
eBook - ePub
Learning From Strangers
The Art and Method of Qualitative Interview Studies
- 256 pages
- English
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- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Learning From Strangers is the definitive work on qualitative research interviewing. It draws on Robert Weiss's thirty years of experience in interviewing and teaching others how to do it. The most effective interviews, says Weiss, rely on creating cooperation -- an open and trusting alliance between interviewer and respondent, dedicated to specific and honest accounts of both internal and external events. Against the eclectic background of his work in national sample surveys, studies based on semi-structured interviewing, and participant observation, Weiss walks the reader through the method of qualitative interview studies: sample selection, development of an interview guide, the conduct of the interview, analysis, and preparation of the data. Weiss gives examples of successful and less successful interviews and offers specific techniques and guidelines for the practitioner.
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Information
Chapter 1
INTRODUCTION
WHY WE INTERVIEW
Interviewing gives us access to the observations of others. Through interviewing we can learn about places we have not been and could not go and about settings in which we have not lived. If we have the right informants, we can learn about the quality of neighborhoods or what happens in families or how organizations set their goals. Interviewing can inform us about the nature of social life. We can learn about the work of occupations and how people fashion careers, about cultures and the values they sponsor, and about the challenges people confront as they lead their lives.
We can learn also, through interviewing, about peopleās interior experiences. We can learn what people perceived and how they interpreted their perceptions. We can learn how events affected their thoughts and feelings. We can learn the meanings to them of their relationships, their families, their work, and their selves. We can learn about all the experiences, from joy through grief, that together constitute the human condition.
Interviewing gives us a window on the past. We may become aware of a riot or a flood only after the event, but by interviewing the people who were there we can picture what happened. We can also, by interviewing, learn about settings that would otherwise be closed to us: foreign societies, exclusive organizations, and the private lives of couples and families.
Interviewing rescues events that would otherwise be lost. The celebrations and sorrows of people not in the news, their triumphs and failures, ordinarily leave no record except in their memories. And there are, of course, no observers of the internal events of thought and feeling except those to whom they occur. Most of the significant events of peopleās lives can become known to others only through interview.
SURVEY INTERVIEWING AND QUALITATIVE INTERVIEWING
Interviews can be as prepackaged as the polling or survey interview in which questions are fixed and answers limited: āDo you consider yourself to be a Republican, a Democrat, or something else?ā There is a high art to developing such items and analyzing them, and for years this has been a respected way to collect interview information.
The great attraction of fixed-item, precategorized-response survey interviews is that because they ask the same questions of every respondent, with the same limited options for response, they can report the proportion of respondents who choose each option: 40% Democrat, 38% Republican, 15% Independent, 7% Other or Donāt Know. Furthermore, the standardization of question and response permits comparisons among subgroups, so that, for example, the responses of men can be compared with those of women. Categorized responses to fixed-item interviews can also serve as the raw material for statistical models of social dynamics.
Studies whose ultimate aim is to report how many people are in particular categories or what the relationship is between being in one category and another are justly called quantitative. They are quantitative not because they collect numbers as information, although they may (for example, in response to the question āHow many years have you lived at this address?ā), but, rather, because their results can be presented as a table of numbers (for example, in a table entitled Proportions of People in the Labor Force, Grouped by Age, Who Have at Least Some SelfEmployment Income).
Quantitative studies pay a price for their standardized precision. Because they ask the same questions in the same order of every respondent, they do not obtain full reports. Instead, the information they obtain from any one person is fragmentary, made up of bits and pieces of attitudes and observations and appraisals.
If we want more from respondents than a choice among categories or brief answers to open-ended items, we would do well to drop the requirement that the questions asked of all respondents be exactly the same. For example, if we are free to tailor questions to respondents in a study of working mothers, we can ask a working mother who has a special-needs child about the quality of the school program she has found, and we can ask a working mother whose children are not yet school age about the worries of leaving her children in day care. And we can make clear to each respondent when we need further examples or explanations or discussions. Furthermore, we can establish an understanding with the respondents that it is their full story we want and not simply answers to standardized questions.
