Interview Packet
(PARTNERSHIP FOR POSITIVE CHANG)
Interview Packet
Contents:
Overview of Interview Process
Tips for Conducting Interviews
Interview Questions
Interview Summary Form
Summary
Forms Due upon completion
Overview of Interview Process for interviewers
Part I – Prior to the Interview
1. You will be provided a list of people
to interview. You will typically be assigned individuals that you may not
interact with on a regular basis.
2. Contact your interviewee to schedule
the interview to request a one hour appointment.
.
Part II – At the Interview
3. Take two copies of the interview
questions – one for you and the other for the individual you are interviewing.
4. Please use the space after each
question for taking notes during the interviews.
5. It is recommended that you summarize
the interview immediately after the interview session. Use the attached 2-page
summary form
6. Assure your interviewees that all
comments are anonymous, but not confidential.
In other words, stories and quotes will be shared, but no names will be
attached to them.
Part III – After the Interview
7.
Complete
your Interview Summary Form and send them to (name and email) as soon as
they’re completed.
Part IV - Use of interview Data
§ All interview summaries will be collated
for use at the Partnership for Positive Change Summit, June 3-5, 2003.
§ The best practices, success stories and
wishes for the future provide valuable data for the Summit.
§ A desired outcome of the Summit is a
shared vision for the future of the HIV/AIDS sector in Ethiopia.
Questions? Please call (name)
Tips for
Conducting Interviews
§ Use the interview questions as a script
for the interview and guidelines for note-taking
§ Here are some possible questions to use
to probe further:
v Tell me more.
v Why was that important to you?
v How did that affect you?
v What was your contribution?
v How has it changed you?
§ Let the interviewee tell his/her
story.
§ Take notes and listen for great quotes
and stories.
§ Be genuinely curious about their
experiences, thoughts, and feelings.
§ Some people will take longer to think
about their answers -- allow for silence.
§ The questions should be used as
guidelines, you may choose to not use all the questions, or to adapt the
questions to what you find works best for your interviews.
What to do with Negatives:
With
the introduction paragraph provided in the interview guide – you can generally
get interviewees to identify things at their best. However, people should not feel like
they do not have permission to talk about things that need fixing. Depending on your empathic understanding of
where the interviewee is, there are several different ways to handle negatives.
§ Postponing: Say that you would like to make a note of what the person
has said and come back to it later. When
you get to the question about what he or she would wish for the organization in
the future, this is the time to discuss the “negative” data.
§ Listening:
If the person has some real intensity about
problems, let him or her express it. If
it is the major focus of the person’s energy, you are not going to get any
positive data until she or he gets it out.
This may mean muddling through some negativity, and the biggest threat
is that you will take it in and lose your capacity to be appreciative. Keep a caring,
and affirmative spirit.
§ Redirecting:
If the person is adamant about dealing with the negative, or if you have
listened sufficiently to understand the negative issues being raised, find a
way to guide the person back to the positive.
“I think I understand a little bit about some of the problems you see, I
am also interested in understanding what is happening when things are working
at their best. Can you think of a time
when you saw innovation (for example) at its best?” If the person says it never happened where he
or she works, find out if the person has had the experience of something
working well in any organization or
work context.
§ Using Negative Data:
Everything that people find wrong with a situation represents an absence
of something that they hold in their minds as an ideal. For example, if the interviewee says
something like, “The communication in this organization is terrible”, say to
them, “When you say that the communication is terrible, it means that you have
some image in your mind about what good communication would look like. Can you describe that for me?” If the interviewee cannot reframe his or her
statement into a positive image, use the negative information and reframe it
yourself into a wish or vision statement and then confirm that statement with
the interviewee.
PARTNERSHIP FOR POSITIVE CHANGE
INTERVIEW PROTOCOL
Name:
Organization/Community:
Interviewed by:
____________________________________________________________
As
part of a special planning process we are conducting interviews with a range of
stakeholders who are in some way involved with the HIV/AIDS sector in
Ethiopia. In particular, our goal is to
locate, illuminate, and understand the distinctive values, best practices, and
programmatic successes which have occurred over the years in our collective
fight against the HIV/AIDS pandemic. In
other words, we are interested in understanding more about what is happening
when we are at our best, when our work has made a difference.
The
information you provide in this interview will be used to help a representative
community of HIV/AIDS donors, practitioners and beneficiaries create a shared
vision of opportunities for future action based on the collective strengths and
successes this study reveals. Our
interest is in learning from your experience.
The collected comments, experience and suggestions from all of those
interviewed will be summarized and drawn upon at the Partnership for Positive Change Summit to be held in Addis Ababa,
June 3-5, 2003.
