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Hannah Fechtel; Sienna Ruiz; Julie Spray; Erika A. Waters; James Shepperd; Jean Hunleth – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Virtual technologies gained popularity during the COVID-19 pandemic for use in research, including research with children. As scholarship from the field of science, technology and society (STS) suggests, technologies are never neutral, but embedded with social values and, as such, used by people to navigate identities and relationships. Building…
Descriptors: Children, Power Structure, Interpersonal Relationship, Privacy
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Fish, Jillian – Teaching of Psychology, 2023
Introduction: Since the 1990's, psychology has demonstrated a strong commitment to the full spectrum of human diversity (Vera & Speight, 2003). Statement of the Problem: However, psychologists from underrepresented backgrounds and diversity science (DS) remain marginalized in psychology (Syed & Kathawalla, 2020), which affects the ease…
Descriptors: Psychology, Psychologists, Diversity, Disproportionate Representation
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Bettens, Talley; Warren, Amye R. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2023
Police officers are often trained to use the Behavior Analysis Interview (BAI) to detect deceit, but it is based on faulty indicators of lying that may be especially problematic for juveniles due to developmental immaturities. Juveniles, young adults, and adults were assigned to guilt or innocence conditions, read a criminal scenario, and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Young Adults, Adults, Beliefs
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Kühne, Simon – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
Survey interviewers can negatively affect survey data by introducing variance and bias into estimates. When investigating these interviewer effects, research typically focuses on interviewer sociodemographics with only a few studies examining the effects of characteristics that are not directly visible such as interviewer attitudes, opinions, and…
Descriptors: Surveys, Bias, Social Problems, Political Issues
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Cheung, Kason Ka Ching; Tai, Kevin W. H. – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2023
Background: Intercoder reliability is a statistic commonly reported by researchers to demonstrate the rigour of coding procedures during data analysis. Its importance is debatable in the analysis of qualitative interview data. It raises a question on whether researchers should identify the same codes and themes in a transcript or they should…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Data Analysis, Interviews, Research Methodology
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Tine, Janine; Ellis, Julia – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2022
In interpretive inquiry, researchers need interviewing approaches that will create possibilities for insight and holistic understanding. A hermeneutic interview protocol was developed and refined over a number of years in the context of an interpretive inquiry course. In this study, one of the authors examines her experience with using this…
Descriptors: Marriage, Cultural Differences, Family Characteristics, Parent Attitudes
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Bettencourt, Genia M.; Wells, Ryan S.; Abbott, Jordan A. – Teachers College Record, 2022
Background: Although students with disabilities are enrolling in higher education in larger numbers than ever before, they are still underrepresented in colleges and universities, particularly among four-year institutions. College choice has been explored across multiple facets, but limited research has examined the college choice processes of…
Descriptors: College Choice, Disabilities, Accessibility (for Disabled), Higher Education
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Tonia F. Guida; Moira L. Ozias – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
In this methodological inquiry, we ask: "What are the walls that block the examination of whiteness for white women when using photo-elicitation interviewing? What are the methodological possibilities and risks of photo elicitation with white women when critically studying whiteness?" Framed by concepts of white complicity, white…
Descriptors: College Students, Females, White Students, Critical Race Theory
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Barbara Brown; Soroush Sabbaghan – Canadian Journal of Action Research, 2025
In this study, we aimed to examine graduate students' experience when working with peers to complete a learning task focused on conducting a program evaluation in a qualitative research course. A generative artificial intelligence (GenAI)-powered platform was incorporated to support an experiential learning activity designed by the…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Interviews, Research Methodology, Graduate Students
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Carolyn A. Berry; Courtney Abrams; Margaret M. Paul; Rachel E. Massar; Kayla M. Fennelly; Beth C. Weitzman – American Journal of Evaluation, 2025
Qualitative interviews and focus groups are commonly used methods to elicit participants' voices in program evaluations. However, the use of these data-gathering methods can fall short of the goal; even with open-ended questions, the protocols guiding and shaping interviews and focus groups heavily reflect the evaluators' understanding and…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Photography, Visual Aids, Interviews
Andrew P. Jaciw; Rebecca Dowling; Mayah Waltower; Li Lin; Jenna Zacamy – Empirical Education Inc., 2025
This report contains the appendices for the report "'How Are the Children?' A Study of the Effectiveness of a Social-Emotional Learning Curriculum for High School Students: A Report of a Randomized Experiment Conducted in the Rock Island Milan School District." The report presents findings from a one-year teacher-level randomized control…
Descriptors: High School Students, High School Teachers, Program Effectiveness, Social Emotional Learning
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Andrew P. Jaciw; Rebecca Dowling; Mayah Waltower; Li Lin; Jenna Zacamy – Grantee Submission, 2025
This study evaluates the first year of implementation of How Are the Children (HATC), a project-based social-emotional learning (SEL) curriculum designed to enhance high school student's social-emotional (SE) development. Through documentary filmmaking and lessons based on SE competencies, HATC aims to provide SEL support that amplifies authentic…
Descriptors: High School Students, High School Teachers, Program Effectiveness, Social Emotional Learning
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Doug Maynard; Lars Ellwanger; Lucia Daher; Michael Jagacki – American Journal of Play, 2025
Using a grounded theory method, the authors explore the phenomenon of adult play guilt, or the negative emotions associated with the perception of being unproductive while engaging in play. They interviewed twenty-four emerging adult undergraduate students about feeling guilty when contemplating or engaging in play. The authors found that…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Young Adults, Play, Anxiety
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J. Michael Rifenburg; Jenn Mallette; Rebecca Nowacek – Composition Forum, 2025
This methods-focused article attends to the mechanics of participant drawing as a data collection tool in qualitative research. Writing studies researchers undertaking qualitative research benefit from a wealth of handbooks on how to design methodologically sound studies. However, despite interest in visual research methods, little guidance is…
Descriptors: Research Design, Research Administration, Qualitative Research, Freehand Drawing
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Tong, Donia; Wyman, Joshua; Talwar, Victoria – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
There is a need to tell if children are providing truthful testimonies in legal cases. This study examined differences between children's true and false statements obtained using either an interview that included cognitive instructions or one that did not. Children witnessed a theft that they were asked to deny and were interviewed with or without…
Descriptors: Children, Deception, Interviews, Ethics
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