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Methodology Notes

Ethnography- principles in practice

Oral Accounts and the role of interviewing p97-121.

  • Tension- accounts of people- sources of info about selves and world live in p97.
    • Vs- accounts social products which can tell us about socio-cultural processes which are generated
  • Views of importance of accounts
    • Authors
    • Accounts- what tell us about phenomena they refer
    • Analyse perspectives they imply psychosocial dynamics
  • Accounts useful- not accepted on face value p98. 
  • Informants to collect information ethnographer can’t
    • Or to check inferences from observations
  • Comments
    • Evidence of perspectives
    • Subcultures, cultures which they belong
  • Understand bias better context
    • Presuppositions
    • How produced
    • For whom
    • why
  • Treat as a resource and a topic p99.

Unsolicited and solicited oral accounts

  • Unsolicited- often if a misalignment between perceived values, rules etc and the actual course of events
  • Other motives- relay news, gossip, integral to human social relations
  • Areas useful about
    • Setting
    • Perspectives
    • Concerns
    • Discursive practices
  • Good sites
    • Staffroom
      • About particular students
      • Moods
      • Characters
      • Prospects
    • Attitudes to national political events
  • Often to make sure researcher understands the situation “correctly”
    • Counteract what “others” have been saying
    • Or counteract presumed interpretations of researcher
  • Limitation to try solicited accounts
    • Threatening
    • Inappropriate
    • Answers of little value
      • Try to move into innocuous areas  p100.
      • Finding out “game”
      • Being “hip,” knowledgeable- understand with minimal cues
  • If elite, difficult to answer- cast in light as an expert to get better answers
  • Becker and Greer p101.
    • Not only solicited- fear could be misled by reactivity- effect of researchers questions on what was said
    • Co-constructed (Polter, Hepburn)
  • Naturalism- non directive interviewing
    • Talk at length on their terms- open expression of perspective
  • “even when the researcher plays no role at all in generating the account, one can never be sure that his or her presence was not an important influence.”
    • Answering ‘reasonably’ an unspoken question
    • Non-directive questions and unsolicited doesn’t remove bias
  • Reactivity one issue of effect of audience and context generally p102.
    • No “pure” data- discover best way of interpreting- collect more to check inferences
      • Know how data effected
  • Interview v. useful- often only way to get some data.- often only way to get some data,
  • Observation effects how interviews interpreted and vice versa
  • Different research strategies produce different data and different conclusions p103.

Selecting Informants

  • Self-selection p104.
    • Therapeutic
    • Keep updated- report news v. useful (if asked to keep informed)
  • People selected
    • Hide data
    • Speed?
      • Can be misleading
      • Cannot search- needed for reflexive approach
  • Negotiation- often with gatekeepers first
  • Snowball effect- hope individual knows names of others p105.
  • Available resources and opportunity costs- selecting interviewee’s p106.
  • Multiple interviews useful
    • Trace patterns of change over time
    • Further info needed- checking previous info
  • Research of role
    • Suitable size at random
    • Stratified- takes account of heterogeneity
      • Needs clear boundaries and full listing of members
      • Or not able to interview many
      • Try representative
        • Ask informants what are/ not representative views
        • Comparing characteristic of sample with what is known by the population as a whole
  • Representative not needed if seeking info, not perspectives
    • Follow social distribution of knowledge
    • Motives of those in roles

Informants especially sensitive to area of concern

  • Outsider- vantage point- different culture, class, community
  • Rookie- surprised by taken for granted status of things, no stake?
  • Nouveau statused- transition between positions- tensions of experience vivid
  • Naturally reflective and objective person in the field

More willing to reveal  p107.

  • Naïve- of what fieldworker represents, or of own group
  • Frustrated- rebel, malcontent- conscious of blocked drives and impulses
  • Outs- lost power. Ins- negative facts about colleagues
  • Old hand/fixture
    • No stake
    • So secure. Not jeopardized in exposing others
  • Needy
    • Craves attention and support. As long as interviewer satisfies- will talk
  • Subordinate
    • Adapt to superiors- insights to cushion force of authority- could be hostile, willing to “blow top”
  • Also- those most likely to develop and test emerging analytic ideas
  • Problems
    • Can’t interview all
    • Could take time
    • Involve cost to obtain interview
    • Not useful
      • Leverage needed
      • Speak off script
      • Emergency causes interviewee to leave
  • Might need to revise on basis of experience

Interviews as participant observer p108.

