Clean Language Interviewing (CLI) sometimes shortened to Clean Interviewing (CI) aims to maximise the reliability that information collected during an interview derives from the interviewee. CI seeks to address some of the “threats to validity and reliability”[1] that can occur during an interview and to increase the “trustworthiness” of the data collected.[2] It does this by employing a technique that minimises the unintended introduction of interviewer content, assumption, leading question structure, presupposition, framing, priming, tacit metaphor and nonverbal aspects such as paralanguage and gesture that may compromise the authenticity of the data collected.[3]

At the same time Clean Interviewing seeks to minimise common interviewee biases, such as the consistency effect, acquiescence bias and the friendliness effect which may mean an interviewee (unconsciously) looks for cues from the interviewer about how to answer.[4]

Furthermore, a systematic application of a ‘cleanness rating’ protocol provides a quantitive measure of adherence to interview guidelines and by extension the trustworthiness of the data collected.

CI can be considered a phenomenologically-based interview method, similar in intent to neuro- and micro-phenomenology,[5] psycho-phenomenology,[6] phenomenography,[7] and Interpersonal Process Recall.[8] Clean Interviewing can be seen as a method of operationalising the phenomenological aim of bracketing(epoche).[3] CI is also an integral part of a new qualitative research methodology, Modelling Shared Reality which suggests that by paying careful attention to the language they use, qualitative researchers can reduce undesired influence and unintended bias during all stages of research—design, data gathering, analysis and reporting.[9]

History

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Clean Interviewing derived from a therapeutic process, Clean Language, devised by David Grove[10] which has since found application in education, business, organisational change, health and academic research.[11]

Grove devised the principles of Clean Language in the 1980s and continued to develop a specific question set until his death in 2008. Although Owen first suggested applying Clean Language to phenomenological research in 1996,[12] it was not until 2010 that the first systematic research into the veracity of the method was conducted and published in the British Journal of Management.[13]

Features

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The features of Clean Interviewing include: the specificity of the technique; minimising unintended influence; data collection from the perspective of the interviewee; its applicability to in-depth interviews; elicitation of naturally occurring autogenic metaphor; investigating tacit knowledge; evaluation research; modelling mental models; and the verifiability of the adherence to the method.[13] [14] [15] [16] [17]

CI seeks to address the research that demonstrates responses can materially be affected by: question construction;[18] [19] framing;[20] changing a single word;[21] [22] introduced metaphors;[23] [24] presupposition;[25] and the nonverbal behaviour of the interviewer such as paralanguage[26] and gesture.[27] Furthermore, in these studies, not only did the subjects show little or no indication that they were aware of being subtly and systematically influenced, they reported their answers with a high degree of confidence.[28]

The amount of training required to become a proficient interviewer is commonly underestimated[29] [30] and because of the rigour of the CI technique, training and practice are required to become a proficient clean interviewer.[17][31]

Cleanness Rating

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Roulston maintains “researchers must demonstrate the quality of their work in ways that are commensurate with their assumptions about their use of interviews”[32] yet systematic methods for assessing the reliability and validity of the data collected during an interview are noticeably absent from published research.[33]

A “Cleanness Rating” can be used to measure the proportion of ‘clean’ to ‘leading’ interviewer interventions and hence the authenticity or trustworthiness of the data collected (i.e. how much is sourced in the interviewee’s lexicon). An independent examination of interview transcripts allocates one of four categories (Classically clean; Contextually clean; Mildly leading; Strongly leading) to every question or statement made by the interviewer. The tabulated results are used to arrive at a summary assessment for each interview. Interviewers experienced in CI can consistently achieve over 90% of ‘clean’ interventions whereas as many as two-thirds of the questions asked by an untrained interviewer can be considered ‘leading’.[14] [17]

Critique

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The assumption that interviewers can minimise their influence on the collection of data has been questioned for several decades[34] and the social constructivist school claims all knowledge is co-constructed.[35] Practitioners of CI do not claim it does not influence nor that it is “non-directive”.[36] They acknowledge that the interviewer’s role is to set the overall frames and direct the general flow of the interview[1] and they emphasise that all questions, including clean questions, set frames, contain presuppositions and invite the interviewee to attend to certain aspects of his or her experience. Clean questions aim to stay within the lexicon and inherent logic verbalised by the interviewee and leave the interviewee maximally free to answer from within their frames of reference. In other words, "accounts are co-constructed through the process of selecting and asking questions. At the same time, Clean Language [Interviewing] aims to minimise the co-construction of the content."[3]

As yet there has been no comprehensive test of the premise that interviews with a high cleanness rating result in higher quality data. Rather, an interview with a low cleaness rating may raise questions about compliance with research protocols and doubts about the authorship of the data collected.

