Towards Democratisation?: Understanding university students’ Internet use in mainland China


Appendix III: An interview invitation letter



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Appendix III: An interview invitation letter


An interview invitation letter

Xuelian Jin

Jop10xj@shef.ac.uk

Department of Journalism Studies

University of Sheffield

18-22 Regent Street

Sheffield, UK

S1 3NJ


20 Feb 2012

Dear friends:

Thanks for reading this invitation letter. My name is Jin Xuelian. I’m a second-year PhD student in the Department of Journalism Studies at the University of Sheffield in the UK. My study tries to understand the Internet use of university students like you, your understanding of your Internet use and its political implications.

I’m sincerely inviting you to participate in an interview, which is crucial to my research. The interview is about your use of the Internet and your understanding of your usage. It may take about one to three hours and the process will be recorded with your agreement. I hope that we could go into details of your Internet use and what you really think about your usage. It is up to you to decide whether or not you will participate in the research. Before the interview, you can talk to me about the research. You will be given a consent form to inform you of the researcher, the research and ethical issues involved to protect your rights. To protect your privacy, the record will be stored anonymously with a code for the project and destroyed after this project. Any information about your identity will not be released in any of my publications.

You have the right to ask and leave any time you want during the interview without giving a reason. And you also have the right to check the record and notes to see if you are correctly understood. In return for your favour, you could ask me any question that you are interested in after our interview. Drinks and refreshment will be provided during the interview. No other incentive will be provided for your participation.

Please contact Jin Xuelian anytime before 3rd March, 2013 if you decide to participate. I will appreciate your acceptance my invitation. Your perspective will be of significant importance to my research.

Contact detail of Xuelian Jin

QQ: 939922452

Mobile: 86269983

Kindly regards,



Xuelian Jin

Supervised by Dr. John Steel (The University of Sheffield)


Appendix IV: Informed Consent Form Template for Focus Group



University Research Ethics Committee (UREC)


http://www.shef.ac.uk/ris/other/committees/ethicscommittee


Informed Consent Form Template for Focus Group


Informed Consent Form for university students in mainland China who I am inviting to participate in my PhD research, titled “Understanding university students’ Internet use and its political implications in mainland China: using grounded theory”

Investigator and Moderator: Xuelian Jin

Position: PhD student

Supervisor: John Steel

Institution: The Department of Journalism Studies, The University of Sheffield, UK

Address (UK): 18-22 Regent Street, Sheffield, S1 3NJ

E-mail: jop10xj@shef.ac.uk

This Informed Consent Form has two parts:

Information Sheet (to share information about the study with you)

Certificate of Consent (for signatures if you choose to participate)

You will be given a copy of the full Informed Consent Form

Part I: Information Sheet

Introduction

Thank you for agreeing to meet me. My name is Jin Xuelian. I’m a second-year PhD student in the Department of Journalism Studies at the University of Sheffield in the UK. My study tries to understand the Internet use of university students like you, your understanding of your Internet use and its political implications. This is a focus group about your use of the Internet and your understanding of your usage. I am going to give you information and invite you to be part of this research. It is up to you to decide whether or not you will participate in the research. Before you decide, you can talk to me about the research. This consent form may contain words that you do not understand. Please ask me to stop as we go through the information and I will take time to explain. If you have questions later, you can ask them of me.



Purpose of the research

The Internet has been developing rapidly in China. Many people are interested in how the Internet influences China. I try to understand its influence through the perspective of university students. How do you use the Internet? What do you use it for? And how do you explain and understand your usage? How do you see the influence of the Internet in China?



Type of Research Intervention

This research will involve your participation in a focus group discussion that will take about one and half hour to two hours. The focus group consists of six participants from six different colleges in this university.



Participant Selection

You are being invited to take part in this research because your tutor recommended you to me. As a university student, your online experience and your understanding of your online experience can contribute much to my understanding and knowledge of my research topic.



Voluntary Participation

Your participation in this research is entirely voluntary. It is your choice whether or not to participate. You can choose to withdraw any time you wish without giving a reason even after you agree to participate.



Procedures

If you accept my invitation to participate in the group discussion, you and other five participants will have a group discussion in the meeting room of the College of Foreign Languages at the Level 1 of its teaching building with me as the moderator. If you do not wish to discuss about any of the questions during the group discussion, you may say so and we will move on to the next question. The information recorded is confidential, and no one else except I will access to the information documented during your interview. The entire interview will be recorded, but no-one will be identified by name on the document. The document will be kept in my personal laptop and a digital storage device that can be accessed only by me. The information recorded is confidential, and no one else except I have access to the documents. The documents will be destroyed when the project is closed.



Duration

The group discussion will be held once and will take about one and half hour to two hours. You could leave me a means to reach you if you agree to further contact you when questions emerge during the research.



