Read Understanding Research Online
Authors: Marianne Franklin
More on these points in the next chapter. Suffice it to say that the basic steps for analysing the responses and then working with results of larger surveys where statistical analysis and random selection govern the design proceeed as follows:
Formalized ways of gathering personal data from human subjects also provide invaluable information for qualitatively inflected research inquiries. The basic rules
and procedures follow those outlined above. Incorporating surveys can be suitable for:
In light of the downside of survey work covered above, take note that
Figure 6.3
I can prove or disprove it. . .
Source
:
http://Vadlo.com
If a survey is in fact the bulk of the research then the sampling technique, questionnaire design, size of the sample, and eventual findings and analysis thereof move you into more specialized, statistically-based forms of research. This then requires you to be well enough versed in the finer points of survey design and execution to make the point relative to your research question, aims and objectives.
You can still carry out survey-based research, if not make use of survey work available in the public domain, if you keep in mind the following ground rules for achieving and evaluating good quality quantitative analysis:
Finally, as is the case across the board, trial and error, ‘pilot research’ in other words, before embarking on the formal data-collection phase is indispensable; standardized questionnaires need trying out, interview questions revised and tried out on willing guinea-pigs, software programs practised and applied in try-out examples.
Useful overviews are in Fowler (2002), Harkness et al. (2003). A review of web-based surveys is in Couper (2000); principles for asking sensitive questions are covered by Tourangeau and Smith (1996); Baehr (1980) is an example of surveys using in-depth interviewing; Lewis (2001) is a look at mass surveys and their role in public opinion research from the ‘other side’; for a cultural studies perspective see Deacon (2008); Deacon et al. (2007) address surveys for communications research.
Whilst some surveys are based on interviews, this section looks at interviews as a generic form of data-gathering in their own right.
Interviews conducted without depending on a standardized questionnaire are a well-known and productive way to gain insights from people, those in the know, ordinary people, or particular groups. A derivative of interviews –
focus groups
– is particularly popular in media and communications, business studies, and marketing. Some of the same rules of thumb laid out in the previous section apply to setting up and designing interviews and interview questions.
Interview and focus-group research generates large amounts of textual, including visual and audio material, the content of which requires time and attention to sorting and analysing the data, either in quantifiable form (word/phrase frequencies or volume) or by other, interpretative means; see
Chapter 7
. A combination of analytical interventions is possible, interpreting and then making use of interview material in strictly qualitative inquiries is heavy on text, citations as well as the commentary on them. In both cases, transcripts of interviews are your raw data.
As Berg puts it, interviewing is ‘simply conversation with a purpose’ (2009: 101). As such they are a core ingredient of much social research, the bread and butter of news and entertainment journalism, and used in various forms extensively in market research.
In distinction to large-scale and medium-sized surveys based on anonymous questionnaires or polling, a research interview is generally held between two persons.
It can be highly structured, using standardized questionnaires, relatively formal along a set of prepared questions, or very informal where interviewer and interviewee engage in an undirected conversation. The form an interview takes, its role in the data-gathering phase, and thereby decisions about how many interviews are sufficient for any project, depend once again on the aims and objectives of the inquiry; what sort of research question is at stake and what sort of information is being sought?
There are various ways of demarcating various sorts of interviews along with related techniques and reasons for undertaking each approach (see Berg 2009: 105, Gray 2009: 371). This discussion clusters them into three broad approaches, all of which are open to adaptation and the unexpected in real-life research scenarios. Three concerns are shared by all sorts of interview formats and their methodological implications:
As is the case with survey design, interview questions require time and thought, and try-outs should be done before the research proper can begin. This is important because the working assumption in these sorts of interviews is that what respondents say they do is in fact what they do, or what they feel, so questions need to elicit an
appropriate response (see Berg 2009: 105). Below is an overview of the different forms interviews can take, with accompanying pros and cons.
The working assumption here is that all respondents need to understand and respond to questions in a similar enough way so that responses can be collated in quantifiable terms, and then statistically analysed; the inferences drawn will then depend on the size and composition of the sample. When the researcher is looking for clear answers from, usually but not exclusively, a relatively large group of respondents – for example, news and entertainment preferences, shopping habits, voting behaviour, public opinion polling – ‘how often’, ‘ when’, and ‘what’ sorts of questions, singular or multi-choice, characterize this category. Standardized interviews are particularly suitable for research questions interested in gaining information, or in ascertaining the views, attitudes, or behaviour of respondents in a controlled manner; hence their use in survey work such as polling and market research; telephone-based research uses standardized questionnaires for one-to-one interviews that are randomly selected.
This format is not suitable for interviews premised on the interviewer playing a substantial role in the conversation and in that respect jointly generating the ‘raw’ material to be analysed. Open-ended, narrative-based or autobiographical sorts of inquiry do not lend themselves to standardized interview formats. This because the aim with this degree of formality in the interview is to obtain a standardized response, cover a particular territory, or ascertain a trend or set of behaviours across the sample; political pollsters use this format to good effect. Here the findings, and quality of the analysis, stand or fall on correctly formulated questions. You cannot collate or compare results across (groups of) respondents if the questions are too ‘fuzzy’, open to many sorts of answers, involve question and answer forms such as the interviewer asking ‘why?’, or ‘ tell me more about that’, or if a crucial question has been omitted.
Most interviews are formalized, somewhat artificial interactions in that the researcher has approached their interlocutor with a clear aim in mind, then assumed the lead by steering the conversation. However, working with human subjects brings with it always a degree of the unexpected; this too is accounted for in standardized formats through the ‘don’t know’, or ‘neutral’ response category. In practice, most interview situations are a subtle interplay between interviewer and interviewee; both an explicit agreement between the two parties, based on
informed consent
, about the reason for undertaking the interview, and an implicit sort of ‘meaning-making occasion’ for both (see
Chapters 3
and
5
; Berg 2009: 104). This is why interviewees are known to go on record, or comment afterwards about how the interview generated new ideas, insights or even memories for them as well.
