or position the
they have. When you know the time available, you can body in a particular way. Facial expressions are
pace the interview in order to cover all the questions in perhaps the most obvious example, but gestures,
the guide. One way to keep track of the questions you posture, and constant movement can also be
powerful indicators of a person’s mood, opinion,
have asked or that have been addressed is to check and evaluative stance. Interviewers should be
them off in the guide. This is especially practical when conscious of their body language at all times and
you ask questions in a different order than they appear be careful not to imply, for example, boredom,
in the guide or when a participant’s response applies to aggression, or exasperation. Instead, body lan-
guage that indicates patience, pleasant mood,
a question you have not yet asked. open attitude, and sincere interest will serve to
encourage participants to express themselves
If the instrument design allows, it can be advanta- without reserve.
geous to let the interview conversation proceed more
In-Depth Interviews 41
Table 6. Unbiased versus leading questions
“Why did you want to use the female condom?” “Was one reason that you wanted to use the female
Potential follow-up question:“What were you trying condom because you were trying to prevent sexually
to protect yourself from?” transmitted infections?”
“What do you think stops people in the school “Do you think people in the school community
community from talking about sex and condoms?” don’t talk about sex and condoms because they
might be stigmatized and seen as promiscuous?”
or less naturally, as long as you can redirect the focus if necessary. Adapting the flow of the
interview may involve recognizing when a participant has already addressed a particular ques-
tion in a previous response, rephrasing a question, or asking questions in a different sequence
from how they are organized in the interview guide (unless the research design requires a spe-
cific order). Again, this emphasizes the need
for familiarity with the guides.
Examples of effective probes
Because it is important to focus on eliciting Direct questions:
the participant’s perspective, you should not • “What do you mean when you say . . .?”
correct factual errors during the interview. • “Why do you think . . .?”
Afterward, however, the interviewer is free • “How did this happen?”
and in some instances ethically obligated to • “How did you feel about . . .?”
provide the participant with relevant factual
• “What happened then?”
information. For example, if a participant
• “Can you tell me more?”
expresses the belief that mosquitoes transmit
HIV, you should relay scientifically correct • “Can you please elaborate?”
information about how HIV is transmitted. • “I’m not sure I understand X. . . . Would you
explain that to me?”
However, you should speak only on subjects
about which you are well informed. Include • “How did you handle X?”
these misconceptions and clarifications in • “How did X affect you?”
your field notes for the interview. • “Can you give me an example of X?”
Indirect probes:
• Neutral verbal expressions such as “uh huh,”
What are some techniques for effec- “interesting,” and “I see”
tive questioning? • Verbal expressions of empathy, such as,“I can
Proficiency in techniques for asking effective see why you say that was difficult for you”
questions is especially important for leading • Mirroring technique, or repeating what the
interviews in which participants speak liber- participant said, such as,“So you were 19
ally. This involves keeping track of which when you had your first child . . .”
questions have and have not been asked and • Culturally appropriate body language or
gestures, such as nodding in acknowledgment
answered; knowing how to phrase questions
INTERVIEWS
being in that study is a sign of having tuberculosis?”
In-Depth Interviews 43
TIPS
Leave space on the page for expanding your notes, or plan to expand them on a separate page. (See the section
on “How do I expand my notes?” on this page.)
Take notes strategically. It is usually practical to make only brief notes during data collection. Direct quotes can
be especially hard to write down accurately. Rather than try to document every detail or quote, write down
key words and phrases that will trigger your memory when you expand notes.
Use shorthand. Because you will expand and type your notes soon after you write them, it does not matter if you
are the only person who can understand your shorthand system. Use abbreviations and acronyms to quickly
note what is happening and being said.
Write on the interview question guide. Save time by writing notes directly in the question guide under the rele-
vant question. If it is not possible to record direct quotations, write down key words and phrases.
Distinguish clearly between participant comments and your own observations. You could use your own ini-
tials or “MO” to indicate “my observation.” For example:“MO – embarrassed by empty beer bottles in room.”
This documents the researcher’s observation that the participant seemed embarrassed about the empty beer
bottles in the room.
Cover a range of observations. In addition to documenting what people say, note as well as you can their body
language, moods, or attitudes; the general environment; and other information that could be relevant.
viewer. If a participant answers a sub-question in the initial response, it is not necessary to then
pose that sub-question. Engaged listening will help you decide which follow-up questions to ask.
You should use probes when the participant’s response to your question is brief or unclear, when
the participant seems to be waiting for a reaction from you before continuing to speak, or when
the person appears to have more information on the subject. As much as possible, probe for more
detail about what the participant thinks, feels, and experiences in relationship to the research
topic. Do not assume that you understand the intent of a brief response. Instead, use probes to
further or confirm your understanding and to encourage more explanation. Be careful, however,
not to use probes to excess. Balance knowing when to probe with knowing when to go to the
next question. If responses are repetitive or lacking in substance, or if the participant becomes
annoyed or upset about lingering on a particular topic, it is best to advance to the next question.
Probing is probably the most important technique in qualitative interviewing, but also the hardest
Interviewers write their notes on the question guide or in a notebook as they are leading the
interview. Because you are actively engaged in the interview, your notes will be less detailed
than those of, say, a focus group note-taker. The tips on page 44 offer some suggestions for for-
INTERVIEWS
matting and writing interview notes. (See also the Case Study Samples, page 46.)
This involves transforming your raw notes into a narrative and elaborating on your initial obser-
vations, a task most conveniently done using a computer. If no computer is available within a
day or so, you should expand your notes by hand. Eventually, all expanded notes should be
typed into computer files using a specific format, as discussed in the Tools for Data Managers
appendix, page 105.
In-Depth Interviews 45
Sample Interview Guide with Field Notes
Site:
Interviewer:
Date:
Start:
End:
(Question 1)
What family planning methods do you provide in this clinic?
Sample Expanded Field Notes
Archival #: CCIISP01
Site: Morning Star Clinic
Interviewer: Beatrice B.
Date: 7-6-04
(Question 2) Start: 10:00 a.m.
Describe the process of how you provide family planning
End:methods.
11:10 a.m.
Archival #: CCIISP01
Site: Morning Star FP Clinic I = Interviewer
Interviewer: Beatrice B. R = Respondent
Transcriber: Beatrice B.
Translator: Samuel D.
Typist: Samuel D.
Date: 7-6-04
Start: 10:00 a.m. End: 11:10 a.m.
(Question 1)
I: As a family planning provider, what do you do or which methods do you provide in this clinic?
R: We provide all methods, some of them being the pills, injection, Norplant, coil, condoms and the permanent family
planning methods.
(Question 2)
I: How do you go about that?
R: Usually when a client comes, we counsel them on all the methods, how they work, how they are used, and then the
INTERVIEWS
client chooses which method she feels she can use.
I: Ehee . . .
R: Then you go ahead and examine and evaluate if she is eligible for the method, we then give it and then we give a
return date, and if she has any problem, she can come and we check it out.
I: Ehee . . .
R: And we are there to assure them of confidentiality, giving instructions and the methods how they are used, the likely
side effects, and how they can deal with them. So that they are free to make their own choices on family planning.
(Question 3)
I: If VCT was to be brought into this clinic, is there anything that makes it very difficult to say promote the condom or
convince someone to use the condom? Is there something?
R: If you are seen everyday coming for the condoms, people may wonder,“Are you sexy that you cannot even refrain
even for a month (laughter) why are you finishing my condoms?” (Laughter)
I: Who will complain about condoms being finished?
R: Now the attitude, if you feel the sisters will see you being given 200 condoms.
I: So there are some clients who fear to come for condoms because they feel they will be seen?
