| Source: Tom Daccord |
Because my research deals with activities and interactions youth carry out on and with digital technologies, it would be advantageous to utilize these technologies for at least part of the research process. Benefits of this might include the fact that with such technologies, I would be able to interview people who may be shy in face-to-face interviews, or I could reach out to those who cannot express themselves as well in discussion as they do in writing (Olubunmi, 2013). My initial semi-structured interviews, then, will be conducted via some kind of instant messaging (IM) interface, or even email. Since these technologies need at least a certain level of literacy, however, and because not all interview questions can be effectively expressed or answered using IM, this could result in some low or incomplete responses (Olubunmi, 2013), I will not solely rely on “digital” interviews.
Following this initial interview, then, I will ask participants to keep a diary of their daily digital interactions for one week. This diary would be a first-person account, documented through regular, candid entries in some kind of personal journal (again, use of digital technology would be welcome), which will then be analyzed for recurring patterns or salient events (Gkonou, 2013). With the inclusion of this step in my research, I will have access to concrete details that might otherwise get lost if I were only conducting interviews. A diary study will hopefully give me a glimpse into micro-level details about how some young people use and feel about digital technology in their everyday lives. These are often private matters that adult researchers do not have access to (Pascoe, 2012). Although diary data is sometimes subject to memory gaps on the part of the diarist (Gkonou, 2013), this step in my research would add another valuable facet of information I could gather.
Finally, I will conclude the data collection portion of my research through the use of unstructured, face-to-face interviews with each participant. This interview, then, would be based on a limited number of topics or issues that emerge from examining the participant’s diary, and the emphasis would be on encouraging each respondent to talk around the themes that emerged as most important or interesting to them. An unstructured interview, in which I would take a constructionist stance whereby knowledge is constructed between the researcher and the interviewee, would also allow me to adapt questions and the order we discuss themes in accordance to what each interviewee says (Rowley, 2012). Additionally, I foresee that the affect resulting from digital interactions will be an important aspect of this study, and physical, inter-personal interaction will most likely be more effective at conveying affect than purely online interviews would be (Pascoe, 2012). Thus, this final interview stage will be another necessary aspect of data collection.
| Source: Jerome Stone |