Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

For the first part of this unit I simply want you to think about the questions you would like to ask: what question will allow you to explore your chosen.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "For the first part of this unit I simply want you to think about the questions you would like to ask: what question will allow you to explore your chosen."— Presentation transcript:

1 For the first part of this unit I simply want you to think about the questions you would like to ask: what question will allow you to explore your chosen area of media? What makes a great poem? What do journalist do? How do documentaries explore intolerance? What would drive someone to commit a hate crime? Why and how does music affect our mood and emotions? At what point does gaming become an addiction? Why would a female writer in the 1940’s and 50’s keep her dream of becoming a writer a secret? Why do we stay silent on sexual abuse in the film industry when we know it happens so often?

2 Unit 12: Are you ready. then I’ll begin
Unit 12: Are you ready? then I’ll begin! QUESTIONS, QUESTIONS AND MORE QUESTIONS? Interview another student about ideas for the FMP. Get into groups and ask each other a series of questions that will help develop ideas. Listen and be inspired. Share! Your initial ideas: begin a research diary (on the blog and in a notebook) - this can be very good evidence for this task

3 Unit 12: Your RESEARCH REPORT IS LIKE AN ESSAY; AN ESSAY IS LIKE AN ARGUMENT.
Think of a question concerning your research ideas and open to class debate. How to formulate a question? E.g. why and how? Record the findings of the debate (USE YPOU MOBILE PHONE). Group discussion and presentation. SHARE!

4 Doing Interview Zoran Tesic

5 Preparation: Find out as much as possible about your interviewee
Know your main research question Prepare your questions in advance Prepare what you are going to do

6 Planning your interview
The key questions when planning your interview are: WHY: what is the purpose of what I want to find out? WHAT: what I want to investigate? HOW: what question I am going to ask to obtain the intended information?

7 We conduct interviews to:
Understand the world from the other person’s view. We want to know what he/she knows the way he/she knows it. You want to understand the meaning of another person’s experience, to walk in his/her shoes, feel things as the person you are interviewing feels; to explain things as the other person explain them. (How they see the world?) Treat the person you are interviewing as your teacher who is helping you understand things you want to know.

8 Scripting the interview
The preparation for the interview contain some topics to be covered and carefully worded questions. The topics to be covered relate to ‘what’ I want to find out. When preparing your questions ask open questions. Open questions are any questions that give more than a yes - or – no answers.

9 Open questions A question that begins with on of the six W words is an open question: Who What When Where Why How

10 For example: When did you first ….. When you look back……………….
Where were you …… Why did you choose …. What was it like ……….. What where the advantages of …………. How did you feel ………….

11 Types of questions Introductory questions: Can you tell me about you…?; DO you remember on occasion when…?; What happened when…?; Could you describe in as much detail as possible a situation…? Direct questions: Have you ever…?; Did you experience…?; Do you like…? Probing questions: Could you say something more about that?; Can you give more detailed description of what happened?; Do you have further examples of this? Specifying questions: What did you actually do when…?; How did you react…?; What was your experience of …?

12 Types of questions Interpreting questions: Is it correct that you feel that…?; Does it mean that…?; Does the event you described express your…?

13 It is Important to: Prepare questions but be ready to adapt and move the story forward by asking supplementary questions, which arise from the interview. Be a good listener: It will help you concentrate on listening to answers if you look at the contributor all the time, and nod or smile occasionally

14 Video example Semi structured in depth interviewing

15 TASK: You interview a colleague from the class and try to find out about his/her life, interests, view point and what they would like to make for their FMP. You will work in pairs, prepare interviews and interview questions, record them and upload on your blogs. Once you uploaded your recordings you will analyse your interview and produce the findings to your peer. Don’t forget to keep your questions open, but within the subject matter.

16 Research Questions (topics)
Example Research Questions (topics) Interview questions What are you passionate about most in media? When were you first interested? Where did it happen and why? What in particular caught your attention? Who was the writer/performer or artist?


Download ppt "For the first part of this unit I simply want you to think about the questions you would like to ask: what question will allow you to explore your chosen."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google