The Long Interview
Instead of the three separate interviews recommended by Schuman, McCracken recommends one long interview.

The first step of the long qualitative interview begins with an exhaustive review of the literature.

The literature

  1. helps define the problems to be studied and helps assess data
  2. aids in the construction of interview questions.

The second step involves a self-examination.

This cultural review

  1. helps identify cultural categories and relationships that become the basis of question formation
  2. prepares the investigator for the "rummaging" that will occur during data analysis
  3. "distances" the investigator. "Only by knowing the cultural categories and configurations that the investigator uses to understand the world is he or she in a position to root these out of the terra firma of familiar expectation. This clearer understanding of one's vision of the world permits a critical distance from it...The investigators experiences and biases are the "very stuff of understanding and explication" (p. 32).

The third step involves developing a questionnaire.

Begin an interview by demonstrating that the interviewer is a "benign, accepting, curious (but not inquisitive) individual who is prepared and eager to listen to virtually any testimony with interest" (p. 38). Once the preliminaries are completed, deploy grand-tour questions followed by "floating prompts." Follow this with planned prompts:

Be alert for

The fourth and final phase of the long interview is the most demanding. It is the analysis of the data.

.....McCracken, G. (1988), The long interview. Newbury Park, CA: Sage.

 

Del Siegle, PhD
del.siegle@uconn.edu