The most popular sort of interview is the semi-standardized, or semi-structured one to which the researcher-interviewer brings a set of predetermined questions, or a line of questioning to the meeting. Sometimes the interviewee requests, or can be
sent these questions in advance. In any event the interviewer comes prepared for the respondent to digress, or for the direction of the interview to change along the way. How far the interviewer allows the interview to develop in various directions, or judges when it is time to return to the main theme, or lets the interviewee take control of the conversation (this can be consciously or unconsciously) depends not only on the sort of information the researcher wants to elicit but also the underlying rationale of the project.
In less structured settings, interviewers also need to contend with those moments when a line of questioning becomes too sensitive, a question misunderstood or tensions develop between the interviewer and interviewee; some questions may be out of bounds for official reasons (as with government officials), emotional or cultural ones (traumatic memories or inappropriate references by the interviewer). Sometimes the conversation generates less ‘significant’ material; but how insignificant may well require closer analysis at a later date.
At the other end of the spectrum from the standardized interview/questionnaire format, and moving away from the more directive even if more open-ended approach of the semi-structured interview, are scenarios that consciously forego a preconceived set of questions, or expectations about the response.
Sometimes, however, informal interviews do not start out as such; semi-formal interviews can often morph into one-on-one conversations. Whether this is desirable or not is a moot point and many first-timer research interviews can end up like this. Either way the net result is that the more informal the interview, the greater the input the researcher will have into the material generated. This affects how the same researcher handles the eventual material in the analysis phase. Indeed, it often takes a supervisor or examiner to notice that these sorts of interview transcripts often provide important insight into the researcher’s underlying motivations of the research, their assumptions and goals predicating the interviewee’s input.
When applied consciously, the unstructured approach is also suitable for certain sorts of settings: with people who may not feel comfortable or respond well to a more formal interview format, for example, those in unfamiliar cultural contexts, or disadvantaged groups. That said, the principles of informed consent and anonymity
for these sorts of interactions still need to make sense within the working principles of research codes of ethics (see
Chapter 3
, sixth section).
Cutting across these generic types is another designation: in-depth interviews. By definition these involve interviews with fewer people, over a longer period of time albeit not necessarily, or spread out over several meetings rather than one single comprehensive interview (see Berg 2009: 119–21). In normal parlance, when a research project undertakes ‘in-depth’ interviews the researcher/s is working at the semi-unstructured part of the spectrum.
A number of the practical considerations when preparing and carrying out interviews, whatever the eventual format you opt for, overlap those for surveys and questionnaire design. Others are specific to the more open-ended structure and expectations of the sort of material interviews will generate.
(a) Preparation matters: Preparing a set of questions, including the key topics you want to discuss as well as basic information about your interviewees, is highly advisable for all but the most open-ended sorts of research interview. Even the latter requires preparation; more on this below.
That said, note that for most interviews, even the most well crafted questions can and will provide all sorts of responses; from different people and sometimes from the same person as they contradict or correct themselves during or after the interview.
The output of the interview – recordings and/or notes – can also vary; some highly relevant for the research question, some digressing, and some challenging as interviewees take the researcher and the topic on. Sometimes they render little material because they digress, or because interviewees – as humans are wont to do – find ways of avoiding the topic.
At the outset of an interview the interviewer needs to establish rapport. This can be small talk or by way of preliminary information-eliciting questions (see Berg 2009: 112–17) before the more substantial questioning begins. Later, as you analyse the outcome, note how silence or diversions in the conversation can also speak volumes; comparable to a statistically significant result in standardized questionnaires in the ‘not applicable’, ‘no opinion’, ‘neutral’, or ‘don’t know’ category.
(b) Sorts of questions: Again, these practicalities overlap those for questionnaire design. For interviews based on qualitative sorts of questioning (i.e. open-ended rather than closed-ended questions and fewer of them), working on how to formulate as well as order the questions you want to ask helps you focus and refine your core questions; gets you to consider closely why exactly it is you are engaging this sort of interaction. Bearing in mind general pointers about question formulation, pitfalls to avoid when conducting interviews across a range of formats and context include:
(c) Sorts of settings – which is best? I often get asked by student researchers setting out to conduct interviews about the right, correct setting for an interview. As research becomes increasingly predicated on information and communication technologies, web-based media, products and services, the convenience of VOIP services (Skype being by far the most popular at time of writing) for interview purposes appear a given, yet create uncertainty about their validity.
But rather than set up premature hierarchies of value, the setting and manner for conducting the interviews, or mixture thereof, bears noting and considering in the set-up phase and eventual analysis and methodological explication. In this respect the variety of computer-mediated and technological mediations for facilitating interviews (including here video-conferencing or web-conferencing) are there to use. There is also research that has research interviews and focus groups (see the section on focus groups) conducted in purely online settings: virtual worlds (for example, Second Life) and between avatars. Again, this depends on the inquiry.
Wherever the interview takes place, these architectural aspects do play a part in the flow, pacing, and outcome of the interview; the significance of which is up to the researcher to consider.
(d) Dealing with tensions and disappointments: A brief word on tensions and disappointments, some of which have been mentioned already in passing, and some of these can be avoided, even for the novice research interviewer, by preparing the ground beforehand as well as expecting interviews to differ. Preparation, though, is your best means to avoiding major disappointments in projects with short time-spans.
Issues can arise beforehand, during, and afterwards.