Unit 4 first section q's Flashcards

1
Q

Brewer (00)

A

Defines ethnography as ‘the study of people in naturally occurring situations, by methods of data collection which capture their social meanings an ordinary activities, involving the rsearcher participating directly in the setting if not also in the activities, in order to collect data in a systematic manner.

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2
Q

David and Sutton (04)

A

Ethnogrphy study over 16 month period tryung to capture every aspect of a cashier’s working life using field diariries, participant observation oral life hisrohis, individual and roup interviews and participating in ‘out of work’ social activities.

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3
Q

Grounded Theory

A

Grounded theory is the process where researchers don’t want their interpretation of data to be influenced by the categories and concepts used previously. Istead, they want their own to emerge from data collection.

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4
Q

Research Bargain

A

Where access is granted only with various strings attached.

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5
Q

Martin Bulmer (2001)

A

Overview of ethics - respondents need to be infromed about the nature and purpose of the study, how the data will be used and how their anonymity will be respected.Intervewer can check up on any possible harm by building a rapport, the data collected must be collected securely and in line with the Data Protection Act.

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6
Q

Miles and Huberman (1994)

A

‘You cannot study everyone, everywhere, doing everything’.

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7
Q

Stratified Sampling

A

Sampling frames can be sub-divided into smaller lists and then random samples taken from each list.

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8
Q

Systematic Sampling

A

Say a sampling frame of 1000 names, it is then decided that the sampling size is to be 100. The sample is chosen by simply choosing every 10th name on the list.

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9
Q

Multi-stage cluster sampling

A

Sample of areas may be chosen and then a random sample taken from these clusters. More practical than randomly selecting from a huge national sample.

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10
Q

Quota sampling

A

involves dividing the population according to characteristics such as age, gender, ethnicity.

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11
Q

Jessica Jacobson (98)

A

Used a snowball sample in her qualitative sample of the importance of religion for the identities of young Pakistanis. No sampling frame was available and she needed an initial contact to ‘smooth the ground’ for her.

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12
Q

Bryman (2004)

A

Cricises dtructured interviews ‘the resaecrher extracts inforation from the researcher subject and gives nothing in return’.

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13
Q

Semantic differential scales

A

To extremes at either end of a series of numbers. Respondents are given a statement and then circle the number that most closely reflects the strength of their opinion.

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14
Q

Qualitative Researcher aims to

A

See the world through the eyes of research participants, examine the contexts in ehich social processes over time and use flexible methods which allow participants to express themselves in their own way.

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15
Q

Respondent validation

A

A process which research participants are asked to comment on the validity of the research findings.

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16
Q

Principle of Verifiability

A

identification of norms of a group which allow the researcher or other ‘outsiders’ to act as a ‘normal’ member of the group.

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17
Q

Eileen Baker (1984)

A

Study of the Moonies. Conducted in depth interviews dealing with their background, why they became a Moonie, their life. She also lived as a participant observer in several centers with Moonies. Two years after her researcher she conducted a large Questionnaire based on her findings in order to find social patterns and trends.

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18
Q

Three types of triangulation

A

Investigator - using different researchers to check for bias. Data - Collecting data at different times from different people in different places. Methodological - Variety of techniques within the same method or combination of research methods and the data produced.

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19
Q

Data Sets

A

Sets of data collected at regular intervals, which provide a bank of information for researchers to draw on. e.g. General Household Survey, BSA etc.

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20
Q

Trace Measures

A

Physical traces left by human activity which can be analyzed to check the validity of responses in interviews and questionnaires.

21
Q

Myhill & Allen (2002)

A

Nationally representative sample of 6,994 women aged 16 to 59. Estimated that nearly 1 in 20 women in England and Wales have been raped since the age 16. The operational definition was the use of violence, threats or intimidation to force women to have sex against her will. Only 60% of women classified as rape victims were prepared to classify their experience as rape.

