Cards (44)

  • What are the difficulties of conducting group interviews with young children?
    Children may struggle to express themselves.
  • What advantages do group interviews offer when interviewing young children?
    Participants may feel more comfortable together.
  • What are the learning objectives of this topic?
    • Understand structured vs. unstructured interviews
    • Evaluate strengths and limitations of interviews
    • Apply understanding to education studies
  • What is an alternative to written questionnaires for data collection?
    Interviews
  • How do structured interviews differ from unstructured interviews?
    Structured interviews follow strict question guidelines.
  • What are structured interviews similar to?
    Questionnaires
  • What is the main characteristic of structured interviews?
    They ask the same questions in the same order.
  • What are unstructured interviews also known as?
    Discovery interviews
  • What is a semi-structured interview?
    It has common questions but allows probing.
  • Who used group interviews in their research on schooling?
    Paul Willis
  • What is a focus group?
    A group discussing specific topics together.
  • What are the strengths of group interviews?
    • Comfort in group settings
    • Stimulates richer data through interaction
    • Generates initial ideas for further research
    • Observes group dynamics
  • What are the limitations of group interviews?
    • Dominance by one or two individuals
    • Researcher must maintain focus
    • Peer pressure may inhibit honesty
    • Complex analysis of group interactions
  • Which type of interview is quicker to conduct?
    Structured interviews
  • Why might unstructured interview results be harder to compare?
    They allow for varied responses and questions.
  • What do structured interviews typically involve?
    Closed-ended questions with pre-set answers.
  • What is a practical issue with structured interviews?
    Training interviewers is straightforward and inexpensive.
  • What is a benefit of structured interviews regarding sample size?
    They can cover large numbers efficiently.
  • What is a limitation of structured interviews regarding response rates?
    They may attract untypical respondents.
  • Who conducted structured interviews on the extended family?
    Young and Willmott
  • What makes structured interviews reliable?
    Standardized questions ensure consistent results.
  • What is a criticism of structured interviews regarding validity?
    They may produce a false picture of the topic.
  • How can interviewer bias affect structured interviews?
    It may influence the answers given by interviewees.
  • What type of questions do structured interviews typically use?
    Closed-ended questions
  • What is the main focus of structured interviews?
    Gathering straightforward factual information.
  • What is the average duration of structured interviews conducted by Young and Willmott?
    About half an hour to an hour.
  • What is the significance of using closed-ended questions in structured interviews?
    They allow for easy quantification of results.
  • What is a potential issue with the data obtained from structured interviews?
    Participants may lie or exaggerate their responses.
  • How does the social interaction in interviews affect data collection?
    It may introduce bias into the responses.
  • What is the risk associated with interviewer bias?
    It can influence the interviewee's answers.
  • What are the two main types of interviews in sociological research?
    Structured and unstructured interviews
  • Why do positivists favor structured interviews?
    They are rich in reliability and representativity
  • What do interpretivists prefer unstructured interviews for?
    They are rich in validity
  • What is the delivery method of structured interviews?
    Face-to-face or over-the-phone
  • What type of questions are used in structured interviews?
    Pre-set closed-ended questions
  • What are the advantages of structured interviews?
    • Easy and cheap to train interviewers
    • Cheap and easy to administer
    • Representative of a wide sample
    • Results are quantifiable
    • Reliable due to reproducibility
  • What are the disadvantages of structured interviews?
    • Lack of validity due to closed-ended answers
    • Potential for interviewees to lie or exaggerate
  • What type of questions do unstructured interviews primarily use?
    Open-ended questions
  • What is a key benefit of unstructured interviews?
    They build a strong relationship with interviewees
  • What are the advantages of unstructured interviews?
    • Develop rapport with interviewees
    • Flexible questioning
    • Valid data due to open conversation