Difference between revisions of "Maynard1997c"

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|Author(s)=Douglas W. Maynard; Nora Cate Schaeffer;
 
|Author(s)=Douglas W. Maynard; Nora Cate Schaeffer;
 
|Title=Keeping the gate: Declinations of the request to participate in a telephone survey interview
 
|Title=Keeping the gate: Declinations of the request to participate in a telephone survey interview
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Telephone; Survey Interviews; Requests; Declinations; Sequence organization; Turn Construction
+
|Tag(s)=EMCA; Conversation Analysis; Telephone; Survey Interviews; Requests; Declinations; Sequence organization; Turn Construction; Data management
 
|Key=Maynard1997c
 
|Key=Maynard1997c
 
|Year=1997
 
|Year=1997

Latest revision as of 08:48, 25 March 2021

Maynard1997c
BibType ARTICLE
Key Maynard1997c
Author(s) Douglas W. Maynard, Nora Cate Schaeffer
Title Keeping the gate: Declinations of the request to participate in a telephone survey interview
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, Conversation Analysis, Telephone, Survey Interviews, Requests, Declinations, Sequence organization, Turn Construction, Data management
Publisher
Year 1997
Language
City
Month
Journal Sociological Methods & Research
Volume 26
Number 1
Pages 34–79
URL Link
DOI 10.1177/0049124197026001002
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

The authors employ a conversation-analytic perspective, using a haphazard sample of recorded phone calls, to analyze the sequential placement of and turn construction manner for recipients' declinations of the request to participate in a telephone survey interview. Recipients regularly respond very early in the opening of the phone call, just after the “reason for the call” is stated. In constructing their declining turns, recipients are either polite (claiming the “bad timing” of the request or that they are “not interested”), or they are impolite, as when they abruptly hang up. Some declinations are without preamble and are minimalist, whereas others are expressive and contain some question about the nature or length of the interview. The distribution of declination types reflect interviewers' and recipients' coordinated social actions in their brief encounter. The authors explore implications for survey design and data quality.

Notes