Interviews that sacrifice uniformity of questioning to achieve fuller development of information are properly called qualitative interviews, and a study based on such interviews, a qualitative interview study. Because each respondent is expected to provide a great deal of information, the qualitative interview study is likely to rely on a sample very much smaller than the samples interviewed by a reasonably ambitious survey study. And because the fuller responses obtained by the qualitative study cannot be easily categorized, their analysis will rely less on counting and correlating and more on interpretation, summary, and integration. The findings of the qualitative study will be supported more by quotations and case descriptions than by tables or statistical measures.
In general, if statistical analysis is our goal, we would do better to use a survey approach. The survey approach is preferable if we want to compare some specific aspect of different groups: to compare, for example, the job satisfaction of workers in different firms. It is also preferable if we hope to use statistical analysis to identify linkages among phenomena, especially where the phenomena are unlikely to be recognized by respondents as linked. An example would the contribution of parental loss in childhood to vulnerability to depression in adult life.
On the other hand, if we depart from the survey approach in the direction of tailoring our interview to each respondent, we gain in the coherence, depth, and density of the material each respondent provides.1 We permit ourselves to be informed as we cannot be by brief answers to survey items. The report we ultimately write can provide readers with a fuller understanding of the experiences of our respondents.
We need not restrict ourselves to just the one approach. Standardized items can be appended to qualitative interviews. And usually we can produce numerical data from qualitative interview studies that have explored the same area with different respondents, although we may have to engage in a time-consuming and cumbersome coding procedure and tolerate lots of missing data.
The following excerpt, from an interview conducted for a study of adjustment to retirement, provides an example of the material that can be obtained in qualitative interviews. The respondent is a woman of 66, formerly a department head in a firm in the creative arts, retired for almost 2 years at the time of the interview. This is the third interview in which she was a respondent. The first had been held before her retirement, the second a few months after it.
The interview took place in one of the research projectās offices. In this excerpt the interviewer and respondent have just taken a few minutes to recall the projectās aims, and now the respondent is describing her current situation:
RESPONDENT : My life isāthe euphemism I guess today is ācouch potato.ā I stay home. I try to go out as infrequently as I can. When I say āout,ā I mean, like shopping ⦠um, going any place. I listen to a lot of music. I read a great deal. And I watch television a great deal. I donāt see anyone. I do speak to my daughter; I speak to her on the phone. Thatās it! All the things that I thought I would do, if I werenāt in a working situation ⦠Iād be writing, Iād create, Iād start a business. I had so many ideas while I was still working. I sort ofānow maybe this is fanciful thinkingābut I sort of pride myself on being a person who comes up with ideas fairly easily. When I say āideas,ā I mean practical, good ideas and creative ideas. But I have no opportunity to ⦠Oh, my only hobby is crossword puzzles, [chuckles] Which is more of the same, just sitting there in isolation.
Iām not unhappy with my situation. But just that I feel like that the past year ⦠wasnāt unpleasantānone of it is unpleasantābut it really didnāt matter whether I ⦠had been alive last year or not. Except in terms of what I can offer to my daughter, whoās in Syracuse. I havenāt been to visit my daughter and her husband in almost a year. Well, partly itās because of health. Iām afraid to drive a full six and a half hours. Because I do get very, very dizzy and have to pull up to the side of the road. So, you know, itās difficult. But, you know, if I really wanted to open my door, I could take a plane. I could take a taxi over to the airport, and I could fly there. I mean, I could be doing things. I could find alternative ways. But I just donāt want to. I donāt know if you remember, but Iāve sort of let myself go. Iām all gray now, practically. Which is okay. If you decide to be. Iām going around in sneakers. I donāt have a pair of shoes anymore. Itās not a sloppiness. Itās just like Iām wearing house slippers all the time, you know, except that itās acceptable in the street. Itās like nothing really matters that much. I was going to put on shoesāI mean, you know, real pumps, I mean, the kind that I used to wearāwhen I came here. And I ⦠it was like I was torn between pride in my appearance and the fact that it doesnāt really matter. As long as I can be comfortable.
