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  2. Interview (research) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interview_(research)

    When choosing to interview as a method for conducting qualitative research, it is important to be tactful and sensitive in your approach. Interviewer and researcher, Irving Seidman, devotes an entire chapter of his book, Interviewing as Qualitative Research, to the importance of proper interviewing technique and interviewer etiquette.

  3. Qualitative research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Qualitative_research

    Research interviews are an important method of data collection in qualitative research. An interviewer is usually a professional or paid researcher, sometimes trained, who poses questions to the interviewee, in an alternating series of usually brief questions and answers, to elicit information.

  4. Semi-structured interview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semi-structured_interview

    A semi-structured interview is a method of research used most often in the social sciences. While a structured interview has a rigorous set of questions which does not allow one to divert, a semi-structured interview is open, allowing new ideas to be brought up during the interview as a result of what the interviewee says. The interviewer in a ...

  5. Interview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interview

    One form of unstructured interview is a focused interview in which the interviewer consciously and consistently guides the conversation so that the interviewee's responses do not stray from the main research topic or idea. [3] Interviews can also be highly structured conversations in which specific questions occur in a specified order. [4]

  6. Methodology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methodology

    Some researcher employ the go-along method by conducting interviews while they and the participants navigate through and engage with their environment. [81] Focus groups are a qualitative research method often used in market research. They constitute a form of group interview involving a small number of demographically similar people ...

  7. Structured interview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structured_interview

    A structured interview (also known as a standardized interview or a researcher-administered survey) is a quantitative research method commonly employed in survey research. The aim of this approach is to ensure that each interview is presented with exactly the same questions in the same order. This ensures that answers can be reliably aggregated ...

  8. Online interview - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_interview

    An online video conference interview. An online interview is an online research method conducted using computer-mediated communication (CMC), [1] such as instant messaging, email, or video. Online interviews require different ethical considerations, sampling and rapport than practices found in traditional face-to-face (F2F) interviews.

  9. Member check - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Member_check

    In qualitative research, a member check, also known as informant feedback or respondent validation, is a technique used by researchers to help improve the accuracy, credibility, validity, and transferability (also known as applicability, internal validity, [1] or fittingness) of a study. [2]