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To interview or not to interview? That is the question

International Journal of Therapy and Rehabilitation, 2006
Interviewing is one of the methods used by occupational therapy schools to select prospective students. There has, however, been little research on how interviewing is used in the UK.
Bailey, Chris   +2 more
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Interview

Personalized Medicine, 2008
Eleni Zika is currently a research program manager at the Medical Research Council (London, UK). Previously she was a research fellow in the 'Agriculture and Life Sciences in the Economy' unit of the Institute for Prospective Technological Studies of the European Commission, where her work focused on the socioeconomic impacts of biotechnology ...
  +9 more sources

Interview Time, Interview Set, and Interview Outcome

Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1970
The authors demonstrate that the length of an interview (10 min., 20 min., or 30 min.) has little effect upon student interviewers' after-interview ratings of student interviewees. In contrast, interviewers given different initial sets about interviewees let those initial sets (to the effect that interviewees are cold or warm) affect significantly ...
Leonard W. Ferguson   +2 more
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The Interviewer Interviewed: An Interview with Richard Simon

Australian and New Zealand Journal of Family Therapy, 1986
The Second International Family Therapy Conference, organised in New York in October 1985 by the American Association of Marriage and Family Therapy, proved to be an invigorating watershed of ideas old and new attended by 3500 family therapists (old and new, famous, infamous and unknown) from over 20 countries.
openaire   +2 more sources

Interviewers and Interviewing

1993
Throughout science, the accuracy of our understanding rests fundamentally upon the quality of the data we collect. The limits of the identity-interview approach should be recognized before embarking on a study; they are well summarized by Bourne (1978b, pp. 375–382).
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Interviews with the interviewers and interviewees

The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 2014
The basic conflict between scientist and journalist is that each wants to tell a story—but not necessarily the same story. Can they agree on a version that grabs and holds the attention of most people but is still true to the science? Despite the risks of being portrayed inaccurately, should researchers make an effort to talk to the press?
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Interviewing

Health Information Management, 1998
A Model for Learning and Assessment used in the Bachelor of Health Information Management Course, School of Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne
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Impact of Similarity of Interviewer-Interviewee and Interviewer-Interviewer on Ratings in a Selection Interview

Psychological Reports, 1980
This study aimed to determine whether similarity of interviewer and interviewee or interviewer and interviewer influenced applicant interview ratings. Data on background characteristics, relative interests and need for social approval were secured from 21 faculty interviewers and 296 applicants during actual selection interviews.
Maureen T. Hallinan   +1 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Semi-Structured Interview

The SAGE Encyclopedia of Research Design, 2022

semanticscholar   +1 more source

Sample Size in Qualitative Interview Studies

Qualitative Health Research, 2016
K. Malterud, V. Siersma, A. D. Guassora
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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