R: I think the client service provider relationship is not really very confidential with all the providers, with some
providers. Because some women, if they feel somebody will know about the services they come for, they will not come
for it. So maybe she will come for a condom then she hears somebody say,“I heard that you came here for condoms, I
was told.”You see this client will say I was only with X, so why did Y also know? Which means they talked about it. So
clients will fear – also fear people knowing they came for the HIV testing.
I: Okay.
R: Because confidentiality is not guaranteed.
I: What can be the solution to that?
I: Privacy, confidentiality, they are some of rights of the client, so if the service provider doesn’t know that those are the
rights of the clients, he/she can just play around with them, but if you know them, you know how to go about it.
In-Depth Interviews 47
Interview Steps
Preparing for the Interview
Getting familiar with the instruments:
1 Study the interview guide.
2 Study the informed consent document.
STEPS
q Spare batteries
INTERVIEWS
Interview packet
q 2 informed consent forms (1 for interviewer, 1 for participant, in the appropriate language)
q Signed informed consent form (signed only by interviewer if oral, by participant and interviewer if
written)
q Field notes
In-Depth Interviews 49
50 Qualitative Research Methods: A Data Collector’s Field Guide
Qualitative Research Methods: A Data Collector’s Field Guide
Module 4
Focus Groups
FOCUS GROUPS
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Focus Groups
F
ocus groups are a qualitative data collection method effective in helping researchers learn
the social norms of a community or subgroup, as well as the range of perspectives that
exist within that community or subgroup. Focus groups are often used to determine what
service or product a particular population wants or would like to have, such as in marketing stud-
ies. Because focus groups seek to illuminate group opinion, the method is especially well suited
for sociobehavioral research that will be used to develop and measure services that meet the
needs of a given population.
This module presents the fundamentals of using focus groups in applied qualitative research. It
includes:
• Overview of Focus Groups
• Ethical Guidelines
• Logistics of Focus Groups
• How to Be an Effective Moderator
• How to Be an Effective Note-taker
• Suggested Readings
• Case Study Samples
• Steps in Moderating a Focus Group
• Steps in Note-taking for a Focus Group
FOCUS GROUPS
• Focus Group Checklist
Focus Groups 51
Table 7. Strengths of focus groups versus in-depth interviews
Focus group data can also capture idiosyncratic experiences and views of individuals, but it is
preferable to collect that data during one-on-one interviews, rather than in a group environment.
Within a study, focus groups are typically one method among many that are used to create a
complete picture of how a given issue affects a community of people. Focus groups contribute to
this broad understanding by providing well-grounded data on social and cultural norms, the per-
vasiveness of these norms within the community, and people’s opinions about their own values.
Ethical Guidelines
How do I explain the purpose of the focus group?
Sometimes participants or potential participants ask focus group recruiters or facilitators to
answer questions about the research or the topic of discussion before the focus group session
begins. In this event, it is important not to talk about the topic in any detail, to avoid influencing
what people say during the discussion.
You should, however, explain the purpose of the focus group as it fits within the broader context
of the research study. In doing so, it is important that you be truthful and straightforward about
the objectives of the study and the anticipated risks and benefits to the individual participant and
the community. You should also identify the organizations involved in the study. Do not create
false expectations in order to obtain a participant’s cooperation. Be cautious about making even
small promises, such as saying a staff member can give a participant a ride home after the focus
group, unless you know for certain that they can be fulfilled.
Participants may ask you questions that you prefer to answer at the end of the focus group – for
example, if your response would risk influencing the discussion. Write them on a board or large
piece of paper to ensure that you come back to them at the end.
FOCUS GROUPS
What should I say about confidentiality?
Maintaining confidentiality requires special precautions and emphasis in focus groups. For this
reason, it is often preferable to avoid using participants’ names during the focus group. In such
instances, you should implement a system of name substitution before the session begins. For
example, you could assign participants numbers, letters, or pseudonyms for the moderator and
note-taker to use on the seating charts and to identify speakers in their notes.
Although the moderator and note-taker should assure participants that everything they share in
the focus group will be treated as confidential by project staff, they cannot promise that other
members of the focus group will do the same. It is therefore important to emphasize both at the
beginning and end of each session that participants should respect each other’s privacy and
anonymity. Once outside the focus group setting, they should not reveal the identities of other
participants nor indicate who made specific comments during the discussion.
If any participants express concern about their privacy during the focus group, assure them that
you have taken special precautions to protect participants’ identities and the data. You should
understand the procedures outlined in the study protocol for protecting participants’ privacy and
Focus Groups 53
be able to explain those steps clearly. You should also
Obtaining informed consent with focus group provide participants with the contact information of
participants
study officials whom they can call for more specific
1. For less literate populations, read the con-
sent form aloud to the participant. The form information. (If consent forms are being used, these
must be written and read in a language the contacts will appear on the forms.)
participant understands. Speak slowly. Ask
the participant often whether he or she If, after these assurances, any participants are still
understands what you are saying, and uncomfortable and wish to withdraw from the focus
explain any terms or sentences in your own
words as necessary. For more literate popu-
group, the moderator should respectfully acknowledge
lations, give the participant time to read the and support their right to do so and thank them for their
form. Then review each section with him or time and effort. The note-taker should then take the per-
her and check for comprehension. son or persons to the side, preferably to another room,
2. Once you are satisfied that the participant provide them with the full reimbursement (if there is
fully understands the research and his or one), and again thank them for their time. The modera-
her rights as a participant, ask for his or her
consent to be in the focus group.
tor should then redirect the focus group back to the dis-
cussion, taking care to avoid personal commentary.
3. If the study protocol requires you to obtain
written consent, ask the participants to sign
the consent form. After the participants sign How should informed consent be handled for
the forms, sign them yourself.
a focus group?
4. If the study protocol requires you to obtain
oral consent, you should sign the consent Before beginning the focus group, you must obtain
form to document that you have obtained informed consent in accordance with the procedures of
oral consent from these participants. the specific study protocol. Typically, you will obtain
Protocols may require that oral informed informed consent individually with each participant
consent be tape-recorded in full or in part,
before and sometimes again after the focus
before the person joins the group. As noted in the
group. Qualitative Research Methods Overview module,
5. Offer the participant a copy of the informed page 10, the overarching purpose of informed consent
consent form, written in a language the par- procedures is to ensure that participants understand
ticipant understands. This document should that they are not for any reason obligated to participate
always list the contact information for study in the focus group, nor are they required to answer any
officials to whom questions about the
research may be directed.
questions they do not wish to answer. Informed con-
sent for focus groups is often oral and may be tape-
recorded in full or in part, but some studies may
require written informed consent. It is also essential to provide participants with information on
how the focus group data will be used and who will have access to it.
FOCUS GROUPS
• Recruiting participants according to the recruitment strategy outlined in the work plan.
• Reminding recruits of the focus group time and place. If the particularities of local public
transport could affect participants’ punctuality or their accessibility to the focus group loca-
tion, facilitators may need to arrange to transport participants from an agreed location. In
that case they would need to consider how to maintain confidentiality – for example, by
using an unmarked car or finding out whether participants are sensitive about being trans-
ported as a group.
• Answering any advance questions recruits may have, without providing information in
excess. To do this, you should be knowledgeable about the research topic. If you do not
know the answer to a question, tell the participant that you will research the matter and
respond later. Maintain your credibility by following up on such promises.
• Being reliable. Participants will be more likely to take the focus group discussion seriously if
you demonstrate your own commitment to the discussion. Arrive on time, with the recording
equipment, focus group guide, and notebooks, and be prepared to either moderate or docu-
ment the focus group, according to your role. Satisfy any commitments you make to partici-
pants, such as fact-finding and confidentiality, to the greatest possible extent.
