940 resultados para Interviews
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In this paper we present ClInt (Clinical Interview), a bilingual Spanish-Catalan spoken corpus that contains 15 hours of clinical interviews. It consists of audio files aligned with multiple-level transcriptions comprising orthographic, phonetic and morphological information, as well as linguistic and extralinguistic encoding. This is a previously non-existent resource for these languages and it offers a wide-ranging exploitation potential in a broad variety of disciplines such as Linguistics, Natural Language Processing and related fields.
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Understanding the basis on which recruiters form hirability impressions for a job applicant is a key issue in organizational psychology and can be addressed as a social computing problem. We approach the problem from a face-to-face, nonverbal perspective where behavioral feature extraction and inference are automated. This paper presents a computational framework for the automatic prediction of hirability. To this end, we collected an audio-visual dataset of real job interviews where candidates were applying for a marketing job. We automatically extracted audio and visual behavioral cues related to both the applicant and the interviewer. We then evaluated several regression methods for the prediction of hirability scores and showed the feasibility of conducting such a task, with ridge regression explaining 36.2% of the variance. Feature groups were analyzed, and two main groups of behavioral cues were predictive of hirability: applicant audio features and interviewer visual cues, showing the predictive validity of cues related not only to the applicant, but also to the interviewer. As a last step, we analyzed the predictive validity of psychometric questionnaires often used in the personnel selection process, and found that these questionnaires were unable to predict hirability, suggesting that hirability impressions were formed based on the interaction during the interview rather than on questionnaire data.
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This article deals with self-referential storytelling in sociolinguistic interviews. It analyzes the personal stories in ten interviews to linguistically heterogeneous couples. For this purpose, it is applied the model of linguistic analysis of drama (Bruner & Weisser 1991) and it identifies and interprets discursive markers of autobiographical storytelling. Therefore it takes into consideration the elements referred to agents and to their actions, to the sequences of events, to the canon or rule, and to the narrator's perspective. At the same time, it proposes to extend our approach to the existence itself of the participants. Resumen.-"Discurso narrativo en entrevistas a parejas lingüísticamente mixtas". Este artículo trata de las narraciones autorreferenciales en entrevistas sociolingüísticas sobre concepciones y usos de las lenguas en familias lingüísticamente mixtas. Analiza los relatos que aparecen en diez entrevistas a padres y madres que forman parejas lingüísticamente heterogéneas. Aplica el modelo de análisis lingüístico del dramatismo (Bruner & Weisser 1991). Identifica e interpreta los marcadores discursivos de la narración autobiográfica. Con este propósito considera los constituyentes que se refieren a los agentes y sus acciones, a las secuencias de sucesos, al canon o norma y a la perspectiva del narrador. Y propone la ampliación del estudio a los guiones de vida de lo actores. Palabras clave: entrevista, relato, narración, pareja, política lingüística de la familia, multilingüismo, marcador discursivo.
