Phenomenology is actually a
philosophical approach to interviewing. Different researchers have slightly
different methods and views for what they call phenomenology, I will be talking
about the view set forth by Seidman (2013). Phenomenology is examining the
experience of participants and the meaning they make of it; this view stresses
the transitory nature of human experience. As Seidman states (p. 16) "in
human experience, the 'will be' becomes the 'is' and then the 'was' in an instant."
Therefore as interviewers, we are interested in the participant's
"is," recognizing that it may change in the future.
Consider in most of life we are
seeing the world from our point of view, which may be quite different from how
others view it. In phenomenological interviewing, the goal, as the researcher,
is to set our own beliefs about the world aside and understand the world from
the interviewee's viewpoint. We will never fully understand their view, but we
must strive to come as close as we can.
Researchers emphasize that a
phenomenological approach focuses on the "lived experience" of
others. What does "lived experience" mean? It means both the
interviewer and interviewee step back and reflect on the reconstruction of what
the interviewee felt during the phenomenon of interest. Interviewers strive to
guide the interviewee to recreate mentally their lived experience, trying to
make the "was" into the "is."
Finally, a phenomenological
approach emphasizes the meaning of experiences. A basic assumption is that the
meaning people make of their experience affects how they live the experience.
By asking participants to reconstruct their experience and reflect on it,
researchers are asking people to give meaning to it. It is the context of the
experience: their feelings, rationale, and thoughts about the experience, which
gives it meaning. Therefore, understanding the person's words that he or she
chooses to use become very important; clarity of meaning is the goal. As an
interviewer, you must put the experience into the wider context of the person's
life. For example, knowing a woman is currently a dissertation student only can
be understood when you understand what it means to her in the context of her
life.
Next time we will consider doing
a 3 interview series. 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
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