Focus Groups 55
How many people are necessary for a focus group?
The qualitative work plan for each site will specify the approximate number of participants to be
recruited for each focus group, as well as the number of focus groups required for the project. A
typical number of participants is eight to ten people, with a maximum of 12.
In most cases, more than the target number of people will be recruited because it is common for
people who are scheduled to participate not to show up. If more than 12 people come to the ses-
sion, one of the facilitators should explain to the last arrivals that the group is already full, pro-
vide them with the full reimbursement (if there is one), offer refreshments (if applicable), and
thank them for coming. If a participant is especially disappointed at not being able to participate
in the focus group, the facilitator can try to schedule him or her for another group or for an indi-
vidual interview, if feasible.
The work plan for each site should outline policies and strategies for recruiting participants.
However, it is common for realities in the field to necessitate creative revision of these strategies.
When developing a recruitment strategy, it can be helpful to consult with local people who are
active in or have connections to the study population. They may be able to offer ideas about how to
gain access to the population, how best to approach people, and possible obstacles to recruitment.
FOCUS GROUPS
What if I want to refer a participant for help?
If, during the discussion, a participant appears to be distressed about information shared, the
moderator or note-taker might consider approaching the person after the focus group and offer-
ing to refer him or her for help as appropriate or desired.
Note that all participants should be provided with the full reimbursement sum, regardless of
whether they complete the focus group. This includes:
Focus Groups 57
• participants who arrive for the focus group and decide not to participate after all
• participants who choose not to answer some questions
• participants who turn out to have no knowledge about the focus group topic
Procedures for documenting reimbursement dispersal are study-specific and usually outlined in
the informed consent form. Commonly, in studies that require only verbal (and not written)
informed consent, the facilitator signs a statement certifying that each participant was given the
cash reimbursement. In studies that require written informed consent, participants may be asked
to sign a receipt.
Note that accounting personnel are not always aware of the confidentiality issues related to
research studies. The local principal investigator should be prepared to inform accounting per-
sonnel if the established reimbursement procedures risk compromising confidentiality, so that
alternative procedures may be created. These procedures should be worked out by the on-site
principal investigator before the focus group begins and must comply with the ethics commit-
tee’s approved protocol.
Next, the moderator should become thoroughly familiar with the focus group guide. Being famil-
iar with the guide allows the moderator to be more engaged during the discussion, to adhere to
the guide more easily should the conversation begin to deviate from the questions, and to focus
on encouraging equal participation from group members rather than on locating the questions in
the guide. It is important to understand the purpose behind each question and how it fits within
the overall research aims. It may be necessary to rephrase questions that are unclear to partici-
pants, or to spontaneously think of follow-up questions and probes. You should be able to recog-
nize when participants have adequately addressed the intent of the question, when a response or
responses contain information that applies to a separate question or to a scripted follow-up ques-
tion, and when or which probes are needed to elicit additional information from individuals or
FOCUS GROUPS
from the group as a whole. Being familiar with the guide also enables you to use it flexibly, tak-
ing advantage of natural shifts in the discussion. It is advisable to review the focus group guide
before every session. If multiple versions of a guide have been developed, make sure you are
using the correct version.
It is also helpful to practice moderating in pilot or mock focus groups. Mock sessions, in which
you use the focus group guide and other project staff play the role of participants, allow you to
test your knowledge of the questions, your ability to probe and to keep the discussion on track,
and your flexibility. (Some suggested exercises are provided in the Exercises for Training Data
Collectors appendix, page 93.) You might also conduct practice focus groups with people in the
community who are not participating in the study. In that case, however, you must obtain
informed consent, just as you would from someone who was participating in the study. Informal
practice sessions – such as with friends, family, or support staff or other researchers – do not
require informed consent.
Another important step in preparing for a focus group is to label all materials that you will use dur-
ing the focus group – including notebooks and the focus group guide – according to a previously
Focus Groups 59
established convention for archiving the data. All items should be labeled identically. (See the
Tools for Data Managers appendix, page 105, for an example of archival conventions.)
Finally, it is very helpful to review debriefing forms from previous focus groups before conduct-
ing your own. Debriefing information will provide insights into questions that need more prob-
ing, topics that were not well covered in previous groups, and other useful information.
A crucial skill for moderating a productive focus group is the ability to build rapport with and among
participants from the start of the discussion. This involves quickly establishing a positive, relaxed, and
mutually respectful group dynamic. If participants do not feel comfortable expressing personal opin-
ions and experiences during the discussion, the focus group will not achieve its objectives.
Specific techniques for building positive rapport are culturally specific; words and behaviors that
would put someone of one culture at ease may be offensive in another. Therefore, if you are
unfamiliar with the context, it is a good idea to ask colleagues who have qualitative research
experience in the local culture for ideas about establishing rapport. Table 8 outlines some sug-
gestions for establishing and maintaining good rapport in any culture, and Table 9 suggests some
ground rules that can help ensure that the focus group goes smoothly.
Use relaxed body language Do not scold or berate participants for the content
of their responses or for personal characteristics
Incorporate humor where appropriate
Do not allow any participants to berate others in
Be patient and do not rush participants to respond the group
In an interview setting, the interviewer might try to adjust his or her style to the character of the
individual participant. In contrast, in focus groups, the moderator has to maneuver the conversa-
tion among too many individuals for this technique to be practical. Following are suggestions for
handling common personality traits and emotional states within the focus group context.
If a participant is . . .
Talkative. If a participant holds the floor for too long, you may need to intervene. You could
start by thanking the person for his or her contribution and inviting others to comment on what
the person said or to provide alternative views. You might also try encouraging a talkative person
to make only one point at a time. You could, for example, step in as the person is introducing a
new topic and encourage the group to discuss the first point. You might also use body language
to discourage someone from talking for an excessive amount of time, such as decreasing your
eye contact with the talkative participant and increasing eye contact with other participants.
FOCUS GROUPS
Taking time to establish ground rules at the start of the focus group can save the moderator (and sometimes
the entire project staff ) much grief later on. All parties will be much better positioned if participants are kind
to one another during the focus group and if they respect one another’s privacy afterward. Laying ground
rules is your opportunity to address which behaviors are desirable and which are unacceptable.
Focus Groups 61
Prone to interrupt. One strategy is to remind the group that one of the ground rules of the focus
group is to refrain from interrupting other people. You might also thank the individual and sug-
gest returning to his or her point after the first speaker’s contribution has been completed.
Aggressive. You might first remind participants of the ground rule that no one is permitted to
insult or personally attack anyone else. You could also try to decrease the level of aggression by
calmly asking the individual in question to explain the reasoning behind the stated negative opin-
ion and then involving the rest of the group in the discussion.
Shy. Some participants will be hesitant to join an ongoing debate or discussion. You could offer
them a safer opportunity to speak by pausing the discussion and asking whether anyone else has
something to contribute. You could also pose questions directly to individuals who have been
especially quiet, thank them afterward for sharing their experience, and encourage them with
body language, such as smiling.
Angry. If a participant becomes angry, try to soften the level of emotion by acknowledging that
the issues at hand are indeed sensitive or controversial. If you consider it preferable to address
the person’s anger, steer the conversation toward the idea that it is the issue that is upsetting
rather than another participant.
Tired. If more than one participant begins to appear tired or irritable, it may be time to take a break.
Encourage people to get up and move around, use the restroom, and have refreshments (if provided).
FOCUS GROUPS
ences using the family planning services at xxxx clinic?”
Focus Groups 63
Table 10. Unbiased versus leading questions
“Why did you want to use the female condom?” “Was one reason that you wanted to use the female
Potential follow-up question:“What were you trying condom because you were trying to prevent sexually
to protect yourself from?” transmitted infections?”
