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Please contact me if you would like a free copy of the most recent 'Guide to
BNIM research interviewing and interpretation' or are interested in BNIM
training. Best wishes. Tom.
_____
Fifteenth and Sixteenth (March 2008 and June 2008)
Intensive BNIM Training - Course in Muswell Hill, London N10
in the Biographic-Narrative-Interpretive Method (BNIM)
5 days for 6 people: March 13th and 14th, and 17th to 19th ; June
12th-13th, 16th to 18th
The value of open-narrative interviewing and insightful interpretation is
widely recognised, but rather than having to invent the wheel for
themselves, many people welcome a systematic immersion into principles and
procedures that have been shown over two decades and many countries to
generate high-quality work. An excerpt from an email we received from one
university may be suggestive:
“… a number of the trainees who graduated this year got top awards in their
doctorate projects... BNIM and narrative projects were considered to be of a
particularly high standard by both internal and external examiners, and were
very well received. The course director was very impressed and has told me
that the standard of the research of those undertaking these projects (using
BNIM) has improved the standard of the whole cohort.”
For over nine years in the UK, and more recently in New York (USA), in
Auckland (NZ), Ljubljana (Slovenia), and Sydney (Australia), we have been
running BNIM intensive trainings designed for PhD students and postdoctoral
researchers in various pure and applied fields. Comments include:
Elvin – A richness beyond what I could imagine.
Sian – Well-balanced, with just enough of each step. It was nice to have a
number of little thresholds. I like the emphasis on own research, and having
lots of time for reflection.
Mark – I could go away and practice now. I liked the balance of how and why.
I really got my head round that and could explain it to someone else.
Recently completed PhDs and clinical doctorates by researchers using BNIM
range over topics such as: reintegration of returning Guatamalan refugees;
identity in informal care; men coping with sexual abuse; psychosomatic study
of breast cancer; love and intimacy; motivation in occupational therapy;
South African migrants to NZ; nurses’ and health visitors’ learning and
their professional practices; relationship experiences in psychosis (such as
those of, and with, hearing voices people) and hospitalisation,. We know of
18 more PhDs and clinical doctorates in process. Anglophone universities
involved include Birmingham, Central Lancashire, Dublin, de Montfort, East
Anglia, East London, Essex, Exeter, Kings College London, Leeds, Leicester,
Massey, Oxford, Oxford Brookes, Plymouth.
BNIM assumes that “narrative” expresses both conscious concerns and
unconscious cultural, societal and individual presuppositions and processes.
Integrally psycho-societal, it supports research into the lived experience
and reflexivity of individuals and collectives, facilitating understanding
both the ‘inner’ and the ‘outer’ worlds of ‘historically-evolving
persons-in-historically-evolving situations’, and particularly the
expectedly surprising interactivity of inner and outer world dynamics. It
especially serves researchers who need a tool that supports understanding
spanning sociological and psychological dynamics and structures, and these
treated not statically but as situated and affected historically and
biographically.
Such research provides an innovative base for policy review and for better
policy and professional or activist practice.
When you do the course, you automatically become a member of the
<Biographic-narrative-BNIM> email list where news, questions and discussion
circulate. Methodology can be lonely without a secure base and like-minded
people working in the same way as you. The course, the textbook, the Short
Guide and the email list offer you support in using part or all of the BNIM
tool-kit in your own work.
Summary
Designed for PhD students and professional researchers, the course provides
a thorough training in doing BNIM biographic narrative interviews, together
with ‘hands-on experience’ of following BNIM interpretation procedures.
Students develop a sense of how their own research projects might use such
aspects and components. The earlybird cost is £650 if paid in full by
February 1st [May 1st]. If paid later, the cost is £750. Taught by Prue
Chamberlayne and Tom Wengraf in Muswell Hill, North London, the course’s
small number of students ensures close coaching and support for the
intensive work that is needed for you to fully acquire both the
understanding of principles and also the practical capacity for proceeding
with the systematic procedures involved in BNIM – usable both for BNIM but
also for other types of narrative interviewing and interpretation.
You will be expected to have looked at (not read!) chapters 6 and 12 of
Tom’s textbook, Qualitative research interviewing: biographic narrative and
semi-structured method (2001: Sage Publications). Before the course starts,
you are expected to have studied some bits and scanned others of the Short
Guide to BNIM which will be sent to your email address. This
preparing-by-reading means that most of your time during the 5 days can be
spent on clarification and practical exercises, learning-by-doing.
Programme (subject to revision)
Thursday and Friday
We start with a short introduction to the Biographic-narrative-interpretive
method, the history of its development, and to the principles behind its
practice. The point and timing of using open-ended biographic narrative
interviews rather than (only) the more conventional semi-structured and
attitude-and-argument focused ones is clarified. You get to see the value
of the 3 quite different subsessions. The bulk of the first two days is then
almost entirely devoted to learning the craft of BNIM interviewing
practice. This involves learning to ask narrative-pointed questions (both
open and also focused) and not inadvertently interrupting or deflecting the
interviewee. Apparently simple, it rapidly becomes clear that such a craft
requires repeated and carefully-monitored practice to be successfully
achieved. Pencil-and-paper and repeated interview practice exercises ensure
such success is achieved by the end of the 2nd day.
Monday to Wednesday
We outline the principles and you engage in the key practices of BNIM
interpretive work . We explain the importance of the twin interpretive
tracks of ‘living of the lived life’ and ‘telling of the told story’
analysis, and micro-analysis, and how you convert the raw transcript into
two series of processed data for each track. You learn the significance of
the future-blind chunk-by-chunk approach peculiar to BNIM by practice – by
doing parts of a narrative text analysis, a micro-analysis and
biographical data analysis. You see the value of bringing the separated
tracks together in an integrated ‘case account’. Finally, on the basis of
case-presentations, you practice systematic case-comparison and the
generalising and particularising modelling towards which BNIM work is
typically oriented. The course ends with our looking again at how you might
best use all or part of the BNIM approach within your individual research
projects, and, given the existence of sceptical research and applied policy
audiences, how to defend your choice to use such an in-depth biographical
research method with a necessarily low-N sample.
For an example of BNIM case studies we recommend the European Union
seven-country SOSTRIS project (edited) Biography and social exclusion in
Europe: experiences and life-journeys (2002: Bristol, Policy Press). Other
books, articles and reports are listed in the full bibliographies of the
constantly updated Short Guide to BNIM.
To get a copy of the most recent version of the free Short Guide to BNIM,
to ask any questions or to book a place, contact
<mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask]
To reserve a place, you need to send us a deposit of £200.
To get the early-bird discount, you need to pay a total of £650 before the
1st day of the month before the month in which the course runs (i.e. by 1st
of February for the course running in March). Otherwise, the cost then
rises to £750. Reserve early, pay early: make sure of getting a place, pay
less!
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