“You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing

Interviewing, as a way of collecting research data, has emerged and been developed within the transition from modernist ideals to more postmodern perspectives about what constitutes knowledge. Interviewing practices range from standardized structured interviews to collect data in large-scale studies...

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Main Authors: D. Jean Clandinin, Andrew Estefan, Vera Caine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2025-02-01
Series:International Journal of Qualitative Methods
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/16094069251324170
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author D. Jean Clandinin
Andrew Estefan
Vera Caine
author_facet D. Jean Clandinin
Andrew Estefan
Vera Caine
author_sort D. Jean Clandinin
collection DOAJ
description Interviewing, as a way of collecting research data, has emerged and been developed within the transition from modernist ideals to more postmodern perspectives about what constitutes knowledge. Interviewing practices range from standardized structured interviews to collect data in large-scale studies, to interviews that are more characteristic of a conversation that allow for a more expansive venture into an area of inquiry. While there are times when ideas develop over time and one can see the evolution of them, this is not as clear with the ideas of interviewing. In this state-of-the-art article, we survey the fields where interviews are visible and see the presence of different forms of interviews. Research interviews necessitate recognition of the ontological and epistemological commitments that shape research study design. A research interview cannot be crafted without attending to questions about: the purpose of the interview; the place it takes up alongside the needs, interests, and vulnerabilities of researchers and participants; the relationship between the intent for interviews and the places in which research interviews are conducted; how research interviews can open up as well as foreclose insight into experiences; and, how interviews are shaped by considerations of power and positionality. By attending to these questions, researchers can resist reducing interviews to a simplified ask-and-answer procedure.
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spelling doaj-art-a1f195e9de4b4a26baf0dabc2108fc082025-08-20T02:55:10ZengSAGE PublishingInternational Journal of Qualitative Methods1609-40692025-02-012410.1177/16094069251324170“You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative InterviewingD. Jean ClandininAndrew EstefanVera CaineInterviewing, as a way of collecting research data, has emerged and been developed within the transition from modernist ideals to more postmodern perspectives about what constitutes knowledge. Interviewing practices range from standardized structured interviews to collect data in large-scale studies, to interviews that are more characteristic of a conversation that allow for a more expansive venture into an area of inquiry. While there are times when ideas develop over time and one can see the evolution of them, this is not as clear with the ideas of interviewing. In this state-of-the-art article, we survey the fields where interviews are visible and see the presence of different forms of interviews. Research interviews necessitate recognition of the ontological and epistemological commitments that shape research study design. A research interview cannot be crafted without attending to questions about: the purpose of the interview; the place it takes up alongside the needs, interests, and vulnerabilities of researchers and participants; the relationship between the intent for interviews and the places in which research interviews are conducted; how research interviews can open up as well as foreclose insight into experiences; and, how interviews are shaped by considerations of power and positionality. By attending to these questions, researchers can resist reducing interviews to a simplified ask-and-answer procedure.https://doi.org/10.1177/16094069251324170
spellingShingle D. Jean Clandinin
Andrew Estefan
Vera Caine
“You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
International Journal of Qualitative Methods
title “You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
title_full “You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
title_fullStr “You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
title_full_unstemmed “You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
title_short “You Have Some Questions for Me?” considering Qualitative Interviewing
title_sort you have some questions for me considering qualitative interviewing
url https://doi.org/10.1177/16094069251324170
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