“What do you think stops people in the school “Do you think people in the school community
community from talking about sex and condoms?” don’t talk about sex and condoms because they
might be stigmatized and seen as loose?”
moderator. If a participant answers a sub-question in the initial response, it is not necessary to then
pose that sub-question. Engaged listening will help you decide which follow-up questions to ask.
You should use probes when a participant’s response or contribution is brief or unclear, when a
participant or the group seems to be waiting for a reaction from you before continuing to speak,
or when a person appears to have more information on the subject. As much as possible, probe
for more detail about what the participant thinks, feels, and experiences in relationship to the
research topic. Do not assume that you understand the intent of a brief response. Instead, use
probes to further or confirm your understanding and to encourage more explanation. Be careful,
however, not to use probes to excess. Balance knowing when to probe with knowing when to
move on to the next question. If responses are repetitive or lacking in substance, or if the partici-
pant becomes annoyed or upset about lingering on a particular topic, it is best to advance to the
next question.
Probing is probably the most important technique in focus group moderation, but also the hardest
to master. It requires practice, thorough knowledge of the focus group guide and research objec-
tives, and a solid understanding of what kind of information each question is intended to elicit. It
also requires patience and sensitivity, effective time management, and good interpersonal skills.
FOCUS GROUPS
be similar or different. If everyone appears to agree about a particular issue, verify this by
inquiring, “Are there any other points of view?” or “Does anyone see it differently?”
• Use silence to your advantage. Give participants a chance to think about the questions, and
do not be afraid to wait until someone speaks. In some cultures, people are comfortable with
silence; in others, they are not. In the latter case, allowing for pauses could be advantageous,
because eventually someone would feel compelled to speak to end the silence.
• Limit your own participation once the discussion begins. After going through the introductory
material, set the stage by posing a question and then letting the participants react to it for a
few minutes with limited direction from you. Do not provide commentary on each contribu-
tion or take on the role of counselor or educator. The moderator’s role is to elicit information,
not dispense it.
Focus Groups 65
Checking off the questions also makes it easier to return to questions that were skipped in the
natural progression of the discussion.
Although the guide is designed to help the discussion flow easily, you usually do not have to fol-
low the exact order of questions. Try to cover each question thoroughly, because each question is
designed to elicit specific information. Probe each topic as necessary to get sufficient informa-
tion. Make notes in the discussion guide as a reminder to return to a question or address an issue
further. Take advantage of natural shifts in the discussion as they relate to questions in the focus
group guide. If an individual’s comments do not pertain to the research focus, look for opportu-
nities to steer the conversation back to the topic.
FOCUS GROUPS
opportunity is lost.
• Expanding your shorthand into sentences so that anyone can read and understand your notes.
Use a separate page in your field notebook to expand the notes you wrote in the focus group
guide. Depending on circumstances, you might be able to expand and type your notes into a
computer file at the same time.
• Composing a descriptive narrative from your shorthand and key words. A good technique
for expanding your notes is to write a descriptive narrative describing what happened and
what you learned. This narrative may be the actual document you produce as your expanded
notes. Be sure that you create separate, clearly labeled sections to report your objective
observations versus your interpretations and personal comments.
• Identifying questions for follow-up. Write down questions about participant responses or com-
ments that need further consideration or follow-up, issues to pursue, new information, etc. This
continual adjustment of the research questions and techniques is part of the iterative nature of
qualitative research, because answers to some research questions lead naturally to others. In
some cases, your questions might be answered through further clarification from a participant.
Focus Groups 67
Sample Focus Group Guide
Archival #:
CASE STUDY
Site: Moderator:
Date: Transcriber:
Start: End:
E x ce rp t f rom page 4:
(Question 4)
Have you ever gone to get your preferred method of contraception at the family planning clinic and found it was unavailable?
(4b) Did they ever try to give you a different method? Please explain what they said.
(4c) Did they ever refer you to a different clinic? Please explain what they said.
See page 71 for the note-taker’s sample notes from the same focus group.
FOCUS GROUPS
system of shorthand for associating answers with questions that will be simple for you to expand
when completing your notes later on. Finally, if you know the guide well, you are more likely to
understand the purpose behind each question, which will enable you to identify quotations that
capture the essence of an answer or stance.
Another step in preparing for a focus group is to practice taking notes in a pilot or mock focus
group. Practicing note-taking is best done in cooperation with a moderator who is also rehearsing
his or her part in a focus group. Mock sessions, in which the moderator uses the actual or real
focus group guide and other project staff play the role of participants, allows you to test your
knowledge of the questions and note-taking skills. (Some suggested exercises are provided in the
Exercises for Training Data Collectors appendix, page 93.) You and the moderator might also
conduct practice focus groups with people in the community who are not participating in the
study. In that case, however, you must obtain informed consent, just as you would from someone
who was participating in the study. Informal practice sessions – such as with friends, family, or
support staff or other researchers – do not require informed consent.
continued on page 72
Focus Groups 69
Sample Note-Taker Form with Field Notes
Archival #: Site:
CASE STUDY
S e at ing cha r t :
Make a seating chart indicating the participants and their number or identifier. Use this chart to identify speakers as you
take notes.
FOCUS GROUPS
Sample Expanded Field Notes
Archival #: CCFGFPU01
Site: Capital City Hospital
Note-taker: Marie K.
Date: 15-6-04
A lack or shortage of FP supplies appears to be a recurrent problem at this clinic. All participants
agreed that supplies are sometimes not available, for example pills and injectables. (How often
does this happen???)
Another problem with the supply is that the prices change and women travel to the clinic to find they
didn’t bring enough money.They expressed that in that case coming to the clinic is a waste of time
because they leave empty-handed even though the supplies were there. (Find out why prices change.)
One person said when there are supply problems they are told to switch methods.
(Who recommends this? Doctor? Nurse? How often does this occur? How many women end up
abandoning FP for this reason? Potential for problems adjusting to new methods – but no one
mentioned this. Do women in fact switch methods?)
It seems like women are left to their own devices when the supply runs short.There don’t seem to be
any temporary solutions offered or advised. Participants laughed but nonetheless appeared frustrated
about the lack of concern of the clinic staff. One person imitated a staff member throwing up her
hands and saying,“Sorry, nothing we can do for you!”
Focus Groups 71
continued from page 69
It is also important to practice operating the recording equipment to prevent disruption during
the middle of a session. Know how many batteries are required, the range of the microphone,
how to quickly flip or change the tape, and the convention for labeling the tapes accurately.
Bring a sufficient number of tapes and extra batteries to the focus group, and test the tape
recorder before every focus group session.
Another important preparatory step is to label all materials that you will use during the focus
group – including cassette tapes, notebooks, note-taking and debriefing forms, and the focus
group guide – according to a previously established archival system. All items should be labeled
identically. (See the Data Documentation and Management module, page 87, for information
about archival numbers.)
Finally, arrive early to set up the focus group space and equipment. Be sure to arrange timely
transportation to the site so that you have time to set up before participants arrive. You should also
find out where the closest restrooms are located. It might be wise to allow for extra travel or set-
up time if you have never been to the location, and take traffic into consideration. Set up the
recording equipment according to the range of the microphone. Remember that you will need to
sit next to the recorder during the discussion. (It is preferable for the note-taker to sit off to the
side from the group, if possible.) You should then verify that the equipment is working properly.
Make sure that features such as pause, voice activation, and high-low recording levels are turned
off, and that extra batteries, tapes, and a spare tape recorder are readily accessible. Place chairs in
a circle or around a table, so that all participants will be able to see the moderator and each other.
