This is a book about deeper listening . . . that will help
professionals become more sensitive and enable closer
communication. . . . This book is a must for professionals. Dr.
Chirban shows us both how and why we interview. Interviewing In
Depth will hold an important place on my shelf. I hope you find it
as warm and fascinating as I have. --Allen E. Ivey, Ed.D.,
A.B.P.P., Distinguished University Professor, University of
Massachusetts "This sensitive, reflective, and revealing book
supplies a most valuable anatomy of the "deep structure" of the
personal interview, as well as remarkable insights into people who
have left indelible marks on our times. Clinicians and lay readers
will be both instructed and fascinated by this work." --Thomas G.
Gutheil, M.D., Professor of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School Use
this quote first "I hope this useful and challenging book reaches
well beyond clinicians and other health professionals to anyone
whose work depends upon face-to-face encounters. Its simple, yet
radical message is that a successful interview is more likely to
happen when collaboration, personal attributes, values, and
feelings are brought and made available by both participants.
Recognizing that this is precisely what professional interviewers
have avoided, Dr. Chirban skillfully shows how mutual visibility
can be achieved but managed: The interactive-relational approach
works. Readers will love seeing it in action, especially with B.F.
Skinner and Lucille Ball." --Anthony G. Barrand, Ph.D, Department
of Anthropology, Boston University In Interviewing in Depth, John
T. Chirban presents an innovative and powerful interviewing
approach--the interactive-relational--that promises and delivers a
clearer, deeper portrait of the person. By focusing on how the
interviewer participates more fully in the interview, through
particular interaction in the relationship he or she establishes,
Chirban shows how the interviewer manages his or her personal
feelings while still maintaining a professional stance. Through
excerpts of interviews in journalism, oral histories, and
psychohistory, Chirban draws from his work with B. F. Skinner,
Lucille Ball, Sandra Day O'Connor, and patients to illustrate how
the interactive-relational approach differs from more traditional
techniques and applies to interviewing in the health professions,
communications, and business as well as psychology.
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