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Panel
titleHow to Use the Interviewee Recruitment Plan to Recruit Interviewees
  1. Read the Research Question Background to make sure you understand this study's research question.
  2. Read the Interviewee Characteristics to make sure you understand the number and types of instructors we need.
  3. View the Interviewee Recruitment Summary to make see the number and types of instructors we have recorded so far.
  4. Gather relevant information about your potential interviewee (it is not necessary for them to have already committed to an interview).
  5. Complete the Interviewee Information form
  6. View the Interviewee Recruitment Summary to see that information about your instructor has been added (you may need to do a hard refresh (Ctrl/Apple-R) or wait a few minutes for the data to update).
  7. Once you have successfully scheduled an interview with a potential interviewee, please email me with the following information:
    1. Type of instructor (Faculty/Graduate Student Instructor/Instructor Assistant)
    2. The instructor's title (i.e. Assistant Professor, Associate Professor, Teaching Assistant, Administrative Assistant, etc.)
    3. The instructor's specific department (i.e. Philosophy, Computer Science, Mathematics, etc.)

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At this early stage of our recruitment process, these distributions act as guidelines and do not strictly need to be followed. The priority is on getting an initial batch of interviewees recruited and then using these guidelines to select more.

For each group of 6 interviewees within an instructor group, we want to try and match the following behavioral and demographic variable distributions. Variables with importance high are given most priority. The medium and low distributions are more flexible. The distributions are based on the 2009 Sakai Multi-Institutional Survey Initiative results as well as background knowledge of the Data Analysis Group.

Variable

Distribution (out of 6)

Importance

Department Area

Humanities: 1 / Social Sciences: 1 / Arts: 1 / Engineering: 1 / Science & Medicine: 1 / Business & Law: 1

High

Department Size

small (~5): 2 / medium (~10): 2 / large (~20): 2

High

Commitment to Teaching vs. Other job duties

Teaching: 2 / About Equal: 3 / ResearchOther: 1

High

Teaches primarily Large vs. Small courses

Large: 2 / About Equal: 2 / Small: 2

High

Teaches primarily Undergraduate vs. Graduate courses

Undergraduate: 2 / About Equal: 2 / Graduate: 2

High

Teaching primarily Face-To-Face vs. Online courses

Face-To-Face: 4 / About Equal: 1 / Online: 1

Medium

Comfort level with online scholarly research

very uncomfortable: 1 / somewhere in-between: 4 / very comfortable: 1

Medium

Amount of time spent conducting online scholarly research

none: 1 / somewhere in-between: 4 / close to 40 hrs/week: 1

Medium

Comfort level with Sakai or other online course management tools

very uncomfortable: 2 / somewhere in-between: 3 / very comfortable: 1

Medium

Amount of time spent using Sakai or other online course management tools

none: 1 / somewhere in-between: 4 / close to 40 hrs/week: 1

Medium

Age

less than 40: 2 / 40 to 60: 3 / greater than 60: 1

Low