Intensive Interview

    Intensive Interview
    Paper details:
    Instructions:
    In this assignment, you will interview an older relative or friend, using the techniques learned in
    class. Y
    our
    written report will show both what you learned during
    the interview and your mastery
    of the interview
    techniques.
    ?WHAT TO DO
    Identify a family member or friend who is willing to participate in this project. The person should
    be
    significantly older
    than you, and preferably of a different generation.
    Choose one
    of the following
    topics to talk
    about with your informant:
    1.
    Food traditions and experiences: e.g., the foods, meals, and treats your informant ate as
    a child; how
    their family used special f
    oods for celebrations and holidays; who was and
    wasn’t involved with
    preparing the food
    .
    2.
    Military experiences: e.g., how your informant or their family members came to join the military;
    experiences they had; superiors and colleagues; effects on their th
    inking and lives
    .
    3.
    Law enforcement / corrections experiences: e.g., how your informant or their family members came to a
    job or career in law enforcement or corrections; experiences they had; colleagues and superiors;
    effects on their thinking and lives
    .
    4.
    Childhood play and toys: e.g., how your informant played as a child; favorite kinds of
    toys and
    places to
    play; contrasts and/or similarities to modern toys and play
    .
    5.
    Community/social services experience: e.g., how your informant was an administrator and
    /or recipient
    of community services or social services; specific experiences and memories; how the experiences
    affected their thinking and lives
    .
    6.
    Education: e.g., what it was like for your informant in school; favorite and least favorite teachers and
    subj
    ects; friends and enemies
    .
    Set up one or more mutually agreeable times to talk together. Your interview must be conducted in voice

    to

    voice communication. Therefore, meeting in person, talking by phone, or Skype are all acceptable, but e

    mail,
    texting, an
    d instant messaging are not. Give your informant a general idea of the topics you’ll be asking about,
    but do not provide a specific list of questions in advance.
    Your interview should be at least
    30 minutes and ideally an hour
    , and you may conduct multipl
    e interviews if
    you want (with the same person).
    While doing this project, you must apply
    at least
    five
    interviewing/oral history techniques that we learned in
    class. Look over your notes and decide which techniques you will make a conscious effort to use
    .
    Prepare for
    your interview by developing a short Interview Guide of topics and questions, as described
    in class.
    Assume
    that you will not need to ask all of the questions; better to be prepared with too many options than too few. As
    you conduct the int
    erview, create follow

    up questions based on what your informant tells you, as demonstrated
    in class, rather than sticking rigidly to your prepared list.
    During the interview, you must take notes in some way. If you have the capability, you may
    record your
    conversation (with your informant’s permission) and later make notes from it.
    However, these notes are
    n
    ot
    your written report.
    They are the rough data from which you will develop your paper, but they are not
    a paper
    by themselves (i.e., do not simply h
    and in a transcript of your interview). Your job is to analyze and
    draw selectively from the data you collect, to create a readable report that addresses what’s most important
    and interesting from your interview. Direct quotes are acceptable, but your repo
    rt must be more than a series
    of quotes.
    When you review your notes, think about you can organize what you’ve learned in a meaningful way. For
    example, in an interview about educational experiences, you might notice your informant focused on four
    themes (
    e.g., their early years in school, their high school years, their teachers, and their friends). You could
    then discuss these four themes one

    by

    one in your report, rather than simply describing a hodgepodge of
    everything your informant said. In other words
    ,
    your report needs to be internally organized around specific
    themes, even if your interview itself wandered from topic to topic.
    ?
    WHAT TO WRITE
    Write a paper of three to five pages
    that includes the components below. Your paper
    should use APA format,
    in
    cluding a cover sheet, page numbers, double

    spaced, and free of spelling and grammar errors. Do not
    write
    an abstract. Save your paper repeatedly as you write it, in
    .doc or .docx format.
    Please read over your paper
    and correct errors before handing it in
    .
    a.
    Begin with a cover page
    in APA format.
    b.
    In the first paragraph, introduce your informant
    and the topic of your interview. Describe who your
    informant
    is, what relationship you have with them, and a brief summary of what’s important to know
    about them.
    Assume your reader has no idea who your informant is, and consider yourself to be
    writing
    for a formal audience.
    For example, starting with “I interviewed Grampa who I love” is inappropriate, but “My informant was my
    grandfather, Ronaldo Gomez, age 76, w
    ho served in the US Army for 28 years in Kansas, Korea, and
    California” is fine.
    c.
    In the second paragraph, describe the circumstances of your interview(s). Mention the setting, mode of
    communication (phone, face to face, etc.), date, time, approximate dura
    tion of interview, how and when
    you took notes, and anything else you think is relevant.
    d.
    For the next several pages, describe what you learned. As explained above, this body of your paper
    must be organized in a meaningful way, not simply a recapitulation
    of the interview.
    Do not list the
    exact questions you asked your informant; instead, incorporate your informant’s responses into your
    paper.
    That’s because you’re writing a paper, not just an interview transcript. Here are two illustrative
    examples:

    Po
    orly written:
    “I asked him what kinds of toys he played with when he was a kid. He responded by
    saying that he mostly played outside with balls and bikes, but sometimes played with his five sisters
    and their dolls.”

    Strongly written:
    “When Steve was a c
    hild, he mostly played outside with traditional masculine toys
    like balls and bats. But he also played sometimes with his five sisters and their dolls.”
    e.
    In the
    next

    to

    last paragraph, name the
    five
    (or more) techniques for oral history interviewing you
    a
    pplied during this project, and explain how you applied each one.
    f.
    In the last paragraph, describe how your interview felt different (or didn’t feel different) from a normal
    conversation.
    Finally, discuss what, if anything, you would do differently if yo
    u were starting this
    project from the beginning.
    ?
    HOW YOU’LL BE GRADED
    Your score will be determined by the criteria on the Projec
    t Five Assessment Rubric
    ,
    found under “Course
    Information”

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