Take notes strategically. It is usually practical to make only brief notes during data collection. Direct quotes can
be especially hard to write down accurately. Rather than try to document every detail or quote, write down
key words and phrases that will trigger your memory when you expand notes. However, remember that your
notes will be the only documentation of the session if the recording fails or is faulty. Try to capture the content
of all essential verbal contributions, and when possible, to document especially representative quotes word-
for-word.
Record participant identifiers. It can be a great help during later transcription if you note the identifier of each
participant as they speak. The moderator can make this easier for you by asking participants to say their iden-
tifier before making a contribution.
Use shorthand. Because you will expand and type your notes soon after you write them, it does not matter if you
are the only person who can understand your shorthand system. Use abbreviations and acronyms to quickly
note what is happening and being said.
Record both the question and the response. If the question or probe comes from a focus group question guide,
save time by noting the question number. If it is not possible to record direct quotations, write down key
words and phrases.
Distinguish clearly between participant comments and your own observations. You could use your own ini-
tials or “MO” to indicate “my observation.” For example:“MO – embarrassed by empty beer bottles in room.”
This documents the researcher’s observation that the participant seemed embarrassed about the empty beer
bottles in the room.
FOCUS GROUPS
Cover a range of observations. In addition to documenting what people say, note as well as you can their body
language, moods, or attitudes; the general environment; and other information that could be relevant.
Focus Groups 73
Sample Focus Group Debriefing Form
Moderator:
Note-taker:
(1) What are the main themes that emerged in this focus group?
(2) Did any information contradict what you learned in previous focus groups?
(3) What did participants say that was unclear or confusing to you?
(4) What did you observe that would not be evident from reading a transcript of the discussion (e.g., group dynamic,
individual behaviours, etc.)?
(5) What problems did you encounter (e.g., logistical, behaviors of individuals, questions that were confusing, etc.)?
(7) Does the note-taker have any suggestions for the moderator and vice versa?
FOCUS GROUPS
• To discuss issues or comments that need clarification. Field notes explaining confusing parts
of the focus group will be valuable for helping other researchers to interpret the transcripts
later on.
• To discuss particular questions that did not work well and why.
• To note any information that contradicts or confirms data collected in previous sessions.
• To identify missing information. Comparing what information was being sought with what
was actually learned can help moderators plan how to solicit this information more effec-
tively in subsequent focus groups.
• To identify information that needs to be researched outside the focus group setting. This may
have to do, for example, with cultural norms, fact-checking, or specifics about the study.
Focus Groups 75
• To discuss trouble spots that came up during the focus group, with regard to participants,
group dynamics, and questions. It may be necessary to develop new strategies for dealing
with a particular issue for subsequent focus groups.
• To provide the moderator and note-taker a forum for giving each other constructive feedback.
Debriefing notes are used for two purposes. Before the start of every new focus group, modera-
tors and note-takers review debriefing notes from previous sessions. This helps them to make
adjustments and improvements as they conduct the next session. Debriefing notes are also shared
and reviewed during staff meetings, when data collectors and other researchers discuss what they
are finding and any questions or problems they may have. This helps all the researchers to get a
sense of what is and is not working well, which issues require follow-up, and whether any new
issues are emerging as potentially important.
Krueger RA. Moderating Focus Groups (Focus Group Kit). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage
Publications, 1997.
Krueger RA, Casey MA. Focus Groups: A Practical Guide for Applied Research. Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage Publications, 1994.
Morgan D. Successful Focus Groups: Advancing the State of the Art. London: Sage
Publications, 1993.
For additional information on this topic, refer to Chapter 4: Collecting Qualitative Data: The
Science and the Art, Appendix 4: Procedural Guidelines for Managing Focus Group Discussions,
Appendix 6: Topic Guides for Focus Group Discussions on Reproductive Health, and Appendix
8: Common Errors in Moderating Focus Groups in these companion guides:
FOCUS GROUPS
Focus Groups 77
Sample Focus Group Transcript
Archival #: CCFGFPU01
Site: Capital City Hospital Moderator: Sandrine B. M = Moderator
Number of participants: 10 Note-taker: Marie K. R = Respondent
Date: 15-6-04 Transcriber: Sandrine B.
Start: 15:30 End: 16:50 Typist: Samuel D.
E x ce rp t f rom page 5:
(Question 4)
M: Even the way you are all here, I believe you are under different family planning methods. There are those who are
under the injection, there are those who are using pills, there are those who are even using condoms; let me ask, is there a
time you went to an FP clinic and found that injectables were not available? Or the pills were not available? Is there any
time that this has happened?
R: Yes. (in chorus)
R10: That one is very common. You could have prepared that you are coming for injections or pills, then they tell you that
the pills are not there. You wait . . . maybe you go to buy and find they are not even there and you know . . . you could get
that they are selling them at thirty shillings and you don’t have that.
M: Mmm
R10: Coming back they tell you the pills are not there, they tell you we don’t have this type . . . change to this . . . you know
it causes a lot of problems and we are having that problem. Especially people who are on pills.
M: There has always been a shortage?
R5: Oh yes.
Respondents: Yes yes. (in chorus)
(Question 4a)
M: Now when you experience such a problem of shortage of stock, let’s say for pills or so, what do these providers advise
you?
R2: They just tell you to go.
R8: Because the pills are not there, they therefore just leave you to go.
M: They are not there.
R8: There is no single advice they give.
M: No single advice?
R8: They tell you that the pills are not there.
M: So you go?
R8: Yes.
M: Come back maybe when . . . when they have . . .
R5: (Interjects) They don’t even tell you to come back!
M: Mmm . . . they don’t tell you anything?
R3: But in some places they advise you. If you find that there are no pills the doctor can get them for you from elsewhere
immediately.
M: Where is this sister?
R3: XXXXX
M: So they provide an immediate solution?
R3: Yes.
R1: But here it’s like you wait on till the stock is brought.
(Question 4b)
M: Do they ever attempt to advise you on an alternative?
R7: No they don’t.
M: They don’t?
R: Yes (some respondents say yes).
R2: They just tell you to go back home and take care of yourself.
M: That you just go back home and take care of yourself? Now, how do you take care of yourself?
R6: You should not have sex with your husband.
M: You should not have sex with the old man?
R6: Mmm.
R8: Or they say to use condoms but if there are none then the advice is no good.
(Question 4c)
M: So there’s no time that you are referred to another place or there’ s nothing like that?
R: (Majority) There’ s nothing like that . . .
FOCUS GROUPS
Focus Groups 79
Steps in Moderating a Focus Group
Preparing for the Focus Group
1 Study the focus group guide.
2 Study the informed consent document.
3 Practice both moderating and taking notes.
STEPS
4 Decide with the note-taker how you will handle not using participants’ real names.
5 Review debriefing notes from previous focus groups.
6 Prepare a checklist of everything you need to bring to the focus group. (See the Focus Group
Checklist, page 82.)
7 Confirm the reservation of the focus group location and arrange for refreshments (if applicable).
FOCUS GROUPS
19 Turn away latecomers or extra participants, but provide them with the reimbursement, outside the
room where the discussion is being held.
20 Provide reimbursements to participants who drop out of the focus group early.
21 At the end of the discussion, ask the group for clarification of any questions you have.
22 Stop the tape recorder after the group has orally confirmed their consent.
23 Reimburse the participants in accordance with study procedures.
24 Wrap up all conversations and clear the room.
Focus Groups 81
Focus Group Checklist
Make arrangements for
q Private setting for focus group site
CHECKLIST
q Spare batteries
q Note-taking form
q Debriefing form
Module 5
Data Documentation and Management:
Organizing and Storing Your Data
DATA MANAGEMENT
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Data Documentation and Management:
Organizing and Storing Your Data
B
ecause they capture the thoughts and experiences of individual people, every set of
qualitative data collected (from every participant observation event, interview, and focus
group) is distinct. In addition, individual researchers inevitably have differences in style
that affect how data are managed in the field, and different locations have unique logistical con-
straints. Thus, systematically comparing and analyzing qualitative data in raw form is challenging.
