1 / 24

SUBMISSION FOUR

SUBMISSION FOUR. FIELD RESEARCH. Purpose?. See controversy from a different perspective Gain more information about the controversy Get Feedback about your tentative solution. Three Parts. Two Fieldwork components Interviews Civic Engagement Final Conclusion Due April 23rd.

kalli
Download Presentation

SUBMISSION FOUR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. SUBMISSION FOUR FIELD RESEARCH

  2. Purpose? • See controversy from a different perspective • Gain more information about the controversy • Get Feedback about your tentative solution

  3. Three Parts • Two Fieldwork components • Interviews • Civic Engagement • Final Conclusion • Due April 23rd

  4. Submission Four – 15% Content • Approx. 5-7 new pages • Write-up and analysis of TWO in-person expert interviews. • Civic Engagement (supporting action) and Reflection • Concludes with your supported final conclusion and moral reasoning.

  5. Form • Perfect MLA • Organization • Full Works Cited • No spelling/grammar errors

  6. Expert Interviews

  7. Identifying experts • Education and/or work experience in the area • Not just people with opinions

  8. How Many Experts • Two total • 1 For Each Side • You must include the contact information in your research file • No anonymous interviews

  9. What You Cannot Do • Interview family members • SEU affiliates • Interview via telephone

  10. Finding interviewees • Ask your professors • Check library. • List of organizations • Check the internet • Get a directory of elected officials

  11. The Questions

  12. Writing your questionnaire • P 57-59 in Handbook • Ask About issues (3-5 questions) • Ask About moral reasoning (consequences) • Ask About your conclusion/solution Ask each interviewee the same questions.

  13. WRONG QUESTIONS! • What do you know about the controversy? • Where do you stand on the controversy? (This is too much in your face) • Personal information, questions that put people in awkward situations.

  14. Setting up the interviews • Start now. • Contact at least 3X as many people as you need. • Be professional – these people are doing you a favor. • Prepare to describe Capstone and your controversy quickly.

  15. Setting Up the Interviews • Have a phone where you can be reached or a message can be left. • Ask for a time you can call back. • Ask for referrals. • Be persistent.

  16. The Interview

  17. Be Safe • Meet in a professional place • Bring Back-up if necessary • Stop the interview if you feel uncomfortable

  18. Conducting the interview • Be on time. • Dress appropriately. • Taping: • Pre-ask • Be prepared • Take notes efficiently.

  19. Conducting the Interview • Listen. • You are a reporter, not a debater. • Maintain control. • Keep the interview focused. • Remain courteous and open-minded. • Thank you note- you are representing future generations of St. Edward’s students.

  20. Writing it up

  21. Writing Up the Results • Do it as soon as possible • You can always come back to it

  22. Write-up: The questions • Report on every question • Direct quotation: • Use sparingly

  23. Write-up: The analysis • “Feel” of the interviews • Interviewees: • Knowledgeable? • Open-minded? • Demeanor? • Did they change your mind on the issue?

More Related