Using the Life Grid Interview Technique in Science Education Research
Ashley A. Rowland, Dimitri R. Dounas-Frazer, Laura R\'ios, H. J., Lewandowski, Lisa A. Corwin

TL;DR
This paper explores the adaptation and application of the life grid interview technique, originally from medical sociology, to STEM education research, demonstrating its effectiveness in eliciting detailed narratives from students.
Contribution
It introduces the use of the life grid interview method in undergraduate STEM education research and evaluates its benefits in enhancing interview quality.
Findings
Supports respondent agency and rapport
Enhances narrative depth and accuracy
Effective for chronological phenomena
Abstract
Background: Qualitative interviewing is a common tool that has been utilized by Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) education researchers to explore and describe the experiences of students, educators, or other educational stakeholders. Some interviewing techniques use co-creation of an artifact, such as a personal timeline, as a unique way to elicit a detailed narrative from a respondent. The purpose of this commentary is to describe an interview artifact called a life grid. First used and validated in medical sociology to conduct life course research, we adapted the life grid for use in research on undergraduate STEM education. We applied the life grid interview technique to two contexts: 1) students in an advance degree program reflecting on their entire undergraduate career as a biology major, and 2) students in an undergraduate physics program reflecting on a…
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