22
Q

Goffman

A

Participation observation study of behavior of inmates in mental hospital in Washington DC. He watched and listened and amassed a vast quantity of data. He didn’t decide in advance what was relevant but simply watched and listened. However his sensitivities were those of middle class and, as a result, he may have misinterpreted the meanings patients gave to their situation.

23
Q

Three types of triangulation

A

Investigator - using different researchers to check for bias. Data - Colecting data at different times from differnt people in different places. Methodological - Variety of techniques within the same method or combination of research methods and the data produced.

24
Q

Positivism argues

A

Objective social facts about the social world, facts are not influenced by the researcher’s personal opinion, researchers can look for correlations in which two or more things occur, correlations may represent causal relationships, human behavior is shaped by external stimuli and one should only study what one can observe.

25
Q

Comparative method

A

Same logic as an experiment, but using events that have already taken place. More difficult to isolate variables but based on real social events and is the only systematic way to study long-term or wide-scale social change.

26
Q

Interpretivists

A

Usually advocate the use of qualitative data to interpret social action, with an emphasis on the meanings and motives of actors. This often requires imagining the situation from another person’s viewpoint.

27
Q

Symbolic interactionism

A

See individuals as possessing a self-concept, or image of themselves.

28
Q

Blumer (62)

A

Argues sociologists need to understand the viewpoint of the people who’s behavior they are trying to understand.

29
Q

Labelling theory (Becker)

A

Behaviours are deviant only when society labels them as deviant.

30
Q

Comparative method

A

Same logic as an experiment, but usisng events that have already taken place. More difficult to isolate variables but based on real social events and is the only systematic way to study long-term or wide-scale social change.

31
Q

Interpretivists

A

Usually advocate the use of qualitative data to interpret social action, with an emhaiss on the meanings and motives of actors. This often requires imagining the situation from another person’s viewpoint.

32
Q

Bryman (2001)

A

Four types of validity. Measurement - concerns whether something really measures what it claims. Internal - Whether a causal relationship is real or not. External - Whether results can be generalized. Ecological - whether social science theories hold true in everyday settings.

33
Q

Blumer (62)

A

Argues sociologists need to understand the viewpoint of the people who’s behaviour they are trying to understand.

34
Q

Pilot studies

A

Small preliminary studies carried out before a bigger study to improve, help design, or test the feasibility of proposed research.

35
Q

Hey (97)

A

Girls try to construct a feminine identity in schools; those who stray away from this are negatively labelled as ‘slags’.

36
Q

Phenomenologists

A

Reject the idea that causal explanations are possible. To them the social world has to be classified before it can be measured.

37
Q

Critical Social Science

A

Methods of study which are critical of society and have the aim of improving it.

38
Q

Plummer (1982)

A

A life history is useful for helping to understand the world from an individual’s point in view.

39
Q

Abbot and Wallace (99)

A

Criticizes ‘malestream research’ for researching only men and using male only samples, ignoring women’s issues.

40
Q

Oakley (1981)

A

In a masculine approach to interviewing there is an emphasis on objectivity and detachment.

41
Q

Standpoint feminists

A

Argue that women have a unique insight into the social world by virtue of being an oppressed group.

42
Q

Epistemological postmodernists

A

Reject the idea that any research can produce a single ‘true’ description of the world.

43
Q

Harvey (90)

A

Crucial aspect of critica; social science is deconstruction - taking apart an aspect of the social world to understand how it works.

44
Q

Popper (59)

A

Argues that you can never find the truth. Ge sees scientific methodology as desirable but sees that there is always the possibility that a theory may be proved wrong in the future.

45
Q

Paradigm

A

Provides the complete framework within which scientists operate.

46
Q

Metanarratives

A

Big stories such as Marxism or feminism which offer s single explanation, a single perspective in social reality. A total package into which all social reality can be accommodated.

47
Q

Kuhn (62)

A

Argues that scientific communtites develop a commitment to a particular paradigm, a set of shared beliefs about some aspect of the physical world.

48
Q

Lyotard (84)

A

sees all knowledge as story telling, with no way of distinguishing between true and untrue stories.