Conducting An Interview
Conducting An Interview
Unstructured interview. The interviewer uses at most an 'aide memoir' - notes to jog the
memory - rather than a list of questions. The interview may be like a conversation, with the
interviewer responding to the interviewee and letting them speak freely.
Structured interview. The interviewer asks the interviewee a series of specific questions,
to which a fixed range of answers are possible ('ticking a box'). This is the typical form of
interview used in social survey research, and can provide quantitative data, as in a
questionnaire.
Sampling
When you design your project you need to take into account how many people you need to
interview to make the research valid or for 'population validity'. If you are investigating a narrow
but deep subject you may not need to interview that many people. You may be interested in the
opinions and experiences of experts or people with direct experience - a purposive rather than a
random sample.
If you are interviewing a small number of people you must make sure that the sample is as
appropriate as possible to your research.
Larger samples are normally employed in quantitative research using methods such as
questionnaires.
Make sure you introduce yourself and explain the aim of the interview. Also adhere to
academic ethics by making sure the interviewee is fully aware of the purpose of the
research
Devise your questions so they help to answer your research question, and make sure all
the questions are relevant
Try and have a sequence to your questions or topics by grouping them in themes that
follow a logical sequence
That said, make sure that you can easily move back and forth between questions or topic
areas, as your interviewee may naturally move on to another subject
Make sure your questions are clear and easy to understand - only use technical or
academic language if you are sure your interviewee will understand what you mean
Do not ask leading questions. Make sure people are free to give their own, honest
answers.
Kinds of question
Kvale (1996)* has identified nine types of question asked in qualitative interviews. Keep these in
mind when you are composing your interview guide.
Introducing questions: 'Why did you...?' or 'Can you tell me about...?' Through these
questions you introduce the topic.
Follow up questions: Through these you can elaborate on their initial answer. Questions
may include: 'What did you mean...?' or 'Can you give more detail...?'
Probing questions: You can employ direct questioning to follow up what has been said
and to get more detail. 'Do you have any examples?' or 'Could you say more about...?'
Specifying questions: Such as 'What happened when you said that?' or 'What did he
say next?'
Direct questions: Questions with a yes or no answer are direct questions. You might
want to leave these questions until the end so you don't lead the interviewee to answer a
certain way.
Indirect questions: You can ask these to get the interviewee's true opinion.
Structuring questions: These move the interview on to the next subject. For example,
'Moving on to...'
Silence: Through pauses you can suggest to the interviewee that you want them to
answer the question!
Transcription
Once you have completed your interviews you will have to transcribe your notes by copying what
was said into a word-processed document. Modern digital recorders allow you to download a
recording onto a computer and then slow it down to a useful speed. Transcribing can take a very
long time - a ten-minute interview could take one hour or more to transcribe, depending on how
quickly you can type, how fast the interviewee speaks and how clear the recording is.
If you only have a short time in which to complete a research project make sure you do not overestimate the number of people you can interview and transcribe.
Once you have completed the interview, reflect on how it went. Was there anything you could
have done better? Do you need to add any questions or topic areas? Is there anything you should
have explained to the interviewees?
Analysing interviews
Once you have transcribed your interview(s) you may have a lot of data. How are you going to
analyse it?
Some of it won't be useful, perhaps because the interviewee didn't keep to the subject, or gave
background information which is not needed.
Of the relevant information, you could pick out key points and quotes to illustrate your points. You
could also code the information - essentially you could turn a qualitative interview into
quantitative data. You would do this by identifying passages of text and applying labels to them
to show that they are an example of a theme. For example, if you asked 20 people how they
travelled to work and one of the answers given was 'by car' this would be one thematic code. 'By
bike' could be another, as could 'walking', etc.
You could perhaps code car as '1' and 'bike' as '2' etc, and then add and analyse the data in a
spreadsheet, thus giving you the chance to generate charts and graphs to better illustrate your
answers.
You could also use a qualitative research tool such as Nvivo, a program that helps you to classify
your data using codes. Alternatively, if you had a small sample you could simply create a table on
a piece of paper listing how many people said 'car' and how many said 'bike'.
* Kvale S. (1996) InterViews: An Introduction to Qualitative Research Interviews, Sage
Publications, California