Risks

As the research tries to understand every aspect of your Internet use, I may ask you to share with me and other participants some very personal and confidential information that you may feel reluctant or uncomfortable to talk about, like politically sensitive content or pornography. You do not have to answer any question or take part in the discussion if you don't wish to do so, and that is also fine. You do not have to give us any reason for not responding to any question, or for refusing to take part in the interview. I hope that you could let me know that you don’t wish to answer the question instead of lying when you feel uncomfortable to talk about it.



Benefits

There will be no direct benefit to you, but your participation is likely to help me to gain a better understanding about how a university student uses the Internet and how you understand your usage, and thus how the Internet might influence China.



Reimbursements

You will not be provided any incentive to take part in the research.



Confidentiality

I will not be sharing information about you to anyone. The information that I collect from this research project will be kept private. Any information about you will have a code on it instead of your name. Only the transcription of the group discussion will be shown to the coders and be coded, but with all information about your identity concealed.



Sharing the Results

My PhD dissertation based on the data I collect from you and other participants will be submitted to my department, my university and to one external examiner. I will also try to publish the results so that other interested people may learn from the research. But nothing will be attributed to you by name. You can receive a summary of the results if you wish and leave your contact detail.



Right to Refuse or Withdraw

You do not have to take part in this research if you do not wish to do so. You may stop participating at any time that you wish. I will give you an opportunity at the end of the interview to listen to the record, and you can ask to modify or remove portions of those, if you do not want it to be recorded.



Who to Contact

This proposal has been reviewed and approved by University Research Ethics Committee (UREC) which is a committee at the University of Sheffield whose task it is to make sure that research participants are protected from harm. If you wish to find more about the UREC, visit http://www.shef.ac.uk/ris/other/committees/ethicscommittee to find out who and how to contact.

You can ask me any more questions about any part of the study, if you wish to. Do you have any questions?

Part II: Certificate of Consent

I have read the foregoing information. I have had the opportunity to ask questions about it and any questions I have asked have been answered to my satisfaction. I consent voluntarily to be a participant in this study.

Print Name of Participant__________________

Signature of Participant ___________________

Date ___________________________

Day/month/year

Statement by the researcher/person taking consent

I have accurately read out the information sheet to the potential participant, and to the best of my ability made sure that the participant understands the information.

I confirm that the participant was given an opportunity to ask questions about the study, and all the questions asked by the participant have been answered correctly and to the best of my ability. I confirm that the individual has not been coerced into giving consent, and the consent has been given freely and voluntarily.

  

 A copy of this ICF has been provided to the participant.



Print Name of Researcher/person taking the consent________________________

Signature of Researcher /person taking the consent_________________________

Date ___________________________

Day/month/year


Appendix V: The researcher as an instrument


What we bring to the study also influences what we can see. ‘Neither observer nor observed come to a scene untouched by the world’ (Charmaz, 2006, p.15). Therefore, it is of great importance for the audience of the research to know the researcher, one of the important instruments of the research.

The researcher was born in a small village in 1978, the year when the reform and opening up began in China. The village was in Chongqing, in the southwest of China and it contained about fifteen households. It was about an hour’s walk for an adult to go to the nearest town. It took a much longer time to go by bus since it sat in mountains. The researcher’s childhood before she was seven years old was mainly spent there. She spent about a year with her grandmother (her mother’s mother) in another smaller and remoter village during the period her mother gave birth to her younger brother. 1978 was also the year the one-child policy began. Her mother had to leave her village to hide from the family-planning office of the village in order to give birth to her second child. The researcher’s childhood in the countryside was happy and carefree. As far as the researcher can recall, she had no sense of worry or sadness.

Her parents had always wanted to leave the countryside for the town, for a better life. Her father joined the army. At that time, servicemen were assigned jobs in towns or cities when they retired from the army. Her mother was diligent. Her mother worked in a small brick factory as an accountant in the daytime and farmed the land of five people in the night. In 1985 when her father retired from the army and was assigned a job, the researcher moved to Yudong Town and started her primary school life with her father. Her younger brother and grandmother (her father’s mother) still stayed with her mother in the countryside because the unit her father worked for only provided accommodation for one person. A year later, her family reunited in Yudong Town with accommodation provided by the unit.

She was still happy, but she began to have worries with her life in town. She began to notice that most families in town were richer than hers. Their apartments were better furnished, clean and tidy. Their children were better attended and served with better-cooked food. Her parents were too busy making money to feed the family to take care of her brother and her. Her teacher told her mother that she did not do well in her studies because she had not had any education before the primary school. Her family was not well-connected with her father’s family. Her mother’s younger sister and three younger brothers all lived in the countryside, in poorer and remoter villages than her home village. Her family began to help her mother’s brothers and sister since her family moved to town.