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The present thesis had two main objectives: The first was to assess how child sexual abuse (CSA) interviews in Finland are conducted through analysing the interviewing techniques applied and the language used by the interviewers, as well as to suggest ways to improve interviews if they were found to have deficiencies. The second main aim was to contribute to the growing research corpus concerning CSA interviews, in particular, by addressing how interviewers follow up information provided by the child, by analysing whether child health care professionals would use childadapted language, and by studying the kind of modifications in the verbal behaviour of interviewers and children that were associated with a) repeated interviews, b) a support person’s presence at the interview, and c) the use of anatomically detailed dolls. Two complementary samples of CSA interviews were analysed. The first one was composed of child interviews with 3-12-year-old children (N = 27) that had been considered problematic by lawyers or other involved professionals (Studies I and IV). The second sample consisted of unselected interviews (N = 43) with children aged 3 to 8 years conducted in a number of hospitals in different parts of the country (Studies II and III). Study I: The verbal interaction between interviewer and child was analysed in a sample of interviews that had been considered to be problematic by involved professionals. Results showed that interviewers used inappropriate questioning techniques, relying on option-posing, specific suggestive and unspecific suggestive questions to a significant extent, these comprising around 50% of all interviewer utterances. The proportion of invitations, which the research community recommends interviewers to rely on, was strikingly low. Invitations and directive utterances were associated with an increase in informative responses by the child in terms of response type, number of new details reported, as well as length of response. The opposite was true for option-posing and suggestive utterances. Longer questions by the interviewer (in number of words) often rendered no reply from the child, whereas shorter questions were followed by descriptive answers. Even after the child had provided an informative answer, interviewers failed to follow up the information in an adequate way and instead continued to rely on focused and leading questions. Study II: Due to the possible bias of the sample analysed in Study I, the most important analyses were rerun with the unselected sample and reported separately. Results were quite similar between the two studies, indicating that the problems observed in Study I, with interviewers relying on option-posing and suggestive questions to a significant extent, are likely to be general and not specific for those interviews. Even if suggestive questions were slightly less and invitations slightly more common in this sample than in the previous study, almost half of the interviewer questions were still optionposing or suggestive, and also in this sample, interviewers failed to follow up information by the child in a facilitating manner. Differentiating between judicial and contextual details showed that while facilitators, invitations, and directive utterances elicited more contextual than judicial details, the opposite was true for specific suggestive utterances. These results might be explained by the reluctance of children to describe sexual details related to the abuse events. Alternatively, they may also be due to children describing incorrect sexual details as a result of suggestive interviewing techniques. Study III: This study examined features of the language used by the interviewers. Interviewer utterances included multiple questions, long statements, complicated grammar and concepts, as well as unclear references to persons and situations. More than a fifth of the interviewer utterances were coded as belonging to at least one of these categories. The results suggest that even professionals who are experienced in interacting with children may have difficulties in using a child-sensitive language, adding to the pool of studies showing similar problems to occur in legal hearings with children conducted by lawyers. As children rarely comment on, or even recognise, their lack of comprehension, the use of a language that is too complex can have detrimental consequences for the outcomes of investigative interviews. Interviewers used different approaches to introduce the topic of abuse. While 15% of the children spontaneously addressed the topic of abuse, probably indicating that they felt confident with the interviewer and the situation, in almost 50% of the cases, the interviewer introduced the topic of abuse in a way that can be considered leading. Interviews were characterised by a lack of structure, apparent in frequent rapid switches of topic by the interviewer. This manner was associated with a decrease in the number of new details provided by the children. Study IV: This study analysed possible changes in the interview dynamics associated with repeated interviewing, the presence of a support person (related to the child), and the use of anatomically detailed (AD) dolls. Repeated interviewing, in combination with suggestive questions, has previously been found to seriously contaminate children’s accounts. In the present material, interviewers used significantly more suggestive utterances in the repeated condition, thus endangering the reliability of the children’s reports. Few studies have investigated the effects of a support person’s presence at the interview. The results of the present study showed that interviewers talked more and children provided less information when a support person was present. Supporting some earlier findings regarding the use of AD dolls, the present results showed that using AD dolls was associated with longer interviewer utterances and shorter, less responsive, and less detailed child responses. Interviewers used up to five times more unspecific suggestive utterances when dolls were used, for instance through repeatedly asking the child to show “what really happened” with the dolls. Conclusion: The results indicate that CSA interviews in Finland are not conducted in a manner that follows best practice as defined by the research community and as stated in a number of guidelines. When comparing these questioning strategies with the recommendations, which have been predominant in the field for more than ten years now, it can be concluded that the interviews analysed were conducted in a manner that undermines the possibility to elicit an uncontaminated and accurate narrative from the children. A particularly worrying finding was the fact that interviewers did not follow up relevant information by the children in an adequate way. A number of clinical implications can be drawn from the results, particularly concerning the need for improvement in the quality of CSA interviews. There is convincing research regarding how to improve CSA interviews, notably through training forensic child interviewers to use a structured interviewing protocol, and providing them with continuous supervision and feedback. Allocating appropriate resources to improve the quality of forensic child interviews is a matter of protecting the rights of all persons involved in CSA investigations, in particular those of the children.
