interviews and questionnaires (1)

23
INTERVIEWS AND QUESTIONNAIRES

Category:

Education


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

INTERVIEWS AND QUESTIONNAIRE

S

Page 2: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

INTERVIEWS• Allow us to

enter into the other person’s perspective

PERSON TO PERSON OR

GROUP INTERVIEW

Page 3: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

Types of interviews

Highly structure

dSemi

structured

Unstructured

Page 4: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

HIGHLY STRUCTURED

• Also called Stantardized interviews

• Questions and their order are determined ahead of time.

• They are rigidly adhering to predetermined questions and may not allow participants to show their perspectives and understandings of the world

Page 5: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

SEMI STRUCTURED

• It is more open ended and less structured

• It is guided by a list of questions or issues. • The exact words nor the order of questions is

determined ahead of time

• All the questions are more flexibly worded. • Specific information is desired from all the respondents

Page 6: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

UNSTRUCTURED• Informal interviews

• There is no predetermined set of questions• It is essentially exploratory

• It is used to learn enough information about a situation to formulate more questions for subsequent interviews

Page 7: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

GOOD QUESTIONS

HYPOTHETICAL

DEVIL’S ADVOCATE

IDEAL POSITION

INTERPRETIVE

Page 8: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

Type of Question ExampleHYPOTHETICAL: Asks what the respondent might do or what it might be like in a particular situation, they usually start with “What if”or “Suppose”

“Suppose it is my first day in this training program. What would be like?”

DEVIL’S ADVOCATE: Challenges the respondent to consider an opposing view. You want respondents’ opinions and feelings

“Some people would say that employees who lose their job did something to bring it about. What would you say to them? ”

IDEAL POSITION: Asks the respondent to describe an ideal situation. Elicit both information and opinión.

“What do you think the ideal training program would be like?”

INTERPRETIVE: Advances tentative interpretation of what the respondent has been saying and asks for a reaction

“Would you say that returning to school as an adult is different from what you expected”

Page 9: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

QUESTIONS TO AVOID

MULTIPLE QUESTIO

NS

LEADING QUESTIO

NS

YES-NO QUESTIO

NS

Page 10: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

Types of Questions Examples

MULTIPLE QUESTIONS: They are actually a double question or a series of single questions

How do you feel about instructurs and the classes?

LEADING QUESTIONS: They reveal a bias or an assumption that the researcher is making

What emotional problems have you had since losing your job?

YES OR NO QUESTIONS: Any question can be answered with a simple yes or no

Do you like the program?Has returning to school been difficult?

Page 11: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

RECORDING INTERVIEW DATA

Page 12: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

TIPS

Use probes

Use of pseudony

ms

Be respectful,

nonjudgemental

Check time and resources

Page 13: Interviews and questionnaires (1)
Page 14: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

QUESTIONNAIRES

•Questions are usually set out in very systematic way.• The questionnaire is answered by reading the questions and ticking responses, or writing in short answers

Page 15: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

IN QUESTIONNAIRES RESEARCHES CAN ASK…

Facts/personal

perceptionsExperiences/

anecdotesOpinions/

preferences Ideas

Page 16: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

Questionnaires

Take longer to prepare

They have to be carefully

writtenThey should be piloted

They save time

Page 17: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

PILOTING PROCESS• When piloting, you should ask yourself:1. Were the instructions clear and easy to follow?2. Were the questions clear?3. Were you able to answer all the questions?4. Did you find any of the questions: Embarrasing?

Irrelevant? Patronising? Irritating? 5. How long did the questionnaire take to complete?

Page 18: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

QUESTIONNAIRE PREPARATION

PURPOSEHANDLIN

G THE DATA

Page 19: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

DESIGN CLARITY

SIMPLICITY

• RELEVANCE

CLOSED AND OPEN QUESTIONS

Page 20: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

ACTIVITY

• Create a five questions interview and a five questions questionnaire based on your research project

Page 21: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

Final paper• It has to include:INTRODUCTIONThree main paragraphs in which you first state what your research project is about; second, tell the reader what led you to conduct the Project; and third, announce the contents of the document, specifying what will appear in each of the chapters. However, if you consider necessary to write one or a couple of additional paragraphs, do not hesitate to do it whenever relevant

Page 22: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

CHAPTER 1Statement of the problemResearch question(s)General objetiveSpecific objetivesCHAPTER 2Literature reviewTheoretical FrameworkCHAPTER 3ParadigmApproachSettingParticipantsInstruments (just mention them)

Page 23: Interviews and questionnaires (1)

POSTER SESSIONS(november 8, 10 and 11)

•Check the virtual room in order to know specific information about these sessions