Interview
Interview
This is a constructive evaluation or critique, which can be positive or negative, depending on the reviewer's analysis. Maximum 15 pages.
Title
Concise and representative of the content.
It may include the interviewee's name or the central theme.
Presentation/Introduction
Brief biography of the interviewee: background, academic achievements, institutional affiliation.
Context of the interview: why the interviewee is being interviewed, relevance of the topic.
Objective: what you hope to highlight.
Body of the interview (Questions and answers)
Organize it thematically, not just chronologically. Some typical sections could be:
Section
Suggested Content
Academic Context
Questions about education, intellectual influences, and motivations.
Current Research
Ongoing projects, methodology, and relevant findings.
Theoretical Perspectives
Opinions on epistemological currents and debates in the field.
Interdisciplinarity
Connections with other areas, collaborations.
Impact and ethics
Social applications, researcher responsibility.
You can include:
Open-ended questions that encourage reflective responses.
Brief interventions to clarify technical concepts if necessary.
Closing
Final reflection from the interviewee.
Recommendations for young researchers.
Comments on the future of the field.
References or notes
If key theories, authors, or works are mentioned, they can be briefly cited. This is not common in interviews, but useful if you want to maintain rigor.
All Items
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