After her graduation from Sichuan International Studies University in 2001, she became an English teacher in The Third Military Medical University in Chongqing. She was married in 2002 and her husband also came from countryside. She spent lots of her summer vacations and winter vacations with her husband’s family in the countryside.

She had never realised that her living conditions in her home village were poor until one time in about 2004 when she was viewing photos taken in her village on her computer. She came across a news report about the life of children in poor areas and calling people to help them through donation. The news report showed photos of their houses, their bare feet, and their dirty but smiling faces. The family house of the researcher in the countryside was even shabbier. She could not recall if her face had been dirty, but she was sure that she had been as happy as the owners of the smiling faces were. She had been happy and had never realised that her family needed any economic help. To the researcher, her home village was everything, a beautiful place with mountain views and fresh air, a home, and a reservoir of happy and carefree memories, but a poor village that needed economical help.

Her experience in the countryside and family background has a profound influence upon the researcher. On the one hand, the researcher always wants to be better-off economically through her own efforts and wants to help those in poor economic conditions. On the other hand, the researcher has doubt about whether it is the countryside people who need the economic aid or whether it is we who are economically better-off who want to help others to feel spiritually better-off. Maybe what the countryside people need is understanding and respect of their life. To help people live a better life, more importantly, a happy life is one of the motives that drive the researcher to study and do research.

Another important factor that shapes the design of the research and the interpretation of the results is the researcher’s study of communication. In 2004, the researcher decided to take an MA course as a way to improve herself and also as a life-changing opportunity. She was determined to go to Peking University. She was not so sure about what to study. She tried English literature first since this was what she studied for her BA. Unfortunately or fortunately, she found that she was neither interested in nor good at English literature. There were two choices left for her, education or communication considering lots of factors like interest, possibility of passing the entrance examination, and future development. In the summer vacation of 2005, the researcher went to Peking University and tried to find somebody for advice. And she was lucky. She met the first two important persons on her way to communication study, two new graduates from Beijing Normal University. One of them had taken the last entrance examination for MA in international communication of Peking University and received high scores. She told the researcher all her experience of preparing for the examination.

The researcher began to study and prepare for the coming examination right after coming back to Chongqing from Beijing. The researcher was fascinated by the power of communication and fell in love with communication studies. She failed in the coming examination, but she had the confidence to try for the second time since her total score was above the admission line. Only the score of one subject was a little lower than that required and she had started to learn a new course for only six months. Therefore, she prepared for another year during which she took the summer course of communication studies co-lectured by the College of Journalism and Communication at Peking University and Annenberg School for Communication at University of Pennsylvania. The experience started or re-enforced her determination to go abroad for further study and research.

In 2007, the researcher passed the entrance examination, but failed in the interview. She accepted the offer from Chongqing University and started her MA in communication in the College of Literature and Journalism, with a special interest in political communication. Her MA dissertation studied the influence of the university campus Bulletin Board System on deliberation of university affairs. Her study found that BBS worked to reflect and amplify the power relations in reality instead of shifting the power from one group to another.

During her writing of her MA dissertation, the researcher had been preparing for PhD study abroad, taking English language examinations and applying. In 2009, she received an unconditional offer from the University of Sheffield. But she postponed her registration for one year both because her newly-born son was only four months old and because she lacked the funding. In 2010, the researcher, with the support of her family, decided to accept the offer and start her PhD study. It was a very hard decision. The funding from her employer could only cover half of her total expenses and her family had to borrow about 30,000 GBP to cover the difference. She had to separate from her husband and her son because her husband needed his job to support the whole family.

Her three year study in the University of Sheffield, however, proves that it was a wise decision. The experience is precious and life-changing. It is through the three years study that she found many of her previous views about research and democracy had been superficial. She learned and gained the knowledge, skills, and confidence to conduct real scientific and valid research both qualitatively and quantitatively. Through systematic study of democracy guided by her supervisor and talks with research students from different polities or countries with different degrees of democracy about their understanding of democracy and their government forms, her view that democracy solves all problems has been overturned and she learned about the preconditions for democracy and closely related concepts like ‘conflict’, ‘tolerance’, ‘negotiation’, ‘compromise’, ‘interest group’ and so on, which she had not any idea about their relationship with democracy.

The researcher’s view of who benefits from democracy and who are the driving forces of democratisation has also been changed. She used to think that democratisation was a zero-sum game in which the lower class win while the upper class, especially the ruling class, loose. Therefore, it is the conflict between the lower class and the upper class that drives democratisation. Now she realises that democratisation is actually a win-win game in which all classes win. It is the conflict between the lower class and the upper class, more importantly the conflict within the ruling class in the case of China that drives democratisation.


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