I don't care how many points i use I will get a answer for this.

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US History

Oral history interview

i need help making oral history interview questions

here is whats required

Tips for creating oral history interview questions:

1. Begin the interview by finding out basic personal information about the interviewee, such as name, date and place of birth, and current place of residence.

2. Keep your questions short and simple.

3. Avoid asking questions that can be answered with “Yes” or “No.” Instead, use questions that begin with phrases such as “Tell me about . . .”

4. Use questions that begin with “Why” and “How” to encourage the interviewee to offer impressions and opinions. You can also ask your subject to offer his or her point of view or to describe the scene.

5. Encourage interviewees to talk about their own experiences, rather than those of others they may have heard about but not experienced for themselves. You might jog their memory by asking them to describe the happiest/saddest/most disturbing part of this experience.

6. Use follow-up questions to delve more deeply into a topic the subject has touched on. Jot these questions down as the interviewee is talking.

7. At the end of the interview, ask the interview subject whether there is anything else he or she would like to share about this particular event in history.

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Respuesta :

What type of questions do u need?

Answer:

Here are the questions.

May you let me know where were you born?

when were you born?

what is your current place of residence?

What are the best memories you have from that place?

may you tell me the most important difficult moment of your life?

what made you overcome that situation if I may ask?

Describe me who were the persons that helped you and the role they play in your life after that situation?

What have you learned from that situation?

would you help someone else in a similar situation like the persons that helped you?

Read the full explanation please.

Explanation:

The semistructured interview is a method to choose the topics you want to obtain information from the interviewee. So even though you control the interview the interviewed will have the freedom to answer. This covers the number 3 requisite.

We will start by greeting him with:

Hello, good day. How was the weather outside? I kind of have a little bit of cold, may you tell me the conditions outside?

This is rapport, it is used to make the interviewed comfortable and not nervous or as if he or she was under an interrogatory.

After his or her whole answer you will thank him or her and continue.

Hey, it is very glad to have you here. may you tell me your full name?

Always complement his or her answers with something like wow that is a very interesting name. So you can keep interested and jump to the next question.

May you let me know where were you born?

when were you born?

what is your current place of residence?

What are the best memories you have from that place?

may you tell me the most important difficult moment of your life?

what made you overcome that situation if I may ask?

Describe me who were the persons that helped you and the role they play in your life after that situation?

What have you learned from that situation?

would you help someone else in a similar situation like the persons that helped you?

Again you compliment with something about the place and then jump to the question, are you still living there? I would really like to visit it sometimes. So he or she answers yes or no and you jump instantly to the question.

If you want to learn more about this topic, look for the semi-structured interview as a psychological research method.