DiCicco-Bloom and Crabtree
Dilley
Gehlbach & Brinkworth
Price
Chenail
100
Interviewers should start with this type of question.
What is broad and open-ended?
100
Dilley claims this is the best way to learn how to interview.
What is analyze interviews?
100
This article examines ways to enhance the validity of these..
What are survey scales?
100
Interviews without these types of questions may result in relatively superficial accounts.
What are probing questions?
100
This expression means that the researcher should think of the information they are gathering in terms of a story, novel or movie, rich with context, locations, and characters.
What is "Data as the Star"?
200
Qualitative researchers often use this type of interview format.
What are semi-structured interviews?
200
The percentage of time an interviewer should spend talking during an interview.
What is 20%?
200
This type of validation is important as it may help provide clarity on language complexity and other concerns for the researcher.
What is expert validation?
200
This challenge involves deciding when and where to probe - considering respondent privacy against the goal of obtaining rich data.
What is managing 'space'?
200
A method of structuring papers where researchers order their data presentation so as to save the surprises and unforeseen discoveries for last.
What is dramatic presentation?
300
This is an important part of researching, where the interviewer needs to establish a safe and comfortable environment for sharing the interviewee’s personal experience and attitudes.
What is building rapport?
300
The four elements of interview practice are: Background information, interview analysis, protocol creation and revision, and this.
What is self-reflexive interviewing?
300
Info about how the target population thinks about the focal constructs may be obtained in interviews and these.
What are focus groups?
300
The third level of questioning in the "ladder". These questions are the most invasive and concern beliefs, values and deep seated feelings.
What is questions of personal philosophy?
300
A process that entails involving "the other" in your research.
What is Openness?
400
An interviewer is said to be this when he/she repeats the interviewee’s words in order to enrich the description while not leading the interviewee.
What is probing?
400
An interview should address these six areas about a topic.
What is the "who, what, where, when, why, and how"?
400
This process involves getting respondents to repeat questions in their own words and thinking out loud about how they would answer the question.
What is cognitive pretesting?
400
This type of probe involves the interviewer offering provocative questions that encourage respondents to take a stance, argue their case.
What is probing by leading?
400
Mel Brooks' definition of comedy, and a good way to structure your papers.
What is "Juxtaposition, Juxtaposition, Juxtaposition!"?
500
The phase when the interviewee becomes engaged in an in-depth description
What is the exploration phase?
500
In an interview, researchers must listen to what the person is saying, compare what the person says to what we know, compare what the person says to the questions on the rest of protocol, THIS and offer information to prompt reflection/clarification.
What is be cognizant of time?
500
One goal of the literature review is to precisely this the construct in relation to literature.
What is define?
500
When respondents exhibited positive emotions such as this, the interviewer became more confident to ask more searching questions.
What is laughter (at the situation or themselves)?
500
Chenail's first name.
What is Ronald?
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