Using email interviews to reflect on women's careers at a regional university.
Anitra Goriss-HunterKate WhitePublished in: Australian educational researcher (2023)
The article investigates asynchronous narrative research via email as a flexible and agentic method of collecting data that may empower female participants. A case study was used that focused on the challenges for academic and professional women at an Australian regional university. Twenty-one women responded by email to a range of questions about working conditions and career progression. The data demonstrated that participants found this methodology empowering, encouraging agentic behaviour as they could respond at a time that suited them and in as much detail as they desired. They could also leave their narratives and return to them after some reflection. While lacking the non-verbal markers that often add to meanings in face-to-face interviews, the participants' writing gave voice and form to their lived experience that has been missing from academic literature. This research method may be vital in the continuing COVID-19 environment where it can be difficult to access geographically dispersed participants.
Keyphrases
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- pregnancy outcomes
- cervical cancer screening
- sars cov
- electronic health record
- coronavirus disease
- breast cancer risk
- systematic review
- medical students
- big data
- working memory
- insulin resistance
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- machine learning
- adipose tissue
- deep learning
- artificial intelligence