INTERVIEWER: Yeah. Itās like youāve gone through a metamorphosis?
RESPONDENT: Yeah. But the problem ⦠I can understand my reacting this way for a brief time. Hey, Iām going to have the luxury of sloth. And no demands. Iām going to do whatever I want to. If I want to sleep late, Iāll sleep late. If I want to stay up ātil two or three in the morning, which I do ⦠[chuckles] I could understand that as a reaction. The fact that itās extended like almost two years just doesnāt worry me. Because if it worried me Iād do something about it. I just donāt think about it. Itās just that I donāt see any changes coming into my life, unless someone knocks on that door for me. And thatās not going to happen.
INTERVIEWER: Yeah. Is this a way to capture what youāre feeling about it: that it doesnāt worry you, exactly, but it perplexes you?
RESPONDENT: Yeah, I just donāt understand it. INTERVIEWER: Is that right?
RESPONDENT: Yeah. I really donāt understand why Iāve become a nothing person. Even just talking to you, now, Iām rambling. Iām not sure I even know how to talk to people anymore, in terms of conversation. I used to be pretty good at it. You know, I would go to all kinds of functions at work. I thought I handled myself fairly well. And now I donāt. If I were invited to a party now, I wouldnāt go. My nephewās getting married. I just got an invitation last night in the mail. And my first reactionāI have to be honest with you here; I would never say this to anyone elseāwasnāt joy for him. That was my second reaction. My first was fear. He wanting me to come to Iowa for the wedding, to meet people, to be with my family, friends, and so on. Iām not going to go. I donāt want to be seen this way. I donāt want to be with people. I had a call from my college roommate about a year ago. And I havenāt called her back. I donāt call anyone back. Iāve severed all my phone friendships, even. Sheās retired ⦠just, I mean, at that time she had just retired, and she was sending away for Chamber of Commerce āWhatās On,ā and āWhatās to Do.ā And I admired her. And I was able to enter into the conversation with her, you know, how exciting it sounded. And once I hung up, that was the end of it. And sheās not going to do anything either.
INTERVIEWER: Why do you say that, that sheās not going to do anything?
RESPONDENT: Because the first thought that you have is, āHereās an opportunity for a new life.ā But I think it takes either tremendous confidence in yourself to start a new life on your own without any support or you have to be a certain kind of person whoās always been a doer and you keep doing. I think most people donāt know how to start a new life. Schoolās told us what to do, bossesāve told us what to do, husbandsāve told us what to do, Itās very difficult to tell yourself what to do.
INTERVIEWER: Yeah. Suppose somebody suggested to you, say, volunteer work. What would that mean to you?
RESPONDENT: [short pause] My daughter said that to me yesterday. Which is very funny. She despairs, not so much of me, but in terms of my attitude. Which is a non-attitude. Again, Iāve always hated limits, and here Iām asking for them. Isnāt that odd? Freedom, total freedom, is what Iāve always espoused. But if you were to say to me, āThereās a need for some more people to take care of this hospice or to work in this hospital and so on. Could you help out next Tuesday?ā Hey, of course. But when Iāve looked at the volunteer listsāand thereās so much needāitās two things. I donāt know where to go. Because I donāt know anyone. And second, part of it goes back to not wanting to open that door to be among people. I feel that Iāve gotten so heavy, so gray, I donāt even want people to look at me.
INTERVIEWER: Could you walk me through that conversation with your daughter where she made the suggestion to volunteer?
