Which makes it even stranger that, as Mossdog and I have found, the first question is completely unclear as to what you are supposed to be doing.
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I've had a look - I assume it's "Self-defining memory question (Singer & Blagrov, 2004)" and I can see where you are coming from.
It isn't framed as a question - perhaps that is intentional - I wouldn't know - it seems to be inviting us to bring up a memory and put our thoughts down.
Maybe it is deliberately set to leave it open to the participant to respond freely, where a more clearly framed question might offer direction.
I don't want to ask, because I'm just putting it out there for her and am being very passive in doing so.
I appreciate all your support.
Having spent over 30 years in a career as a HCPC registered psychologist, working in the NHS, Local Government, and for a few NGOs, I've had the pleasure (ahem!)of devising, often as a team, a fair few questionnaires, surveys and worst of all, tests. Despite one's best efforts there is usually some aspect of their design and/or implementation that unexpectedly doesn't go as your detailed planning and multiple hours sweated efforts anticipated.
That's one of the 'pleasures' of working with confounding varmints called humans :)
All the best to Mel.
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf...74379904400209
https://hnmcp.law.harvard.edu/wp-con...werPoint.pdfIt
HI Everyone - she's doing quite well, she's over halfway now in completed surveys.
If anyone hasn't done it and are prepared to, I'll be very grateful on Mel's behalf :)
Based on the feedback of a few others, when you get to "Self-defining memory question (Singer & Blagrov, 2004)" there is a space where you should outline the memory you are reflecting on in whatever way you are comfortable doing.
A couple have commented that it wasn't so clear that this was what was expected.