Organizing data in a rigorous, standardized way is essential to their security and to the validity
of the study results, however. Consistency is important for every study but is especially crucial
for large, team-based projects involving extensive amounts of data located in multiple sites.
Your study’s local principal investigator or data manager will set up a data management system
that is specific to your site. This module suggests a general method for the complex task of sys-
tematically managing qualitative data, covering the following topics:
• Converting Raw Data to Computer Files
• Organizing Data Storage
• Suggested Reading
• Data Archiving Steps
• Data Management Checklist
For a specific study, the procedures outlined in this module may be followed exactly or adapted,
as the principal investigator or data manager sees fit. The Tools for Data Managers appendix,
page 105, contains a detailed example of a transcription protocol and data archive model, which
should be of interest to your study’s data management personnel but is likely less relevant for
field workers.
These notes are written on standardized forms, the interview or focus group question guide, or
field notebooks, according to the situation.
For focus groups and interviews, after transcribing all relevant recordings, the transcriptionist
types up the interviewer’s or focus group moderator’s corresponding handwritten field notes.
These typed field notes could either be appended to the transcript within the same file or kept in
a separate file (the principal investigator or data manager would make this decision). Whatever
the case, the typed field notes provide contextual information that could enhance the researchers’
understanding of the transcript and therefore need to be easily identifiable as part of the same
data collection event. Expanded notes from each participant observation event should be typed as
separate computer files.
Archival #:
Site:
Data collector(s):
Transcriber:
Translator:
Typist:
Note: This is the same header information that you will have written at the top of your field notes, the interview and focus
group guides, note-taker form, and debriefing form.
The data manager may also decide to store the original tapes in the envelope, but backup copies of
tapes should be stored separately (or vice versa). Eventually, both copies of the tapes will be
destroyed for reasons of confidentiality. Once you are instructed by the project manager or coordi-
nator to destroy the tapes, it will be necessary to put documentation of this in the archival envelope.
Suggested Readings
McLellan E, MacQueen KM, Niedig J. Beyond the qualitative interview: data preparation and
transcription. Field Methods 2003;15(1):63-84.
For additional information on this topic, refer to Chapter 5: Logistics in the Field and Chapter 6:
Qualitative Data Analysis in these companion guides:
Qualitative Methods in Public Health: A Field Guide for Applied Research
Qualitative Methods: A Field Guide for Applied Research in Sexual and Reproductive Health
DATA MANAGEMENT
Female
Male
FG debriefing notes
Handwritten transcript
Translation
Hardcopy of Electronic
Data Sign-out:
Name Item(s)/Purpose Date Out Date In
Archival # Category* Interviewer Transcriber Translator Typist Date of Language Sex Age Date to
Interview of Interview Manager
89
DATA MANAGEMENT
Data Archiving Steps
In the Field
1 Label all materials (tapes, guide, field notes, forms).
2 Punch the re-record tabs on each cassette after the interview/focus group is completed.
3 After data collection, return all materials to the large, heavy-duty envelope.
STEPS
q Expanded notes
In-depth interviews
q Consent form signed by the interviewer (and participant if obtaining written consent)
q Handwritten notes
q Expanded notes
Focus groups
q Consent form signed by the focus group moderator (or participants if obtaining written consent)
q Handwritten notes
q Seating chart
q Expanded notes
q Debriefing notes
F A M I L Y H E A L T H I N T E R N A T I O N A L
Appendix A:
Exercises for Training Data Collectors
APPENDIX A
The most effective way to learn how to use the qualitative methods described in the preceding
modules is to practice them. The following exercises have been used extensively in training
workshops for developing country settings. Trainers should feel free to use and modify them as
they see fit.
Participant Observation
Exercise 1: Planning for participant observation
Objectives:
• To choose an appropriate location for doing participant observation
• To decide how to best match field staff to the study population and context
• To create a list of topics or questions to guide observation
What you will need:
• A research topic (real or hypothetical)
• A study population (real or hypothetical)
Instructions:
As a class, in groups, or in pairs, discuss places that would be appropriate for doing participant
observation on a research topic of interest. Consider which field staff members would be best
suited for each location and how they might adjust their appearance in order to be inconspicuous.
Determine the best times to do participant observation activities, including times of day and days
of the week. Create a list of questions or topics to direct focused observation. Discuss safety
issues that might arise.
b. Combining your observations with those of other staff for a class presentation
Return to the training facility. Spend one to two hours working in small groups to prepare a
15-minute group presentation synthesizing what you observed. Draw a map of the location
where you did participant observation to show as part of your presentation. (See Exercise 3,
page 95, for a more detailed map exercise.)
APPENDIX A
Complete the exercise with a general debriefing session among class members. Address the
following questions:
• How did the participant observation experience go overall?
• Were you able to engage in conversation with people? How did you do this?
• Describe what you did to map out the site.
• What note-taking strategies did you use?
• How did you practice discretion?
• Did you feel uncomfortable at any time?
• Did you decide to explain your identity and purpose to anyone? If so, what did you say?
• Did you choose to remain an outsider or did you try to blend in?
• What could you have done to more effectively assimilate with the people in the setting?
• How would you change what you did in this exercise if you could do it again?
• What evidence do you have for the observations you made?
Objectives:
• To collaboratively create a map of the participation observation setting that will be useful to
consult throughout the project
• To experience being a participant observer
• To practice investigating a location, including asking people to help you understand particular
aspects of it
• To practice revealing your purpose to people in the observation site
• To describe a setting in detail
• To work collaboratively with other field staff to combine multiple perspectives
What you will need:
• An observation site accessible from the training facility
• A research topic (real or hypothetical)
• A study population
• Courage
• Field notebooks
• Large sheets of paper, such as flip chart paper
• Markers
APPENDIX A
a. Reporting observations
Individually or in teams, go to different observation sites or different areas of a single site. Spend
30 minutes to one hour there quietly observing. In your notebook, record what you see. On one
page, present your observations as objectively as possible. On a second page, report the same
observations in a more subjective manner, indicating your own interpretation of what is there.
In-Depth Interviews
Exercise 1: Interview circle
This exercise works well with both large and small groups.
Objectives:
• To practice interviewing and probing
• To experience being interviewed
• To become familiar with the interview guide
• To enable trainers/project leaders to evaluate each team member’s strengths and areas for
improvement
Instructions:
a. Round robin
One person starts by asking the person next to him or her the first interview question. The inter-
viewer should ensure that the question is addressed completely, including following up with
appropriate probes. That interviewee responds to the question, and then turns to the next person
and asks him or her the second question in the interview guide. Continue going around the room
until everyone has had an opportunity to ask and answer a question, or until all the questions on
the interview guide have been exhausted.
b. Self-critique
At the end of the round robin, each individual team member should describe the difficulties
experienced as an interviewer and as an interviewee.
d. Instructor critique
After everyone has had a chance to describe their experience, the trainer provides feedback
regarding what team members did well during the round robin, as well as areas needing
improvement. The trainer should also review interviewing techniques as necessary.
Instructions:
a. Identify positive techniques
As a class, make a list of suggestions for culturally appropriate ways to put someone at ease
from the beginning to the end of an interview. Address the following questions:
• How should you start the interaction?
• What could you say or do initially to make the participant feel relaxed?
