It would probably be a good idea, especially if you are planning on conducting an "in-depth" interview. However, many (most?) interviews/interrogations are made without the benefit of having such preparedness.
no
In an interview, you have to convince the company that you are the right person to employ to help that company to trade profitably. Do your research on the company before the interview!
If you show that you researched the company, it should impress the interviewer that you cared enough to do the research.
Research? Well, always go online for science research. Use statistics and you can even interview someone. Observing what you need research on is always a good idea, too.
Before the interview, when questions are prepared and proper methodologies researched. During the interview, when the information is gathered according to the correct protocols. After the interview, when the collected information is put to use in research and properly credited.
You could start by doing some research online about pediatricians and select a specific topic to talk about. Then you can call your local medical center and speak to someone to maybe let you interview a couple of pediatricians. After that you can begin to structure your topic and use the interview information to write your research paper.
When answering this question during an interview you should focus on things that are relative to the position you are applying for. Do some research about the company and the position before you go to your interview.
To cite a quote from an interview in a research paper, include the interviewee's name, the date of the interview, and a brief description of the interview in the text. In the bibliography, provide the full citation with the interviewee's name, the date, the title of the interview, and the publication or platform where it was conducted.
To cite a radio interview in an academic paper or research project, include the name of the interviewee, the title of the interview, the name of the radio program, the date of the interview, and the URL if it was accessed online.
It's your job interview. Giving someone else's responses is silly.
In concept research instruments are Questionniare and Interview guidelines
yes