Other forms of interviewing would be more appropriate where the researcher intentionally aims for the ‘co-construction of meaning’ or to challenge and change the understandings of participants, as in ‘transformative interviews’.[32]

Some critics have maintained that the metaphor ‘clean’ is pejorative to other methods. Grove settled on the metaphor after discovering how others (unwittingly) ‘contaminate’ another person’s perceptions with introduced content and presupposition – including Carl Rogers the originator of “non-directive therapy”.[37]

Applications

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There has been growing use of Clean Interviewing. While it is ideally suited to research (especially eliciting naturally occurring metaphors), it has also be used by police interviewers, Critical Incident investigators and in commercial projects such as requirements gathering, market research and organisational change. Examples of published research include:

  • Tacit and explicit knowledge acquisition among student teachers in Czech Republic.[38][17]
  • Comparison of the evidence of coach competency from three perspectives.[15]
  • Elicitation of 30 European business leaders’ metaphors and mental models of leadership and its development.[39]
  • Subjectivity of coachees' experience and outcomes.[16]
  • Metaphors of work-life balance.[13]
  • A Dutch case study into the role of knowledge in greening flood protection.[40]
  • Iranian students’ metaphors for their teachers.[41]
  • A mid-term review of the Dutch Living with Water project.[9]
  • Professional Development Planning at a UK university.[42]
  • Legacy of war experiences of members of the Ulster Defence Regiment.[43]

In addition Clean Interviewing has been used in a range of PhD research topics:

  • Ways in which pervasive media can contribute to a multimodal holistic user experience of the ambulant landscape.[44]
  • Factors that influence employment choices amongst older employees in Denmark.[45]
  • An exploration of leadership and its development through the inner worlds of leaders using metaphor.[46]
  • A model of spiritual leadership and self-development in a Spiritual Order in Malaysia.[47]
  • How older workers in the fire and rescue service deal with work-life balance issues as they approach and transition through retirement.[48]
  • Whether senior partners in legal services firms possess the core characteristics of identity to work in alignment within the firm.[49]

Notes

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  1. ^ a b Seidman, 2006
  2. ^ Lincoln & Guba, 1985
  3. ^ a b c Tosey, 2015
  4. ^ Podsakoff et al., 2003
  5. ^ Petitmengin, 2017
  6. ^ Mathison & Tosey, 2010
  7. ^ Reid & Solomonides, 2007
  8. ^ Larson et al., 2008
  9. ^ a b van Helsdingen & Lawley, 2012
  10. ^ Grove & Panzer, 1989
  11. ^ Lawley & Tompkins, 2000
  12. ^ Owen, 1996
  13. ^ a b c Tosey, Lawley & Meese, 2014
  14. ^ a b Lawley, 2017
  15. ^ a b Lawley & Linder-Pelz, 2016
  16. ^ a b Linder-Pelz & Lawley, 2015
  17. ^ a b c d Nehyba & Svojanovsky, 2017
  18. ^ Loftus & Palmer, 1974
  19. ^ Harris, 1973
  20. ^ Tversky & Kahneman, 1981
  21. ^ Loftus & Zanni, 1975
  22. ^ Heritage et al., 2007
  23. ^ Thibodeau & Boroditsky, 2011
  24. ^ Thibideau & Boroditsky, 2013
  25. ^ Loftus, 1975
  26. ^ Duncan et al.,1969
  27. ^ Gurney et al., 2013
  28. ^ Loftus & Hoffman, 1989
  29. ^ Cho, 2014
  30. ^ Kvale & Brinkmann, 2014
  31. ^ Tosey et al., 2014
  32. ^ a b Roulston, 2010
  33. ^ Mann, 2010
  34. ^ Mishler, 1986
  35. ^ Silverman, 2006
  36. ^ Porter, 1943
  37. ^ Tompkins & Lawley, 1996
  38. ^ Cáscová, 2015
  39. ^ Cairns-Lee, 2015
  40. ^ Janssen et al., 2014
  41. ^ Akbari, 2013
  42. ^ Nixon & Walker, 2009
  43. ^ Snoddon, 2005
  44. ^ Calderwood, 2017
  45. ^ Hanley, 2017
  46. ^ Cairns-Lee, 2017
  47. ^ Munsoor, 2017
  48. ^ Pickerden, 2013
  49. ^ Vanson, 2011

References

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