Home Student Resources Chapter 7 – Interview methods – asking people direct questions

Chapter 7 – Interview methods – asking people direct questions

This chapter introduces general principles concerning the asking of questions.

Exercises

Exercise 7.1

Preparing an interview schedule

Prepare a set of questions for an interview investigating the issue of assisted suicide. Imagine that this is for a piece of qualitative research where you wish to explore the concept fully in terms of people’s attitudes to the issue. You particularly want to know how people rationalise their positions. Make sure that your questions cover a wide area of possible perspectives – look at the issue from different people’s points of view. After you have prepared your interview schedule as fully as you think you can, have a look at the points below (click the ‘reveal hints’ buttons) and see if you have covered all these areas and perhaps produce some that I didn’t think of.

Hint 1

How many of your questions will, produce short answers (e.g., ‘do you believe in assisted suicide?’ or ‘would you ever assist someone to commit suicide?’ – these are closed questions and may only produce single answers of ‘yes’ or ‘no’).

Hint 2

Have you used prompts and probes to facilitate elaboration of shorter answers? (e.g., ‘If no, could you tell me why?’)

Hint 3

Have you investigated:

  • The conditions under which your interviewee would agree to assist or agrees with assisted suicide – e.g., how many months to live, how much certainty of pain, etc., for degenerative diseases or just when life is unbearable?
  • Their reasons for wanting or not wanting to assist.
  • Their reasons for accepting or rejecting the idea.
  • The perspective of the potential suicide, the assister, the immediate family of the dying person?
  • The effect that publicised suicides might have on other people.
  • Whether the interviewee would follow the law of the land (and therefore think it permissible to assist suicide in countries where this is legal).
  • To what extent is the assister legally culpable?
  • The feelings of people assisting a loved one to suicide.
  • The implications of the Hippocratic oath and doctors’ commitment to sustaining life.
  • … or does the commitment to care include helping people escape pain and indignity?
  • The position of carers and whether sufficient support is available for them.
  • The issue of whether we should wait for technological advances, e.g., in the area of pain relief.
  • How much medical opinion should be sought – at least two doctors (e.g.)?
  • The issue of maintaining dignity.
  • Whether suicide is ‘cowardly’, ‘selfish’ or an act of ‘bravery’, ‘courageous’.
  • The sanitisation of death – so it is kept away from us most of the time.
  • Whether removing life sustaining support is assisting suicide or ‘murder’.
  • The issue of control – who should decide to maintain life if a person wants to end theirs.
  • Religious reasons or arguments for views.
  • Have you teased out arguments for and/or against rather than just isolated views?

Exercise 7.2

Select True or False for each item to test your understanding of interview methods.


Film of the Milgram interviews can be seen using the link to Milgram in Chapter 6.

Interesting article about issues in using online surveys and tests:

https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1520769112

About how to transcribe your recordings:

https://www.wikihow.com/Write-a-Transcript

Surveys online:

www.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/