RESPONDENT: We were talking about my mother, who died a couple of years ago. And we used to visit Ma, who lived in an apartment complex for the elderly. And there were all kinds of activities on the premises. You know, they had classes and they had socials and they had dances and so on. And we would try to coerce her into joining. You know: āDonāt sit by yourself all day in your apartment. Take a class in ceramics. Do this, do that.ā And ⦠and āThereās a Thanksgiving Dance; go down and join them.ā And she wouldnāt want to do that. And we felt it would be so much better for her if she were more active, if she did meet other people and did participate. And I said that I ⦠I suddenly understood how Ma felt. And that we were wrong in imposing our values, just because we needed people and we needed activity, on her. And I said, āNow, for the first time, I can really understand why she would prefer reading a book to going to a card game.ā And my daughter said, āThere has to be some way in which you can use your mind and feel that you still make a difference. And why donāt you volunteer?ā I like the thought of helping others. But I donāt know now that Iām as capable of giving as I once was. When I was feeling good, I wanted to share that feeling good. Iām not feeling empty. I still care about my daughter. I still care about the sick person. I still care about whatās going on. I still ⦠even on my pension, I still make charitable kinds of contributions. Because I do care whatās happening in this world. Itās just that I donāt know whether I can give anything.
INTERVIEWER: What did your daughter say?
RESPONDENT: Well, she feels that I ought to try. She feels that I ought to go ⦠someplace. If I find it unpleasant, I can always stop. It isnāt like taking a job. But itās that tremendous inertia. It looks like Iād have to climb a mountain to take the first step out. I think once I made that step I could do it. Itās climbing a psychological mountain, [pause] Maybe itās just the fact that I feel so alone. You know, maybe thereās a difference when a person is retiring and has someoneāor some onesāthere to help.
The excerpt displays the depth and development achievable in qualitative interviewing. It also suggests the contribution qualitative interviewing can make to understanding a situation. Although we would need corroboration from interviews with others among the retired to have confidence in generalization, we see in this interview a process by which retirement makes it easy for those who live alone to slide into isolation.
The process begins with the removal, following retirement from work, of the obligation to participate in social activity. To be sure, the newly retired person may for a time find solitude rewarding after the stresses and demands of work life. Solitude can then be a welcome opportunity for reading and lazing and puttering around the house. But as social withdrawal becomes more established, the prospect of having to mobilize energy to interact with others may bring increasing discomfort to the person who is alone. The person may, like the woman in the interview excerpt, be uncertain of having anything to give and so of being worthy of respect, and may think, āWhy subject myself to discomfort when it is possible just to stay home?ā Withdrawal thus becomes selfreinforcing.
What we have gained from this qualitative interview is an observerās report of one possible impact of retirement. The report could have been provided only by the respondent herself; only she was in a position to make its observations. And the report could have been developed only in an interview that encouraged the respondent to provide a full account.
Qualitative interviews can have different emphases. In this interview excerpt the respondent provided information about her internal state: her mental and emotional functioning, her thoughts, and her feelings. If the interview had been collected in a study with a different focus, the respondent might have given more emphasis to external events, for example, the functioning of the retirement program provided by her company. Qualitative interviews may focus on the internal or the external; what is common to them all is that they ask the respondent to provide an observerās report on the topic under study.
The style of the qualitative interview may appear conversational, but what happens in the interview is very different from what happens in an ordinary conversation. In an ordinary conversation each participant voices observations, thoughts, feelings. Either participant can set a new topic, either can ask questions. In the qualitative interview the respondent provides information while the interviewer, as a representative of the study, is responsible for directing the respondent to the topics that matter to the study. Note that the interviewer in the excerpt asked, about the college roommate, not what her work had been or where she was now living, but why the respondent believed that...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- CONTENTS
- PREFACE
- CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER 2: RESPONDENTS: CHOOSING THEM AND RECRUITING THEM
- CHAPTER 3: PREPARATION FOR INTERVIEWING
- CHAPTER 4: INTERVIEWING
- CHAPTER 5: ISSUES IN INTERVIEWING
- CHAPTER 6: ANALYSIS OF DATA
- CHAPTER 7: WRITING THE REPORT
- APPENDIX A: OTHER NAMES FOR QUALITATIVE INTERVIEWING
- APPENDIX B: FIELDS THAT USE QUALITATIVE INTERVIEWING
- APPENDIX C: SOURCES OF BIAS AND THEIR CONTROL
- APPENDIX D: CONSENT FORMS
- APPENDIX E: QUANTITATIVE CODING OF QUALITATIVE INTERVIEW MATERIAL
- NOTES
- REFERENCES
- INDEX