Conducting Interviews

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Conducting Interviews "The purpose of interviewing...is to allow us to enter the other p erson's perspective.” – Michael Quinn Patton

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Conducting Interviews. "The purpose of interviewing...is to allow us to enter the other person's perspective .” – Michael Quinn Patton. Goals for the next 30 minutes:. How to plan and conduct interviews Different types of questions The importance of listening - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Conducting Interviews

Page 1: Conducting Interviews

Conducting Interviews

"The purpose of interviewing...is to allow us to

enter the other person's perspective.” –

Michael Quinn Patton

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Goals for the next 30 minutes:1. How to plan and conduct interviews2. Different types of questions3. The importance of listening4. Giving you a chance to practice writing

interview questions

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Pre-Interview 1: Develop clear objectives:• Are you looking for facts/opinions?• Do you have Open (the interviewee will have

the freedom to go into details) or Closed (yes/no) questions?

• Are you asking the right person for the information you want?

• Will your interviewee be comfortable with your questions?

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Pre-Interview 2: Decide how you want to conduct your interview:• In person?• By phone?• By email?

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Pre-Interview 3: Where?Your home?Their home?Somewhere neutral?

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Pre-Interview 4: Set-up an Appointment:

Introduce yourself and the purpose of your interviewDecide and agree upon a mutual time and locationDiscuss how much time you would like to speak to themExplain the question areas you want to pursue

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Question Planning Advice: Questions should…

Be clearBe in a logical orderBe connected to the previous questionBe designed to allow the interviewee to answer freely (avoid leading questions)Be written down

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The 6 Types of Topics in Interviews:

Behaviors – what a person has done or is doingOpinions/values – what a person thinks about a topicFeelings – how a person feels about a topicKnowledge – facts about a topicSensory – seen, touched, heard, tasted, or smelledBackground/demographics – age, education, etc.

You will need to spend some time deciding which of these question types will work best for collecting the information you need.

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During the InterviewHave your questions in front of youBe prepared to write down new questions as they pop up while the interviewee speaksSeek clarification – what is your interviewee really saying?

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Other Useful Interview Advice 1

Have a pen/pencil and paper ready to write – paraphrase whatever you heardIf you have something to record the person (audio or video), ask beforehand if they’re willing to have themselves recorded.

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Other Useful Interview Advice 2

Small talk can be good! – weather, sports, flowers, whatever – if you’re both relaxed and having a good time, you’ll get a lot more informationShare your writings with your interviewee later – they can clarify or give you more details on a topic addressed in the interview