The
interview takes about one hour. The
interview will focus on times when programs and services are operating at their
best. I will take notes from time to
time, but the information I collect will be confidential and anonymous.
I.
YOUR EXPERIENCE IN THE
HIV/AIDS SECTOR
To
get started, I’d like to learn about your beginnings with the HIV/AIDS sector.
·
What drew you to this work?
·
What were your initial hopes and aspirations when you joined the battle
against HIV/AIDS?
Looking
at your entire experience, can you recall a time when you felt most alive, most
involved, or most excited about your involvement in the HIV/AIDS sector?
·
What made it an exciting experience? Who else was involved?
·
What was it about you that made it a peak experience?
Let’s
talk for a moment about some things you value deeply. Specifically, the things you value about 1) yourself;
2) the nature of your work; and 3) your organization.
·
Without being humble, what do you value the most about yourself - as a
human being, a friend, a parent, a citizen, and son/daughter?
·
When you are feeling best about your work, what do you value about the
task itself?
·
What is it about your organization that you value?
II.
SUCCESS STORIES: BRINGING
ABOUT POSITIVE CHANGE
In
spite of the many challenges we encounter in the fight against HIV/AIDS, there
have been some amazing examples of success. The
success may have been the result of an especially effective program
intervention, a community effort or an inspired leader.
·
What is the most outstanding or successful achievement you have been
involved in? A project or accomplishment of which you are
particularly proud?
·
What other inspiring stories of success come to mind?
·
What factors (e.g., leadership, teamwork, culture, innovation)
contributed to these successes?
·
What have been
the most successful strategies for educating young people about how to protect
themselves from HIV?
III.
BREAKING THE SILENCE:
LEADING WITH COMPASSION
One of the many challenges
faced in the fight against HIV/AIDS is the stigma associated with the
virus. At the same time there have been
many acts of compassion and empathy especially modeled by courageous
individuals, community leaders and faith-based organizations.
·
What courageous
acts of compassion are you aware of?
·
How have
faith-based organizations made a difference?
IV.
COMMUNITIES HAVE ANSWERS
HIV/AIDS affects the entire
community. It is ultimately the
community response which will determine the course of our success in containing
the disease and sustaining those living with its challenges.
·
What positive
community approaches to supporting people and
families living with HIV/AIDS have you encountered?
·
Additionally, how
are communities supporting orphans and vulnerable children?
V.
SAFE MOTHERHOOD
One way to stop the spread of
HIV is to offer prevention services to pregnant women in order to protect their
babies from contracting the virus at birth.
·
What examples of
successful outreach to pregnant women have you heard about?
·
What are the
traditional ways in which pregnancy is celebrated and supported?
VI.
CARE AND SUPPORT
While programs which focus on
prevention are of utmost importance-- care and support of the large numbers of
men, women and children already infected with HIV/AIDS is urgent and
compelling.
·
What have been
the most successful strategies for reaching people with the HIV virus or with
AIDS?
·
What have been
the most sought after and effective basic care and psychosocial support
services?
VII. PARTNERSHIP
AND COLLABORATIVE SPIRIT
The
fight against HIV/AIDS is being led by the collective hard work of government
ministries, international and national NGOs, faith-based organizations, trade
unions and associations, CBOs, donors, and families. Many human and financial resources have been
mobilized to support and conquer this disease.
It is especially through partnership and collaboration that these
resources can be leveraged for maximum success.
·
What examples of successful partnerships or joint efforts in this
sector are you aware of? What made them
successful?
·
Describe for me an extraordinary display of cooperation among diverse
individuals or groups in the HIV/AIDS sector?
·
Think of a successful partnership or network (focused on a common goal)
that you have been part of. What are the
factors that made it successful?
VIII. WISHES FOR THE FUTURE
If
you could develop or transform the way in which HIV/AIDS is approached here in
Ethiopia what three wishes would you make to increase the likelihood of success
in containing and eradicating this disease in the future? What is the most important first step
(smallest step) we can take as a community to achieve these wishes?
Interview Summary Form
Please
complete the following form and send it to (name and email) as soon as
completed.
Save the document with the file name – Interviewerlastname_interview#.doc (e.g. Smith_interview3.doc)
Name of Interviewer (your name):
Date
of Interview:
Interviewee’s Organization or Community
What
was the most quotable quote that came out of this interview?
What was the most compelling story that
came out of this interview? (use as much space as you need)
Overall, what was your sense of what
was most important to this individual?
Interview Summary Form (Continued)
Interview Summary Form (Continued)
What were the 1 –
3 positive factors/themes that stood out most for you during the interview.
Wishes for the Future:
1)
2)
3)
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