0 6883 6891 6897 6901 6907 6909 6913 6919 6921 6927 6933 6937 6939 6943 6949 6951 6957 6961 6963 6967 6969 6973 6975 6977 6978 6979 6981 6982 6983 6985 6987 6991 6993 6997 6999 7003 7009 7011 7017 7021 7023 7027 7033 7039 7041 7047 7051 7053 7059 7063 7069 7077 11751 我们正在进行流程 你为什么要来中国 a lone 机关党支部书记 附近喧闹的徐家汇 time was flow ければ Защита картера двигателя crazy car 我还没有呢 整理他个人物品 Secondee cost allocation Qualified PP 我不知道她是谁 Icouldn't agree with you any more we are so constituted that we get to love our rountine 但是他们很警觉,一旦受到威胁就会不顾一切反击。所以跟这类人接触时候一定不要让他感到有危险的感觉 希望它们会让满意 公司物品 地球信息科学导论 线性代数与概率统计 计算机语言与程序设计 全球定位系统与应用 地球科学进展 请输入您需要翻译的文本!dry debtor and prepayments racing car 年后见 高档调整 The PayGate's Encrypt Information Is Incorrect 如果你觉得你的存在给我带来的只有不快乐那就请你带上你的东西滚出我的生活 我们春节放假时间 write a composition on tht topic the importance of team work.base your composition 现金流 crazy racing cup My suggestions that we quick to our original plan was finally accepted 她的妈妈总是把她当小孩 一样对待 The availability of coordinatively unsaturated metal cen- ters (UMCs) in MOFs offers an approach to increase this sometimes new word are shorter forms of the old words Planning for Implementation of Voice in a Campus Network Differences between the structured interview and qualitative research interviews Qualitative interviewing is usually very different from interviewing in quantitative research in a number of ways. ? The approach tends to be much less structured in qualitative research. In quantitative research, the approach is structured to maximize the reliability and validity of measurement of key concepts. It is also more structured because the researcher has a clearly specified set of research questions that are to be investigated. The structured interview is designed to answer these questions. Instead, in qualitative research, there is an emphasis on greater generality in the formulation of initial research ideas and on interviewees’ own perspectives. ? In qualitative interviewing, there is much greater interest in the interviewee’s point of view; in quantitative research, the interview reflects the researcher’s concerns. This contrast is a direct outcome of the previous one. ? In qualitative interviewing, ‘rambling’ or going off at tangents is often encouraged––it gives insight into what the interviewee sees as relevant and important; in quantitative research, it is usually regarded as a nuisance and discouraged. ? In qualitative interviewing, interviewers can depart significantly from any schedule or guide that is being used. They can ask new questions that follow up interviewees’ replies and can vary the order of questions and even the wording of questions. In quantitative research, none of these things should be done, because they will compromise the standardization of the interview process and hence the reliability and validity of measurement. ? As a result, qualitative interviewing tends to be flexible, responding to the direction in which interviewees take the interview and perhaps adjusting the emphases in the research as a result of significant issues that emerge in the course of interviews (see Box 15.3 for an example). By contrast, structured interviews are typically inflexible, because of the need to standardize the way in which each interviewee is dealt with. ? In qualitative interviewing, the researcher wants rich, detailed answers; in quantitative research the interview is supposed to generate answers that can be coded and processed quickly. ? In qualitative interviewing, the interviewee may be interviewed on more than one and sometimes even several occasions (see Box 15.1 for an example). In quantitative research, unless the research is longitudinal in character, the person will be interviewed on one occasion 和大家一起学习了一个月 昨天我爸爸为我买了一件毛衣 有时我也兼职