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This qualitative study examined resilience factors of eight university and college students with learning disabilities as revealed through retrospective interviews. This study has added to the existing literature surrounding resilience especially as it relates to individuals with learning disabilities. This study may provide additional insight into the emotional impacts of repeated and chronic risks on students with learning disabilities. The major themes that emerged using the interpretive phenomenological analysis method (Smith & Osborn, 2003) were organized under these four major headings: Challenges and Obstacles, Surviving Challenges, Supportive Conditions, and A Journey of Discovery and Hope. An adaptation of the listening guide analytical method (Gilligan, Spencer, Weinberg, & Bertsch, 2003) was also utilized and offered a more personal depiction of the participants and an exploration of the unique contributions their stories made to this study. Specifically, a theme of feeling trapped/wanting to escape emerged as a reaction to adversity faced during elementary school years. Furthennore, this study has demonstrated that for several of the participants, the benefits of positive outlets extended beyond nurturing areas of strength and self-esteem to also include the provision of a short respite from their challenges and enhanced feelings of overall well-being. Additionally, this study may add to the existing literature surrounding character traits evident in resilient students, specifically highlighting the significance of optimism and selfacceptance.
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Cognitive interviews were used to evaluate two draft versions of a financial survey in Jamaica. The qualitative version used a few open-ended questions, and the quantitative version used numerous close-ended questions. A secondary analysis based on the cognitive interview literature was used to guide a content analysis of the aggregate data of both surveys. The cognitive interview analysis found that the long survey had fewer respondent errors than the open-ended questions on the short survey. A grounded theory analysis then examined the aggregate cognitive data, showing that the respondents attached complex meanings to their financial information. The main limitation of this study was that the standard assessments of quantitative and qualitative reliability and validity were not utilized. Further research should utilize statistical methods to compare and contrast aggregated cognitive interview probe responses on open and close ended surveys.
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Daniel Weinstock, director of CRÉUM, interviews two professors that were invited to pursue their work at CRÉUM during the summer of 2008. His invitees are Lisa Eckenwiler, Associate Professor of Philosophy in the Department of Philosophy and in the Department of Health Administration and Policy at George Mason University; and Chris Macdonald, Associate Professor of Philosophy at Saint Mary’s University in Halifax. You will also hear General International, an experimental/avant-garde music band that was formed only a few months ago.
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L’agression sexuelle (AS) commise envers les enfants est un sujet complexe à enquêter et les allégations reposent souvent exclusivement sur le témoignage de l’enfant. Cependant, même quand l’enfant divulgue une AS, il peut être réticent à révéler certains détails personnels et gênants de l’AS à un étranger. Étant donné qu’il n'est pas toujours possible d'obtenir le consentement de filmer et qu’il est relativement difficile de mesurer l’attitude non verbale de l’enfant et celui de l’enquêteur au cours des entrevues d’investigations, cette recherche a été novatrice dans sa création d’échelles verbales de telles attitudes. Afin de déterminer la corrélation de l’attitude des enquêteurs et la collaboration des enfants, 90 entrevues d’enfants âgés de 4 à 13 ans ont été analysées. Les entrevues ont été enregistrées sur bande audio, transcrites et