The potentials and pitfalls of using Skype for qualitative (longitudinal) interviews
The potentials and pitfalls of using Skype for qualitative (longitudinal) interviews
The use of digital communication technologies has become increasingly commonplace in social research. Yet, sparse attention has been paid to the potential of such technologies in Qualitative Longitudinal Research (QLR). This paper explores the implications of introducing one such technology, internet video calls (e.g. Skype, FaceTime, Google Hangouts), as a new mode of data collection into an established QLR study that has primarily generated data using biographical interviews conducted in participants’ homes. The paper draws on the ‘Your Space’ project; a decade-long study following the lives of up to 52 young people from across Britain. Funded as one of eleven ESRC National Centre for Research Method’s ‘Methodological Innovation Projects’ the most recent phase of the project investigates the implications of shifting from physical co-present interviewing to remote modes on key issues for QLR research such as sample maintenance, research relationship continuity, and rapport. In doing so, it assesses whether internet video calls might be a useful means of conducting short ‘catch-up’ interviews between the main waves of data collection, or as an alternative way of carrying out case study intensive interviews.
National Centre for Research Methods, School of Social Sciences, University of Southampton
Weller, Susan
6ad1e079-1a7c-41bf-8678-bff11c55142b
4 August 2015
Weller, Susan
6ad1e079-1a7c-41bf-8678-bff11c55142b
Weller, Susan
(2015)
The potentials and pitfalls of using Skype for qualitative (longitudinal) interviews
National Centre for Research Methods, School of Social Sciences, University of Southampton
50pp.
Record type:
Monograph
(Working Paper)
Abstract
The use of digital communication technologies has become increasingly commonplace in social research. Yet, sparse attention has been paid to the potential of such technologies in Qualitative Longitudinal Research (QLR). This paper explores the implications of introducing one such technology, internet video calls (e.g. Skype, FaceTime, Google Hangouts), as a new mode of data collection into an established QLR study that has primarily generated data using biographical interviews conducted in participants’ homes. The paper draws on the ‘Your Space’ project; a decade-long study following the lives of up to 52 young people from across Britain. Funded as one of eleven ESRC National Centre for Research Method’s ‘Methodological Innovation Projects’ the most recent phase of the project investigates the implications of shifting from physical co-present interviewing to remote modes on key issues for QLR research such as sample maintenance, research relationship continuity, and rapport. In doing so, it assesses whether internet video calls might be a useful means of conducting short ‘catch-up’ interviews between the main waves of data collection, or as an alternative way of carrying out case study intensive interviews.
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Published date: 4 August 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 443374
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/443374
PURE UUID: 94f28e5d-784d-4b59-8974-1e3fb2df55bd
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Date deposited: 24 Aug 2020 16:30
Last modified: 10 Apr 2024 01:50
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Author:
Susan Weller
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