  • Formal interviews- understanding found might not reflect behaviour elsewhere
  • Relating perspectives from interviews to actions in other settings- issue
  • Artificiality- useful for seeing how they would react to different stimuli or different settings
  • Useful in penetrating barriers people might put up in everyday life
  • Observation and interviewing not as dissimilar as some claim p109.
    • Context
    • Effect of researcher
  • Identities- can be revised during course of interview
    • Common identity- build rapport
    • What not shared- often redefined during the course of the interview
  • Building rapport key
    • Especially if no previous contact made
    • Presentation of self
      • Different clothes for different age groups
      • Shared interests, biographical experiences developing new interests
      • AVOID DAMAGING INDENTITIES
  • Personal information
    • Strategic and ethical to give out some
    • Questions of level of appropriate disclosure and of what
  • Need to maintain interview situation- especially with relatively powerful
    • Too deferential
    • Seeking rapport too much
    • Set up to show you’re in control e.g. arrive early if it is their space p110.
  • Nature/Tone
    • First few minutes key- implicit/explicit negotiation
    • Reason for interview and reassurance of confidentiality
    • Small talk
  • Manner key- subject watches to see if comments appropriate- sign of judgemental reaction
    •  Gives indication of acceptance at beginning
    • Follow what is said- appropriate reaction
    • Aim to facilitate conversation
      • Give interviewee more leeway to talk on their own terms than in standardized interviews
  • Alone
    • Give info they otherwise would not
      • Not necessarily always true
      • Opinions more genuine
      • More truly reflect perspectives
      • What say on other occasions (depends on orientation towards others, including researcher)
  • Subject aware “speaking for posterity” – affect
  • Doubt confidentiality- seek to “leak” info p111.
  • More than one person present
    • Watch reactions of others
    • Join In
  • Group
    • Interview more
    • Can seem less threatening- more forthcoming (overcome shy person)
    • Depends on group/ topic e.g. bullying
  • Follow-up interviews often more relaxed
  • Focus Group p112.
    • Works with some, not others
  • Group changes what is said
    • Harder to maintain control of a topic
    • Informants prompt each other to respond
    • Helpful for some- elite, white collar criminals p113.
  • Group needs to be monitored
    • Accounts created for other issues- e.g. laughter
  • Where and when important p114.
    • Often can’t control
    • Classrooms not always best
    • Considerations
      • Likely distractions- work, opinions of others
      • Whose “territory”
        • Control in situation
          • E.g. stripper in a strip club- be aware of power scenarios
        • Respondent plays a game
        • Office
          • Coffee table- informal setting- comfortable
          • Desk
            • Confidence of subject
            • Adds to formality and sense of individual
        • Useful to be on their territory- adds confidence
          • Insight into how they see themselves and the world
        • Or to set interviewer in control- appropriate
  • How interview fits in with subjects life
    • Not necessarily time- out for participants from their schedule
    • If talk is business- interview routine those unfamiliar behave differently
    • Responses affected by the rest of their lives and how they feel
  • Telephone p117.
    • Easier access to many
    • Elicit info not otherwise forthcoming

Types of Question

  • Interview structured by subject and researcher
  • Normally
    • Not sure of exact questions
    • Do not ask each exactly same questions
    • List of issues to be covered
    • No fixed order of topics- let flow naturally
    • Change style of questions based on intended effect
  • Non-directive- triggers to stimulate interview in a wider area
    • Sharply defined could exclude data you hadn’t thought to look for
    • Personal and community knowledge can intrude about what the interview is to be “about” p118.
      • Subjects can insist on researcher using background knowledge – children and school assumptions
  • Active listening
    • How what is said relates
    • Reflects circumstances of interview- shape course to relevancy
      • Clarification of ambiguity
  • Test emerging inferences with direct questions p119.
    • Or if suspect informant lying
    • Expression of doubt can lead to people trying to defy critics
    • Confrontation with existing knowledge
      • Tell all- to get “your” truth out
      • Care with elites- won’t tolerate questions
        • Persistent not belligerent
  • Leading questions useful to test hypotheses or penetrate fronts p120.  
    • Assess direction of likely bias
  • Lead opposite to direction expected- test
    • Keep up identity as a competent participant

Conclusion

  • Interviewer-

o   social event

o   participant observer

  • Interviews

o   Info on events

o   And explain discursive practices of those who produce them