1 outline 1.definition 2.the interview as test 3.types of question 4.types of interview 5.principles...

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1 Outline 1. Definition 2. The interview as test 3. Types of question 4. Types of interview 5. Principles of effective interviewing 6. Problems the interviewer may face

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Page 1: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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Outline

1. Definition2. The interview as test3. Types of question4. Types of interview5. Principles of effective interviewing6. Problems the interviewer may face

Page 2: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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1. Definition

• An interview is a conversation with a purpose

• Purpose: gathering information about the person being interviewed.

• Outcome: data for description, evaluation, and prediction

Page 3: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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2. The interview as test

• Huffcutt et al.:• Employment interviews

are not like other tests

• Don’t tell us something specific

• Designed to allow a conclusion – e.g., should we hire this person?

• Outcome: complex function of many dimensions

Page 4: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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2. The interview as test

• Huffcutt et al. (2001)• Meta-analysis• Reviewed 47 studies of the

employment interview

• Concluded that interviews tell us about:• Personality• Social skills• Mental ability

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3. Types of question

• Open-ended• Closed-ended

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Open-ended questions

• tailored to individual interviewee

• cannot be answered specifically

• responsive to what interviewee just said

• interviewee decides what is important to discuss, which tells you something about them

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Closed-ended questions

• can be answered specifically

• interviewee has to recall something

• same questions for all interviewees

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Comparison of the two typesOpen-ended• What kinds of cars do you

like?• Tell me about your father

Closed-ended• Do you like sports cars?• Is your father strict?

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4. Types of interview

• Unstructured• Structured• Semi-structured• Group

Page 10: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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Unstructured interviews

• Questions follow from previous response – they’re not set ahead of time

• Follow up with understanding responses to encourage more disclosure

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Unstructured interviews

• Advantages:• Lots of data• Unexpected things learned

• Disadvantages:• subjective evaluation• may wander off topic• non-standardized – can’t be

replicated

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Structured interviews

• same procedure for all interviewees

• same questions asked in same sequence

• closed, short, clearly-worded questions

• follow a flow-chart (include/exclude some questions depending on answers to others)

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Structured interviews

• Advantages:• standardized format• objective evaluation

• Disadvantage:• one size may not fit all

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Semi-structured interviews

• Shares some features with structured interview, some features with unstructured interview

• Guided by a script which gives focus

• Allows you to explore interesting responses

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Group interviews

• Usually 3 – 10 people at one time

• May be structured or unstructured

• Really dependent upon skilled moderator

Page 16: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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Group interviews

• Advantages• rich data• variety of views

• Disadvantages:• expensive• “loud-mouths” may

dominate• conformity pressure?

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5. Principles of effective interviewing

A. Be responsibleB. Plan aheadC. Keep the interaction flowingD. Have the appropriate attitude

Page 18: 1 Outline 1.Definition 2.The interview as test 3.Types of question 4.Types of interview 5.Principles of effective interviewing 6.Problems the interviewer

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A. Be responsible• Interviewer sets the tone • Interviewer is responsible

for success or failure of interview

• Professionals accept responsibility

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B. Plan ahead

• Who will be interviewed?• Where? When?

• What is the purpose?• Which questions will you

ask? In what order?• Will you record?

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C. Keep interaction flowing

• Conversation skills• Comprehension

monitoring

• Verbatim playback• Paraphrasing• Restatement• Summarizing• Clarifying• Understanding

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Types of understanding response

• Carl Rogers created a typology of interviewer’s responses to interviewee

• 5 levels varying in how well the response connects to what interviewee just said

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Types of understanding response

• To be avoided:• Level 1 – a series of non-

sequiturs• Level 2 – little connection

with interviewee’s last response

• For unstructured interviews:• Level 3 – interviewer’s

response is interchangeable with interviewee’s last statement

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Types of understanding response

• Primarily used in therapeutic interviews:

• Level 4 –adds “noticeably” to interviewee’s response

• Level 5 – adds “significantly” to interviewee’s response

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D. Have appropriate attitude

• Interpersonal attraction predicts interpersonal influence

• Be warm, genuine, accepting, understanding, open, honest, fair

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6. Problems interviewer may face

A. Social facilitationB. Spotlight effectC. Validity & reliability issues

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A. Social facilitation

• Occurs when people act like other people around them

• May not know you are doing this

• May communicate something

• E.g., Goldstein & Cialdini (2007) – spyglass effect

• Chartrand & Bargh (1999) – chameleon effect

• Akehurst & Vrij (1999)

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B. Spotlight effect

• Gilovich et al (2000):• People tend to believe that

the social spotlight shines more brightly on them than it really does.

• You think other people notice all your mistakes and silliness

• But they don’t

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B. Spotlight effect

• Especially common in people who feel “different” to others around them on some dimension

• E.g., one student in a room full of professors; one woman in an office full of men

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C. Problems of validity

• predictive validity scores for interview data range from .09 to .94 (Wagner, 1949)

• consider interview data as tentative – a source of hypotheses to be tested against other data

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C. Problems of validity

• Halo effect (Thorndike, 1920)

• tendency to judge specific traits on the basis of a general impression

• generalize judgments from limited experience

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C. Problems of validity

• General standoutishness (Hollingworth, 1922)

• general judgment made on basis of one notable characteristic

• beautiful people often rated as more witty, likable, socially skilled, intelligent, warm (Feingold, 1992)

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C. Problems of validity

• Cross-cultural interviews: lots of potential for misunderstanding

• Be flexible; introspect; learn about groups you will be in contact with

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C. Problems of validity

• E.g., Darou et al. (2000): northern Quebec Cree ejected 7 of 8 psychologists who came to study them.

• Researchers asked Cree for self-disclosure, which is socially inappropriate among the Cree

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C. Problems of reliability

• inter-interviewer agreement

• twice as high for structured as for unstructured interviews

• may be low because 2 interviewers spontaneously focus on different things

• if so, train interviewers to focus on specific things that matter