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Constructing a purposive interview sample of bloggers Internet Research 8.0, Vancouver October 18-20, 2007   By David Brake London School of Economics http://davidbrake.org/ David Brake
Why interview personal webloggers? They write what appear to be ‘private’ statements in a ‘public’ space This study seeks to understand the practice through the self-reflexive accounts of practitioners (not always provided in blogs themselves) David Brake
Why do so face to face? Primarily to get richer more lengthy accounts L ü ders  who mixed instant message and face to face interviews found the length of her face to face interview transcripts was three times that of the IM transcripts Also provided verification of age and gender David Brake
Sampling problems of previous studies “ All informants were well-educated, middle-class people either in school or employed in knowledge work or artistic pursuits.” (Nardi et al 2004) “ The vast majority … identify as middle class. Nearly all of them are university educated” (Reed 2005) “ The interview participants were almost entirely ‘ i nformation professionals ’  in some form.” (Brady 2006) “ generally well-educated professionals and business owners; people involved in higher education or actively pursuing new educational opportunities.” (Lenhart 2006) David Brake
Reflective of blogging population? Using Dec 2005 Pew data: 8% of US Internet users overall College educated - 6.1% blog Lowest  of categories - less than high school = 13.8% Household income $50-75k = 5.2% blog < $10k - 18% blog Age - 24.7% of 18-24 blog but 5.5% of 55-64 y/olds blog David Brake
Representative sample? Characteristics of UK webloggers then unknown Numbers to be interviewed not sufficient to represent full spread David Brake
The solution? Used purposive sampling  (Chadwick  et al.  1984 pp 65-66) - that is: Sample constructed to maximise variety - in this case of age, social class, education, blog audience level and attitude to readers Wish I had heard Dan Li and Gina Walejko’s presentation here two days ago two years ago! David Brake
Four step approach David Brake I Use search engines to find contactable personal webloggers II Select webloggers for initial contact from search results III Send questionnaire and select interviewees based on questionnaire results IV Interview respondents f2f
Step 1 Search terms constructed using Google to find London-based blogs hosted by blogger or LJ with email addresses (using search of profile pages) Eg site:livejournal.com &quot;User Information&quot; London e-mail -Ontario 510 sites examined (starting at bottom of search results to avoid popularity bias) David Brake
Step 2 237 sites were selected matching criteria: in English by one author classified as ‘personal’ (based on reading first page) updated in the last month and contained at least five entries author appeared to be in or near London an email address was available. David Brake
Step 3 Sites from Step 2 emailed an invitation to do a short (21 question) web questionnaire 150 responses to online questionnaire, from which 75 were invited to interview (invitations sent until desired breadth of response achieved). Note: questionnaire results were therefore  not  anonymous - at least not to me. Questionpro enabled tracking and reminder emails to non-responders etc. No non-invited responses allowed. David Brake
Interviewee characteristics evenly split by gender 74% white education level from vocational to postgrad degree (73.9% were degree educated) 56% said they were 'middle class', 13% (3) self-identified as 'working class'). Ages collected as ranges and participants were from all of the age brackets from 16-24 to 50-64 (though there were only two interviewees in the latter age bracket and no questionnaire respondents over the age of 65).  David Brake
Interviewee characteristics (cont.) Also included range of scores on: “ On a scale of one to five how well would a regular reader of your weblog get to know you?” “ Roughly how many people do you think visit your weblog in an average week? (Please guess even if you don't know)” “ how important to you are the comments you get from readers?” David Brake
Benefits Was able to get sample that varied around key variables of theoretical interest (eg number of perceived readers, degree of openness) David Brake
Weaknesses I - social composition Difficult to recruit truly ‘disadvantaged’ bloggers (unclear how many existed then) Three “working class” people interviewed were a software engineer, an accountant and a “writer” (actually student) Of 6 without degrees, two were students, two were in mid-level IT, one accountant and one administrator (but self-identified middle class) Only two respondents combining working class, low educ and blue collar occupation - neither agreed to interview David Brake
Weakness II Use of search engine to construct sampling frame  Coverage and result presentation algorithm not well understood Possible bias towards more popular sites (though attempt made to compensate) Relatively clumsy (would be even harder if you wanted to draw sample across wide variety of weblogging platforms). David Brake
Possible solutions Chyng Yang Jang (cyjang@uta.edu) has a tool to automate extraction of Blogger “random blogs” (which still favours recently updated blogs) Could have “filled in” sample through snowball or cluster sampling (biased but better than nothing?) David Brake
Further Questions? Comments? Contact details: David Brake PhD researcher, Media and Comms department, London School of Economics http://davidbrake.org/ http://blog.org/ Thank you for your attention! David Brake

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Constructing a purposive interview sample of bloggers