• What could you say or do to make the participant feel more comfortable during the inter-
view if the conversation becomes tense?
• What would make a participant feel that he or she could trust you?
• What parting words or behaviors will help the participant leave with the feeling that he
or she had a positive interview experience?
APPENDIX A
Objectives:
• To practice conducting interviews
• To practice probing
• To become familiar with the interview guide
What you will need:
• An interview guide
Instructions:
a. Interviewing
Pick a partner in the group and decide with that person who will play the role of interviewer and
who will be the participant. Spend 10 minutes asking your partner questions from the interview
guide. The person playing the participant should feel free to take on a persona, such as talkative,
irritable, shy, etc. This will help the interviewer to work on probing. After 10 minutes, exchange
roles and repeat the exercise for another 10 minutes. Use different questions so as to become
familiar with the entire interview guide by the end of the exercise.
Exercise 5: Probing
Objectives:
• To become more proficient at knowing when to probe
• To become more proficient at using the probes scripted in the interview guide
• To improve your ability to create probes spontaneously based on individual participant
responses
• To practice identifying and avoiding leading and closed-ended questions
• To know the questions well enough to not have to focus on reading from the guide
What you will need:
• An interview guide
Instructions:
Either in pairs or in interview circle fashion, team members will play the roles of interviewer and
participant. Interview each other using a real interview guide, and focus on probing both with
scripted and original probes. Probing requires being attentive and responsive to the participant.
To practice this skill, cover up the interview guide after asking each question. This will force you
to focus your attention on the participant instead of the guide.
Probes should be purposive and related to the objectives behind each question. After asking a
question and following up with probes, ask yourself if the information you received from the
participant is useful and satisfies the intent of the question. Identify any leading and closed-
ended probes you asked and discuss with your partner how to word them differently.
APPENDIX A
Exercise 1: Role-playing
Objectives:
• To practice leading a focus group
• To practice probing
• To practice accommodating different types of personalities
What you will need:
• A focus group guide
• At least four people (one to play the moderator, three to be participants)
Instructions:
a. Assign roles
Select one person to be the moderator. The other members of the research team will suggest a
type of personality they would like to play. These could include types such as talkative, aggres-
sive, shy, or scornful, as well as other culturally relevant examples (devout, elderly, young, silly,
joker, etc.).
b. Mock discussion
Have a mock focus group discussion, with each person playing the role he or she selected. Let
speakers take turns playing the moderator.
Objectives:
• To practice taking notes during a focus group
• To practice probing
• To practice accommodating different types of personalities
What you will need:
• A focus group guide
• At least four people (one to play the moderator, two to be participants, and one to be the
note-taker)
• A note-taker form
c. Mock discussion
Have a mock focus group discussion, with each person playing the role he or she drew and the
note-taker taking notes on the discussion. Let team members take turns in the note-taker role.
Data Management
Exercise 1: A Day in the Life
This exercise can be used with any size group and adapted to any qualitative method. It can also
be done as part of a longer mock interview or focus group exercise.
Objectives:
• To rehearse the steps of data management from beginning to end
• To practice creating and using data collection checklists
What you will need:
• Flip chart and markers
• Paper and pens for each team member
• Large, heavy-duty envelopes
• Equipment relevant to the method
– Interviews: tape recorders, cassettes, batteries, field notebook, pens
– Focus groups: tape recorders, cassettes, batteries, field notebook, pens
– Observations: field notebook, pens
Instructions:
Choose the method you will practice during the exercise (participant observation, interview,
focus group). Adapt the instructions below according to the method you select.
APPENDIX A
As a group, create two checklists appropriate to the data collection method. One should be called
“What to Take with You” and the other, “What to Submit after Data Collection.” The checklists
provided at the end of the interview and focus group modules can serve as models. Each team
member should make a handwritten checklist to use later.
b. Creating forms
As a group, create the forms you will need for data collection with the particular method. These
include:
• Observations: list of focal points for observation
• Interviews: informed consent forms, interview question guide, reimbursement forms
• Focus groups: informed consent forms, focus group question guide, note-taker form,
debriefing form, reimbursement forms
APPENDIX B
All data collectors will perform some aspects of data management as they collect and handle
data, using the forms and procedures described in the preceding modules. However, it is likely
that a person in the role of data manager will take primary responsibility for keeping close track
of all the data at once. In this appendix we provide models of data archival and transcription pro-
tocols that data managers may use or adapt to meet the needs of the project.
Master Log
Site Name: ___________________________________________ Page # _____
Participant Number
Archival # Interview Focus Group Date Assigned
Observation Assigned by:
2. Assign an archival number to each data source as you enter it on the archival log. The data
manager should assign each event an archival number before the data collection event. (This
could be done as the field staff member checks out the recording equipment and other neces-
sary documentation materials.)
__ FP users
__ FP non-users
Method of recording data (mark all that apply): Additional/backup location(s) of data:
Audiotape
Field notes
Transcription
Translation
APPENDIX B
full or partial names or addresses on the envelope or any other item. Use one envelope for each
interview, focus group, or participant observation event. Do not include materials from more
than one interview or focus group in a single envelope. Write the archival number on every
item that is related to a data collection event and that is placed into the archival envelope.
4. Create an archival information sheet for the data source, such as the one in the sample on
page 106. It should ask for type of data, date of data collection, data collector, translator, typ-
ist, number/age/gender of people interviewed or observed, characteristics of participants
(such as sex worker, truck driver, community leader, elder, employer, service client, or med-
ical research participant), data collection method (such as notes or tape recordings), location
of original data, and the electronic file name. Note that the first box on the archival informa-
tion sheet requests the archival number.
5. Fill out the archival information sheet with as much information as possible.
Tape Storage
Store all tapes that are not actively being transcribed or reviewed in a locked cabinet.
Text Format
Transcribe all interview and focus group recordings using Times New Roman 12-point font, with
one-inch margins on all sides and left justification of the text.
For individual interviews, the Participant ID is composed of the archival number of the interview
tape, followed by the sequential number assigned to each participant. For example, for the partici-
pant interviewed on the tape with the archival number LL007, the Participant ID is LL007_1.
Press “Enter” twice after the header, leaving a single blank line between the header and the
interview transcript.
Type the speaker ID. Before the transcript of each question or response, identify the speaker
using the Interviewer ID or Participant ID, preceded and followed by a double pound sign (##).
For example: ##LL007_1##.
The first part of every document will thus resemble the following sample:
APPENDIX B
Interview Transcript
Participant ID: LL005_1
##ILL3##
OK, before we begin the interview itself, I’d like to confirm that you have read and signed the informed
consent form, that you understand that your participation in this study is entirely voluntary, that you may
refuse to answer any questions, and that you may withdraw from the study at any time.
##LL005_1##
Yes, I had read it and understand this.
##ILL3##
Do you have questions before we proceed?
Label all focus group transcripts with the following header, left justified at the top of the document:
Focus Group Archival #:
# Participants:
Site:
Focus Group Sample:*
Date of Interview:
Moderator ID:
Note-taker ID:
Transcriptionist:
* The Focus Group Sample refers to the subgroup of people who are participating in the focus
group (for example, truck drivers, community stakeholders, public health officials).
Press “Enter” twice after the header, leaving a single blank line between the header and the
focus group transcript.
Type the speaker ID. Before the transcript of each question or response, identify the speaker
using the Interviewer ID or Participant ID, preceded and followed by a double pound sign (##).
For example, ##LL007_1##.
For focus group participants who cannot be readily identified on the tape, type the archival num-
ber from the tape, followed by _UNKNOWN. For example: LL007_UNKNOWN would mean
unidentifiable participant for the focus group with archival number LL007. Do not use
“UNKNOWN” in interview transcripts.