codifiées à l'aide des sous-échelles verbales d'attitudes soutenantes et non-soutenantes des enquêteurs ainsi que d’attitudes de résistance et de coopération de la part de l'enfant. La proportion des détails sur l’AS fournie par les enfants a également été calculée. Afin de comparer les entrevues avec et sans le protocole du National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), une MANCOVA, contrôlant pour l’âge de l’enfant et la proportion de questions ouvertes, démontre tel qu’attendu que les entrevues avec le protocole obtiennent plus de détails fournis à la suite des questions ouvertes que les entrevues sans le protocole. Cependant, aucune différence ne ressort quant aux attitudes de l’enfant et celle de l’enquêteur. Afin de trouver le meilleur prédicteur de la quantité de détails dévoilés par les enfants, une analyse de régression multiple hiérarchique a été faite. Après avoir contrôlé pour l'âge de l’enfant, l’utilisation du protocole et la proportion de questions ouvertes, la résistance de l’enfant et l’attitude non-soutenante de l’enquêteur expliquent 28 % supplémentaire de la variance, tandis que la variance totale expliquée par le modèle est de 58%. De plus, afin de déterminer si la collaboration de l’enfant et l’attitude de l’enquêteur varient en fonction de l’âge des enfants, une MANOVA démontre que les enquêteurs se comportent similairement, quel que soit l'âge des enfants. Ceci, malgré le fait que les jeunes enfants sont généralement plus réticents et coopèrent significativement moins bien que les préadolescents. Finalement, une régression multiple hiérarchique démontre que le soutien de l'enquêteur est le meilleur prédicteur de la collaboration des enfants, au-delà des caractéristiques de l'enfant et de l’AS. Bien que l’utilisation du protocole NICHD ait permis des progrès considérables dans la manière d’interroger les enfants, augmentant la proportion de détails obtenus par des questions ouvertes/rappel libre et amplifiant la crédibilité du témoignage, l’adhésion au protocole n’est pas en soi suffisante pour convaincre des jeunes enfants de parler en détail d’une AS à un inconnu. Les résultats de cette thèse ont une valeur scientifique et contribuent à enrichir les connaissances théoriques sur les attitudes de l'enfant et de l'enquêteur exprimées lors des entrevues. Même si les enquêteurs de cette étude offrent plus de soutien aux enfants résistants, indépendamment de leur âge, pour promouvoir la divulgation détaillée de l’AS, de meilleures façons de contrer les attitudes de résistance exprimées par les jeunes enfants et une minimisation des attitudes non-soutenantes lors des entrevues sont nécessaires.
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In Folge der Ergebnisse der PISA und IGLU Studien ist das Thema Diagnose und individuelle Förderung in die öffentliche Diskussion geraten. Vor diesem Hintergrund richtet sich im Herbst 2002 die Aufmerksamkeit der Arbeitsgruppe Wollring auf ein mathematikdidaktisches empirisches Forschungsprojekt in Australien: Early Numeracy Research Project (ENRP) (Clarke et al. 2002). Eine Besonderheit dieses Projektes besteht in der Eins-zu-eins-Situation zwischen Lehrer und Schüler bei einem Interview über Mathematik. Dieses Projekt bildet den Ausgangspunkt der vorliegenden Arbeit. Im ersten Kapitel wird das australische Projekt sowie seine Umsetzung in Deutschland vorgestellt. Ziel des Projektes ist es, die individuellen mathematischen Performanzen von Grund-schulkindern mit Hilfe eines Interviews in einer Eins-zu-eins-Situation des Schülers mit dem Lehrer (Schüler-Interview) zu erheben und damit mathematikdidaktische Orientierungshilfen für den Unterricht zu liefern. Das Schüler-Interview bestimmt den Lernstandort eines Kindes, der als Ausgangspunkt für eine Diagnose dienen kann. Daher werden unterschiedlichen Sichtweisen der Disziplinen – Psychologie, Medizin, Pädagogik, Sonderpädagogik und Fachdidaktik – in Hinblick auf den Begriff „Diagnose“ diskutiert. Die Durchführung von Schüler-Interviews kann neben ihrem diagnostischen Wert auch eine Bedeutung für die Professionalisierung von Lehrern einnehmen, da