LTGPublicWiki:

Introduction

Interviews are a research method which involve the resaercher asking questions and recieving answers from the people he/she is interviewing.

Interview types differ in relation to the degree of structure and standardization they encompass. Commonly used typology distinguishes between:

Semi-structured interviews and unstructured interviews are often described as indepth interviews.

Interviews are commonly used as a method to collect data within qualitative research, however they can be used to give extra depth to quantitative research, or to lay the groundwork for a larger study (e.g. to investigate what questions need to be asked in a large scale questionnaire).

Advantages and Disadvantages

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Interviewing Tips

Do:

Don’t:

Interviewing People About IT

It is particuarly problamatic when researchers need to conduct interviews concerning IT with non-high-end users of IT. Asking your average lecturer or researcher about "IT services", "networks", "VLE", "security" ect. is using language and vocabulary that does not map to their world. When gathering requirements it is difficult to ask people what they want when they are not aware of the solutions or the way thatt hese solutions could fit into their working processes.

As part of its initiative to profile a representitive sample of OUCS's users and gather requirements for OUCS services the CRT has developed a semi-structured interview schedule that investigates perceptions and requirements of university teachers concerning IT. The interviewer asks the interviewees about what they do for their job, what they do in their teaching (and to a lesser extent admin and research), what they would like to achieve or improve upon and how they use computers in all these tasks. The processes they use to undertake tasks (e.g. preparing teaching materials, organizing meetings, managing a research group) are recorded and their work social networks and IT support routes noted. This is then analysed and IT solutions mapped to processes.

The interview schedule has been pilot tested and refined and is now in use. Go to the Connecting Technology and University Teaching Interview Schedule

Ethical Issues

The personal, conversational nature of interview situations raise a number of ethical issues. Even if you think the interview is on a very mundane or practical topic the very act of questioning can make some people feel intimidated or uneasy. It is important think about issues of confidentiality and who has access to the data that you gather. You must state clearly why you are conducting the interview and what you are going to do with the data. This could be done by giving each interviewee a letter at the beginning of the interview.

See an example of an Informed_Consent_Letter

Example CRT Interview Schedules

LTGPublicWiki: CRT.Interviews (last edited 2013-05-20 11:29:50 by localhost)