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Conducting Qualitative Individual, Dyadic and Focus Group Interviews
Qualitative scholar conversation with

Alison Hamilton


July 25-26

The main goal of this course is to position researchers to develop an active and engaged posture while executing qualitative inquiry projects. To accomplish this goal, we will emphasize strategies to employ a posture of openness, flexibility, and responsiveness in your data collection practices.

Course content will direct interaction with three qualitative data collection strategies:

  • Individual Interviews
  • Dyadic Interviews
  • Focus Groups

Ten engagement strategies, listed here, will be woven throughout our conversation in class:

  • Understanding: How well do you understand the topic of and audience for your project? Are you familiar with the properties, dimensions, and dynamics of your topic? How might your project impact audiences in your field?
  • Aligning: How do your data collection strategies and the questions in your interview/focus group guide align with your analytic plans and project goals?
  • Preparing: Who are your participants? How does your positionality and knowledge of the participants inform your data collection format and approach? How do you foster participant ownership in the data collection experience?
  • Opening: What are ways to open the interaction and conversation appropriately, comfortably, and productively?
  • Asking: What do you ask participants when—and why? What questions open conversation topics? When and how do you probe and ask for further detail and example? What do you note from the field? How do you develop your observation skills?
  • Following: How do you maintain a proper posture to discover, but not unduly influence, your participants’ experiences? How do you manage the conversation and observation in a way that allows you to follow your participants’ unfolding narratives while keeping them interested and involved in their own story-telling?
  • Shifting/Adjusting: When and why do you make adjustments to data collection protocols and approaches to the interview or focus group? How can you shift your approach, language, and direction on the spot as you listen to and observe people’s unfolding narratives?
  • Closing: How can you naturally and affirmatively reach the conclusion of each data collection episode?
  • Processing: How do you track and understand the evolution of your interview/focus group guide and data collection protocols to process the meanings these changes have for your project?
  • Contextualizing: How are your practices directed by considerations of ethical, political, and social implications related to your study, the participants, and their communities?

Employing these strategies through the life of your project will ensure you ask the right questions to the right people at the right time and in the right way. These practices will also help you to understand how the conversations and interactions occurring during data collection fit with what is currently known about, and practiced in, your field.