sie die Lehrer herausfordert, sich mit den Denk- und Lösungswege von Kindern aller Leistungsniveaus intensiv auseinanderzusetzen. In einer Studie von Steinberg et al. (2004, p. 238) wird deutlich, dass dieses Wissen des Lehrers sowohl als ein Index der Veränderung als auch als ein Mechanismus zur Veränderung des Unterrichts dient. In dieser Arbeit werden über den Zeitraum eines Jahres der Umgang der Lehrer mit dem Führen von Schüler-Interviews und den von ihnen daraus gewonnenen Erkenntnissen ausgewertet. Dabei werden mit den Lehrern nach einem halben und nach einem Jahr Erprobung mehrerer von ihnen selbst geführter Schüler-Interviews je ein Interview mit der Forscherin geführt, um herauszufinden, in welchen verschiedenen Bereichen das Führen von Schüler-Interviews den einzelnen Lehrern Unterstützung bietet. Die erhobenen Daten werden qualitativ mit Hilfe der Grounded Theory ausgewertet. Im empirischen Teil der Arbeit werden drei, der am Projekt beteiligten, Lehrerinnen in Form von Fallstudien vorgestellt und ausgewertet. Bei der Lehrerin, die Mathematik nicht als Fach studiert hat, besteht vor allem ein eigener Lernzuwachs in der Sicht auf Mathematik. Zu Beginn der Untersuchung hatte sie laut ihrer eigenen Aussagen eine eher ergebnisorientierte Sicht auf die Mathematik. Die Aussagen der drei Lehrerinnen beruhen auf einzelnen Schülern und ihren Besonderheiten. Im Laufe der Studie verallgemeinern sie ihre Erkenntnisse und beginnen Konsequenzen für ihren Unterricht aus den Schüler-Interviews zu folgern, wie sie in den abschließenden Interviews berichten. Das Schüler-Interview scheint dem Lehrer einen geschützten Raum zu bieten, um die Reflexion über die mathematischen Performanzen seiner Schüler und seinen eigenen Unterricht anzuregen, ohne ihn bloßzustellen und ohne ihm Vorschriften zu machen. Nach der einjährigen Erprobung von Schüler-Interviews betonen alle drei Lehrerinnen größeren Wert auf prozessorientiertes Mathematiklernen zu legen. Sie berichten, dass sie die Performanzen der Kinder stärker kompetenzorientiert wahrnehmen. Jedoch haben sie Schwierigkeiten, die für sich selbst gewonnene Transparenz über die mathematischen Performanzen des interviewten Kindes, den Schülern mitzuteilen und ihnen ermutigende Rückmeldungen zu geben. Außerdem können die Lehrer die problematischen mathematischen Bereiche der Schüler zwar beschreiben, sehen sich laut ihrer eigenen Aussage aber nicht in der Lage mit den Schülern daran zu arbeiten und sie angemessen zu för-dern. Selbst nach den ausführlichen Analysen der ausgewählten Lehrerinnen bleibt unklar, ob und in welcher Weise sie die Erkenntnisse aus dem Führen der Schüler-Interviews für ihren Unterricht nutzen. Laut der Aussage zweier beteiligter Lehrerinnen sollten Lehrer offen und interessiert sein und sich bereitwillig mit ihren eigenen Kompetenzen auseinandersetzen, damit das Führen von Schüler-Interviews für die Lehrer selbst und für die Schüler einen besonderen Nutzen besitzt. Um diese Auseinandersetzung stärker anzuregen und zu vermeiden, dass sich im Schüler-Interview mit dem Kind nicht die Einstellungen des Lehrers gegenüber den Leistungen des Schülers widerspiegeln, könnten sie vor Beginn des Führens von Schüler-Interviews verstärkt in der Ausbildung ihrer Interviewkompetenzen unterstützt und geschult werden. Obwohl sich die Lehrer zuerst Freiräume schaffen mussten, in denen sie trotz ihres Zeitmangels Schüler interviewen konnten, bietet das Führen von Schüler-Interviews die Chance, den Ist-Zustand der Schülerperformanzen in den mathematischen Bereichen Zahlen, Größen und Raum zu erfassen.
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Slides which take students through the interview process, mediated through the presentation of published papers which use interview data
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Introduction to interview data, how it is used and how and why it might be collected
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How to ensure that your application stands out from the crowd - advice on creating your CV, making your application, preparing for interview and getting the job!!