ABSTRACT

Used by everyone from survey researchers to oral historians, the interview may be the most basic and essential field method in the qualitative researcher’s toolkit. In this concise, student-friendly guide, Fontana and Prokos give a cogent introduction to the history, types, and methods of interviewing in the social sciences. They outline the range of ways in which interviews are conducted, both structured and unstructured, then provide instruction on conducting and interpreting interviews, and address ethical considerations in eliciting information from people. The authors also point to recent and future trends that will affect the use of this method. For researchers who need a primer and for students in methods courses or assigned fieldwork projects in other courses across the social sciences, this short, inexpensive volume is ideal.

chapter |10 pages

Interviewing in Perspective

chapter |9 pages

Structured Interviewing

chapter |9 pages

Group Interviewing

chapter |9 pages

Unstructured Interviewing

chapter |5 pages

Ethical Considerations

chapter |14 pages

New Trends in Interviewing

chapter |13 pages

Future Directions

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion