Lecture 7
Lecture 7
Lecture 7
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Types of interview: Purposes of research
and research strategy
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Types of interview: Purposes of research
and research strategy
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Types of interview: Purposes of research
and research strategy
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Links to the purpose of research
and research strategy
Each form of interview outlined above has a distinct purpose.
Standardized interviews are normally used to gather data,
which will then be the subject of quantitative analysis, for
example as part of a survey strategy.
Non-standardized (semi-structured and in-depth) interviews
are used to gather data, which are normally analyzed
qualitatively, for example as part of a case study strategy. These
data are likely to be used not only to reveal and understand the
what and the how but also to place more emphasis on
exploring the why.
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Links to the purpose of research
and research strategy
To examining these categories we can see how the various types of
interview may be used to gather information for, and assist the
progress of, each kind of study:
In an exploratory study, in-depth interviews can be very helpful to find out
what is happening [and] to seek new insights. Semi-structured interviews
may also be used in relation to an exploratory study.
In descriptive studies, structured interviews can be used as a means to
identify general patterns.
In an explanatory study, semi-structured interviews may be used in order
to understand the relationships between variables, such as those revealed
from a descriptive study. Structured interviews may also be used in relation
to an explanatory study, in a statistical sense.
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Links to the purpose of research and
research strategy
Your research may incorporate more than one type of
interview (multiple methods). As part of a survey strategy, for
example, you may decide to use in-depth or semi-structured
interviews initially to help identify the questions that should be
asked in a questionnaire administered as a structured interview.
The data that you gather from such exploratory interviews will
be used in the design of your structured interview.
Alternatively, semi-structured interviews may be used to
explore and explain themes that have emerged from the use of
a questionnaire (Tashakkori and Teddlie 1998).
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When to use non-Standardized
(qualitative) interviews
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Data quality issues and preparing for the
interview
A number of data quality issues can be identified in relation to the
use of semi-structured and in-depth interviews, related to: reliability;
forms of bias; & validity and generalizability.
The lack of standardization in such interviews may lead to concerns
about reliability. In relation to qualitative research, reliability is
concerned with whether alternative researchers would reveal similar
information. The concern about reliability in these types of interview
is also related to issues of bias. There are various types of bias to
consider.
The first of these is related to interviewer bias. This is where the
comments, tone or non-verbal behavior of the interviewer creates
bias in the way that interviewees respond to the questions being
asked. This may be where you attempt to impose your own beliefs
and frame of reference through the questions that you ask.
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Data quality issues and preparing for
the interview
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Books
1.Research Methods for Graduate Business and Social
Science Students By: John Adams, Hafiz T.A. Khan, Robert
Raeside, David White; Page# 144-151
3. Research Methodology: Methods & Techniques By C.R.
Cothari Page#97-100
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