Type END OF INTERVIEW in capital letters on the last line of the transcript to indicate that
the interview session has ended. For example:
##LL007_1##
Nope, I think that about covers it.
##ILL3##
Well, thanks for taking the time to talk with me today. I really appreciate it.
END OF INTERVIEW
APPENDIX B
Transcribe all tapes verbatim (that is, word-for-word, exactly as words were spoken).
Indicate all nonverbal or background sounds in parentheses. This includes laughter, sighs,
coughs, clapping, snapping of fingers, pen clicking, car horn, birds, etc. For example: (short
sharp laugh), (group laughter), or (police siren in background).
Do not “clean up” the transcript by removing foul language, slang, grammatical errors, or mis-
used words or concepts.
Transcribe any mispronounced words exactly as the interviewer or participant pronounced them.
If a transcribed mispronunciation risks causing problems with the reader’s comprehension of the
text, use the following convention: [/word as it would correctly be pronounced/]. (For translation,
mispronunciations will be ignored and only the correct translation will be provided.) For example:
I thought that was pretty pacific [/specific/], but they disagreed.
Standardize the spelling of key words, blended or compound words, common phrases, and
identifiers across all interview and focus group transcripts.
Transcribe both standard contractions (e.g., contractions of the following words: is, am, are,
had, have, would, or not) and nonstandard contractions (e.g., betcha, cuz, ‘em, gimme, gotta,
hafta, kinda, lotta, oughta, sorta, wanna, coulda, couldn’ve, couldna, woulda, wouldn’ve,
wouldna, shoulda, shouldn’ve, or shouldna).
Transcribe all fillers, sounds that are not standard words but that do express some meaning. For
example: hm, huh, mm, mhm, uh huh, um, mkay, yeah, yuhuh, nah huh, ugh, whoa, uh oh, ah, or
ahah.
Transcribe truncated words (words that are cut off) as the audible sound followed by a
hyphen. For example:
He wen- he went and did what I told him he shouldn’ve.
Unclear Speech
Indicate tape segments that are difficult to hear or understand on the transcript. For words
or short sentences, use [inaudible segment]. For example:
The process of identifying missing words in a tape-recorded interview of poor quality is
[inaudible segment].
For lengthy segments that are difficult to hear or understand, or when there is silence because no
one is talking, record this information in square brackets. Also provide a time estimate for the
information that could not be transcribed. For example:
[Inaudible: 2 minutes of interview missing]
Pauses
Mark brief pauses with periods or ellipses (. . .). Brief pauses are breaks in speech lasting two
to three seconds. They often occur between statements or when the speaker trails off at the end
of a statement. For example:
Sometimes, a participant briefly loses . . . a train of thought or . . . pauses after making a
poignant remark. Other times, they end their statements with a clause such as but then . . .
Mark pauses longer than 3 seconds by typing (long pause). For example:
Sometimes the individual may require additional time to construct a response. (long pause)
Other times, he or she is waiting for additional instructions or probes.
Questionable Accuracy
Indicate that a word or phrase may not be accurate by typing the questionable word between
question marks and parentheses. For example:
##LL004_1##
I went over to the ?(clinic)? to meet with the nurse to talk about joining up for the study.
Sensitive Information
When an individual uses his or her own name during the discussion, replace the name with the
appropriate Participant ID. For example:
##LL008_2##
My family always tells me, “LL008_2, think about things before you open your mouth.”
#LL008_4##
Hey LL008_2, don’t feel bad; I hear the same thing from mine all the time.
If an individual uses the names of people, locations, organizations, etc., identify them by typing
an equal sign (=) immediately before and after the sensitive information. For example:
##LL001_1##
We went over to = John Doe’s= house last night and we ended up going to = O’Malley’s Bar
= over on =22nd Street= and spending the entire night talking about the very same thing.
APPENDIX B
must also check every transcript for accuracy against the tape.
Transcriptionists will have already identified sensitive information in the transcript by enclosing
it within equal signs (=). To locate these easily, do a “search” for equal signs (=) in the text file.
However, it is important for the interviewer or focus group moderator also to review the entire
transcript in order to catch any sensitive information that the transcriptionist may have missed.
For example:
[counselor’s name omitted]
[name of local AIDS service organization omitted]
Saving Transcripts
Save each transcript as an individual MS-DOS ASCII text file with a .txt extension or a rich
text file with an .rtf extension.
To name individual interview transcript files, use the interview name followed by the participant
ID. For example: SOCLL007_1.txt = TDF interview for Lilongwe participant #007_1.
To name focus group transcript files, use the study name followed by the archival number for the
site/location, followed by the designation for the sample population. For example:
SOCLL009TDF.rtf = TDF focus group for Lilongwe, archive #LL009, TDF participant.
Destroy Tapes
Destroy all audiotapes when transcription is complete, unless the research protocol specifies a
length of time to keep them. Once a transcript has been reviewed for accuracy against the audio-
tape and the corrected transcription file has been saved and backed up, erase all tapes using an
audiotape eraser. Recycling of audiotapes is permissible, provided that their sound quality is
tested and new labels are affixed to the tape.
GLOSSARY
archival log The list of sequential numbers assigned to each data collection
event; used to track data. Also called the master archival log.
community gatekeepers People whose position in their community affords them formal
or informal power to influence researchers’ access to members
of the study population (for example, village chiefs, elected
officials, government appointees, religious leaders, highly
respected or influential members of the study population).
data collection instruments Tools or forms used to collect data from research participants.
Data collection instruments include in-depth interview guides,
focus group guides, observation guides, and interviewer scripts.
Equipment used during data collection, such as tape recorders
or microphones, are not data collection instruments.
Glossary 115
group to discuss a specific research topic. This technique is
effective for quickly accessing a broad range of views on a spe-
cific topic. During a typical focus group, one researcher (the
moderator) leads a discussion by asking participants to respond
to open-ended questions while a second researcher (the note-
taker) takes detailed notes on the discussion.
informed consent document Form(s) approved by all relevant ethics review boards contain-
ing information about the purpose of the research study, expec-
tations for research participants, expected risks and benefits to
them, the voluntary nature of participation, their right to with-
draw at any time, and contact information for study officials
available to answer questions. Research staff read the forms to
prospective study participants, ask them questions to evaluate
their comprehension of the contents, and then ask if they con-
sent to participate. Participants may or may not be required to
sign the form, depending on ethics review board requirements
for the study. Signed forms are kept on file.
interviewer Person who conducts in-depth interviews; can also refer to the
person who asks questions during focus groups. Also known as
the moderator.
GLOSSARY
making sure they have equal access to all available information,
prevention methods, effective treatments, and research results.
note-taker Person responsible for taking notes during a focus group. Also
known as a facilitator.
quota sampling A process for selecting research participants in which the criteria
and number of people to be included in the study are predeter-
mined. A target number of participants is set, and people who
meet the desired criteria are recruited until the target number
is reached.
sponsoring organization The institution that provides funding and scientific oversight for
the study; is responsible for overall management of the project;
ensures the scientific integrity of research at the local site; and
serves as a link between the funding institution and local
research activities.
Glossary 117
study population The pool of people from which research participants are drawn.
For example, for a study of family planning users, a study popu-
lation might be users and non-users of family planning among
women of reproductive age in Capital City, Developing
Country.
theoretical saturation The point at which new data collected and analyzed no longer
bring additional insights to the research questions. For example,
if interviews 11 through 15 contain the same information found
in the first 10 interviews, theoretical saturation has been reached.
Telephone: 1.919.544.7040
Fax: 1.919.544.7261
Web Site: www.fhi.org