I have been repeatedly asked by
students to talk more about qualitative studies, so let's begin that with
talking about interviewing. I will be using as the basis for my posts Seidman's
(2013) book on interviewing. So why do interviews? Interviewing is hearing
people's stories, understanding the meaning of their behavior and how they see
the world.
The purpose of
interviewing is not to test a hypothesis or to evaluate, rather it is to
discover the lived experience of people and to understand the meaning they give
the experience. This means listening to people, and as an interviewer,
realizing that you are not having a mutual discussion. Instead you are
listening to what the participant has to say. You need to show that you are
valuing their opinion and not leading them to respond in a way that serves your
own agenda.
Phrasing your
research question becomes very important; you must not have a predetermined
outcome in mind. Thus if you are interested in the experience of online
students in writing a dissertation, you DO NOT want to ask: Do online
dissertation students hate working in an online environment? You are predicting
an outcome. Instead, a more general question is better: What is the lived
experience of being an online dissertation student?
Next time I will consider when you should not consider doing
interviews. Do you have an issue or a
question that you would like me to discuss in a future post? Would you like to
be a guest writer? Send me your ideas! leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
Seidman, I. (2013).
Interviewing as qualitative research,
4th Ed. NY: Teacher's College Press.
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