🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Researchers conducting interviews—whether qualitative or quantitative—must actively manage power imbalances, location choices, and interpersonal relationships to collect valid data while respecting participants' dignity and safety.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Power differential: The interviewer sets the agenda and asks participants to reveal information without reciprocating, creating an inherent imbalance that requires deliberate attention.
- Location matters: Interview settings should balance participant comfort and convenience with practical concerns like minimizing distractions and ensuring researcher safety.
- Rapport and respect: Building a bond of mutual trust is essential, but researchers must avoid manipulating participants into believing the relationship is closer than it actually is.
- Active listening and probing: Both qualitative and quantitative interviewers request more information throughout the interview, though quantitative probes must be uniform while qualitative probes can follow the respondent's direction.
- Common confusion: Giving participants significant control can help balance power, but it may also create ethical challenges like loss of academic freedom or oversimplification of theoretical constructs.
⚖️ Power dynamics in interviews
⚖️ Why power imbalance exists
The researcher controls the interview in several ways:
- Sets the agenda and leads the conversation
- Asks participants to reveal personal information they may not typically share
- Does not reciprocate by revealing much or anything about themselves
- Most respondents perceive the researcher as "in charge," even in qualitative interviews where participants have some control over topics
📋 Balancing power across research phases
The excerpt presents strategies organized into three phases:
| Before the Research | During the Research | After the Research |
|---|
| Examine goals and reasons behind the study | Ensure language is tailored to the interviewee's capabilities and life experiences | Check obligations to ensure the study population will not be hurt by what you publish |
| Examine personal commitment to ensure no harm | Show awareness of developing power relationship; provide opportunities for feedback or objection | Do not distort the meaning participants intend |
| Clarify roles, responsibilities, and rights at various stages | Provide reminders about the nature of the study if an interviewee begins discussing intimate or sensitive issues | Protect anonymity of participants |
| Provide information about expected distribution of knowledge | Commit to the principle of justice, ensuring the burden of participating does not outweigh the benefits | Use participants' own language in writing to best reflect what they wanted to share |
| Commit to protecting privacy and anonymity | Research should ensure the right to collect and use the collected data | Provide thick description of the context, your own experience, values, and pressures that play a role in how you interpret and present the data |
| | Use reflexology to be transparent and accountable for the limitations of your methodology |
⚠️ Ethical challenges of participant involvement
Karnieli-Miller et al. (2009) warn that permitting participants to play a significant role in the research can lead to:
- Loss of the researcher's right to intellectual and academic freedom
- Oversimplification of theoretical constructs that may arise from the research
Don't confuse: balancing power does not mean giving participants complete control over the research process.
🔓 Transparency as a power-balancing tool
Another way to balance the power differential:
- Make the intent of your research very clear to subjects
- Share your rationale for conducting the research and the research questions that frame your work
- Explain how the data you gather will be used and stored
- Clarify how privacy will be protected, including who will have access to the data
- Explain what procedures (such as using pseudonyms) you will take to protect identities
- Many of these details will be covered by institutional review board informed consent procedures, but researchers should be attentive even beyond formal requirements
🤷 No easy answers
The excerpt notes that when it comes to handling the power differential:
- There are no easy answers
- There is no general agreement as to the best approach
- It is nevertheless an issue researchers must note when conducting any form of research, particularly those involving interpersonal interactions and relationships with participants
📍 Location considerations
📍 Participant comfort vs. practical concerns
One way to balance power is to conduct the interview in a location of participants' choosing, where they will feel most comfortable answering questions.
Possible locations include:
- Respondents' homes or offices
- Researchers' homes or offices
- Coffee shops
- Restaurants
- Public parks
- Hotel lobbies
🔇 Avoiding distractions
While it is important to allow respondents to choose the location that is most convenient and comfortable, it is also important to identify a location where there will be few distractions.
Examples of distractions:
- Some coffee shops and restaurants are so loud that recording the interview can be a challenge
- The presence of children during an interview can be distracting for both interviewer and interviewee (though observing such interactions could be invaluable to your research, depending on the topic)
Suggestion: As an interviewer, you may want to suggest a few possible locations and note the goal of avoiding distractions when you ask respondents to choose a location.
🛡️ Safety and accessibility limits
The extent to which a respondent should be given complete control over choosing a location must be balanced by:
- Accessibility of the location to you, the interviewer
- Safety and comfort level with the location
While it is important to conduct interviews in a location that is comfortable for respondents, doing so should never come at the expense of your safety.
🤝 Building and maintaining rapport
🤝 What rapport means
Rapport: the sense of connection you establish with a participant; the development of a bond of mutual trust between the researcher and the participant.
According to Palys and Atchison (2014):
- Rapport is the basis upon which access is given to the researcher
- It is the basis upon which valid data are collected
- A good rapport between you and the person you interview is crucial to successful interviewing
⚠️ Misguided approaches to rapport
Saylor Academy (2012) warns that some misguided researchers have attempted to develop rapport with their participants to a level that the participant believes the relationship is closer than it is.
Don't confuse: building rapport does not mean creating a false sense of personal closeness.
🙏 Respect as the foundation
The key is respect. At its core, the interview interaction should not differ from any other social interaction in which you:
- Show gratitude for a person's time
- Show respect for a person's humanity
- Conduct the interview in a way that is culturally sensitive
- In some cases, educate yourself about your study population and receive training to help you learn to communicate effectively with research participants
🚫 Non-judgmental stance
- Do not judge your research participants
- You are there to listen to them, and they have been kind enough to give you their time and attention
- Even if you disagree strongly with what a participant shares in an interview, your job as the researcher is to gather the information being shared with you, not to make personal judgments about it
Example: A researcher studying controversial political views must listen and record what participants say, even if the researcher personally disagrees with those views.
👂 Active listening and probing
👂 What active listening means
Active listening: means that you will probe the respondent for more information from time to time throughout the interview.
Probe: a request for more information.
The questions you ask respondents should indicate that you have actually heard what they have said.
🔢 Probing in quantitative interviews
In quantitative interviews:
- Probing should be uniform
- Often quantitative interviewers will predetermine what sorts of probes they will use
- The goal is consistency across all respondents
💬 Probing in qualitative interviews
In qualitative interviews:
- Techniques are designed to go with the flow and take whatever direction the respondent establishes during the interview
- Better lend themselves to following up with respondents and asking them to explain, describe, or otherwise provide more information
📝 Preparing probes in advance
It is worth your time to come up with helpful probes in advance of an interview, even in the case of a qualitative interview:
- You do not want to find yourself stumped or speechless after a respondent has just said something about which you'd like to hear more
- Practicing your interview in advance with people who are similar to those in your sample is a good idea
Both qualitative and quantitative interviewers probe respondents, though the way they probe usually differs.