  • 1. Constructing a purposive interview sample of bloggers Internet Research 8.0, Vancouver October 18-20, 2007 By David Brake London School of Economics http://davidbrake.org/ David Brake
  • 2. Why interview personal webloggers? They write what appear to be ‘private’ statements in a ‘public’ space This study seeks to understand the practice through the self-reflexive accounts of practitioners (not always provided in blogs themselves) David Brake
  • 3. Why do so face to face? Primarily to get richer more lengthy accounts L ü ders who mixed instant message and face to face interviews found the length of her face to face interview transcripts was three times that of the IM transcripts Also provided verification of age and gender David Brake
  • 4. Sampling problems of previous studies “ All informants were well-educated, middle-class people either in school or employed in knowledge work or artistic pursuits.” (Nardi et al 2004) “ The vast majority … identify as middle class. Nearly all of them are university educated” (Reed 2005) “ The interview participants were almost entirely ‘ i nformation professionals ’ in some form.” (Brady 2006) “ generally well-educated professionals and business owners; people involved in higher education or actively pursuing new educational opportunities.” (Lenhart 2006) David Brake
  • 5. Reflective of blogging population? Using Dec 2005 Pew data: 8% of US Internet users overall College educated - 6.1% blog Lowest of categories - less than high school = 13.8% Household income $50-75k = 5.2% blog < $10k - 18% blog Age - 24.7% of 18-24 blog but 5.5% of 55-64 y/olds blog David Brake
  • 6. Representative sample? Characteristics of UK webloggers then unknown Numbers to be interviewed not sufficient to represent full spread David Brake
  • 7. The solution? Used purposive sampling (Chadwick et al. 1984 pp 65-66) - that is: Sample constructed to maximise variety - in this case of age, social class, education, blog audience level and attitude to readers Wish I had heard Dan Li and Gina Walejko’s presentation here two days ago two years ago! David Brake
  • 8. Four step approach David Brake I Use search engines to find contactable personal webloggers II Select webloggers for initial contact from search results III Send questionnaire and select interviewees based on questionnaire results IV Interview respondents f2f
  • 9. Step 1 Search terms constructed using Google to find London-based blogs hosted by blogger or LJ with email addresses (using search of profile pages) Eg site:livejournal.com &quot;User Information&quot; London e-mail -Ontario 510 sites examined (starting at bottom of search results to avoid popularity bias) David Brake
  • 10. Step 2 237 sites were selected matching criteria: in English by one author classified as ‘personal’ (based on reading first page) updated in the last month and contained at least five entries author appeared to be in or near London an email address was available. David Brake
  • 11. Step 3 Sites from Step 2 emailed an invitation to do a short (21 question) web questionnaire 150 responses to online questionnaire, from which 75 were invited to interview (invitations sent until desired breadth of response achieved). Note: questionnaire results were therefore not anonymous - at least not to me. Questionpro enabled tracking and reminder emails to non-responders etc. No non-invited responses allowed. David Brake
  • 12. Interviewee characteristics evenly split by gender 74% white education level from vocational to postgrad degree (73.9% were degree educated) 56% said they were 'middle class', 13% (3) self-identified as 'working class'). Ages collected as ranges and participants were from all of the age brackets from 16-24 to 50-64 (though there were only two interviewees in the latter age bracket and no questionnaire respondents over the age of 65). David Brake
  • 13. Interviewee characteristics (cont.) Also included range of scores on: “ On a scale of one to five how well would a regular reader of your weblog get to know you?” “ Roughly how many people do you think visit your weblog in an average week? (Please guess even if you don't know)” “ how important to you are the comments you get from readers?” David Brake
  • 14. Benefits Was able to get sample that varied around key variables of theoretical interest (eg number of perceived readers, degree of openness) David Brake
  • 15. Weaknesses I - social composition Difficult to recruit truly ‘disadvantaged’ bloggers (unclear how many existed then) Three “working class” people interviewed were a software engineer, an accountant and a “writer” (actually student) Of 6 without degrees, two were students, two were in mid-level IT, one accountant and one administrator (but self-identified middle class) Only two respondents combining working class, low educ and blue collar occupation - neither agreed to interview David Brake
  • 16. Weakness II Use of search engine to construct sampling frame Coverage and result presentation algorithm not well understood Possible bias towards more popular sites (though attempt made to compensate) Relatively clumsy (would be even harder if you wanted to draw sample across wide variety of weblogging platforms). David Brake
  • 17. Possible solutions Chyng Yang Jang (cyjang@uta.edu) has a tool to automate extraction of Blogger “random blogs” (which still favours recently updated blogs) Could have “filled in” sample through snowball or cluster sampling (biased but better than nothing?) David Brake
  • 18. Further Questions? Comments? Contact details: David Brake PhD researcher, Media and Comms department, London School of Economics http://davidbrake.org/ http://blog.org/ Thank you for your attention! David Brake