Chapter 12 Indirect Data Collection

January 5, 2018 | Author: Anonymous | Category: Arts & Humanities, Communications
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Chapter 12 Indirect Data Collection: Working with Observations and Existing Text Zina O’Leary

Indirect Data Indirect data is data that exists regardless of a researcher’s questioning, prompting and probing.

It is found in social situations, documents, databases, and artefacts and is not created by the researcher for research processes. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Observation A systematic method of data collection that relies on a researcher’s ability to gather data through their senses.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Types of Observation In conducting observations, researchers can be anything from removed to immersed: • Non-participant - in this role, the

researcher does not become, nor aims to become, an integral part of the system or community they are observing. • Participant - in this role, the researcher is, or becomes, a part of the team, community, or cultural group they are observing.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Types of Observation Researchers need to consider the advantages and disadvantages of full disclosure:

• Candid - the researcher offers full disclosure of the nature of their study and the role the observations will play in their research. • Covert - can be non-participant, i.e. watching pedestrian behavior at an intersection, or watching interactions at a school playground. But they can also be participatory. This involves researchers going ‘undercover’ in an attempt to get a real sense of a situation, context, or phenomenon. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Types of Observation Observational techniques can range from highly structured to unstructured: • Structured - highly systematic and often relies on predetermined criteria related to the people, events, practices, issues, behaviors, actions, situations, and phenomena being observed. • Semi-structured - observers generally use some manner of observation schedule or checklist to organize observations, but also attempt to observe and record the unplanned and/or the unexpected. • Unstructured - observers attempt to observe and record data without predetermined criteria.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

What You See Isn’t Always What You Get Observation provides the opportunity for researchers to document actual behavior rather than responses related to behavior. However, the observed can act differently when surveyed; and researchers’ observations are likely to be biased by their own worldviews. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Filtering Observations

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

The Observation Process Taking the world in through our senses needs to be tackled systematically in order to ensure we can: • take in a full range of sensory inputs • keep biases in check • aim for saturated understanding.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

The Observation Process The collection of credible data through observation requires: • • • • • •

thorough planning careful observation thoughtful recording reflexive review considered refinements appropriate analysis.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Recording Observations Recording observations involves preservation of raw data through audio recordings, photographs, and videos or capturing impressions through note taking and journaling.

Observations can be quite subjective so it is important to confirm through strategies that ensure thoroughness and confirmation. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Existing Text Existing ‘texts’ are traces of social activity that include official data and records, electronic/internet material, corporate data, personal records, the media, the arts, and social artefacts.

Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Existing Texts Working with existing texts allows researchers to: • • • •

be neutral capitalize on existing data explore what people produce and eliminate the need for physical access to research subjects.

But researchers need to work through data not expressly generated for their particular research question(s). Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Textual Analysis Textual analysis involves: • planning for all contingencies • gathering ‘texts’ • reviewing credibility • interrogating witting and unwitting evidence • reflecting and refining your process • and analyzing data. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Document Analysis Document analysis sees researchers working with preproduced written, rather than generated, texts. This requires researchers to consider two potential sources of bias: • the original author’s and • their own. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Document Types

Authoritative sources - documents that by their authorship or authority attempt to be unbiased and objective. The party line - documents that have an ‘agenda’ or identifiable bias. Personal communication - letters, e-mails, memoirs, sketches, drawings, photographs, diaries, memos, journals etc. that are personal and subjective. Multi-media - newspaper or magazine columns/ articles, current affairs shows, news reports, TV sitcoms, commercials, etc. Historical documents - records, minutes, and policy documents, or any other materials that have been authored or produced within a particular historical period. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Historical Analysis

Historical analysis refers to the exploration of various forms of data in order to better understand the past, including: • what happened • why it happened • and its implications.

Data includes: • • • •

testimony social book keeping secondary accounts and social artefacts.

Gathering a full range of credible evidence can be a challenge. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Cultural Artefact Analysis Cultural artefact analysis refers to the exploration of various human-made objects in order to ascertain information about the culture of its creator(s) and users. Measures include those of erosion i.e. wear and tear, and accretion i.e. things people produce or leave behind. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

Secondary Data Analysis Secondary data analysis refers to the exploration of existing data sets. While this can save time and resources, you do not develop and ‘own’ the data. Before any statistical analysis is attempted researchers need to assess both the relevance and credibility of their data sources. Zina O’Leary (2009) The Essential Guide to Doing Your Research Project. London: Sage

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