Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to:...

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Collecting Primary Data: Observations

Transcript of Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to:...

Page 1: Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to: Describe some of the advantages and disadvantages of.

Collecting Primary Data: Observations

Page 2: Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to: Describe some of the advantages and disadvantages of.

Objectives

By the end of this session you will be able to:• Describe some of the advantages and

disadvantages of the observational approach.• Select an observational approach appropriate to

a given research objective.• Analyse and interpret observational data.• Produce observational data that are valid and

reliable.• Use observational methods in an ethical

manner.

Page 3: Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to: Describe some of the advantages and disadvantages of.

Observation: is there movement?

Page 4: Collecting Primary Data: Observations. Objectives By the end of this session you will be able to: Describe some of the advantages and disadvantages of.

Observation: shrinking haze

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Observation: left/right brain conflict

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Observation

• Triangulate with other data gathering methods.

• Getting to understand participants’ symbolic world.

• Observing what participants are unwilling to reveal.

• Observing the difference between what participants say or think they do, and what they actually DO.

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How do we ‘observe’?

Sensory INPUTS

• Sight

• Sound

• Smell

• Touch

• Taste

Interpretations OUTPUTS

Schemas/concepts

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Observation rolesOvert observation

Covert observation

Non-participantobservation

Participantobservation

Announced participant

Undercover participant

Announced observer

Undercover observer

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Merits of participant observation

Participant observation is of value in that it:

• Is effective at observing non-verbal behaviour.

• Is immediate in the sense that it elicits data on events as they happen.

• Allows for a more natural relationship to develop over time between the researcher and respondent.

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Challenges of participant observation

• Insider v. outsider status – confusion.

• ‘Going native’ – bias.

• Being ‘outed’ – respondent anger.

• Collecting the data – how/when?

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The process of observation

• Getting in.

• Informed consent.

• Becoming invisible.

• Building rapport.

• Handling identity.

• Observing and learning.

• Tracking.

• Developing relationships.

• Eavesdropping.

• Asking questions.

• Locating ‘stars’.

• Getting out.

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Gathering data: field notes

• Date, time, place.• Physical appearance of inhabitants.• Physical appearance of setting (layout, artefacts).• Observation of activities being undertaken

(including sequence of events).• Observation of non-verbal behaviours (body

language).• Tone of conversations (polite, formal, angry, etc.)• Key quotations.• Personal views, reflections and emotions.

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Expanding and analysing field notes

• Primary observation: chronological log. Raw data (i.e., no explanations or analysis) of observations on people, their surroundings, behaviours and conversations.

• Reflection and recall during the process of writing up field notes.

• Pre-analysis of data: ideas and inferences. • Experiential data: impressions and personal

feelings about events, people, conversations and interpretations of own emotional reactions.

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Structured observation

More quantitative than the use of field notes. Advantages include:• It should result in more reliable data because the

results can be replicated either by the same researcher at a different time, or by other researchers.

• It allows data to be collected at the time they occur and does not have to rely on the recall of participants or their interpretation of events.

• It collects data that participants themselves may not realize are important.

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Alternative ways of coding an event

Event 1 2 3

I I I I I I I I

Event 2 2 1 3 1 1 1 2 3

Elapsed time

(mins)

0 5 10 15 20 25 30

Event 1 2 3 2 2 1 1 2 2 1

(a) Simple checklist

(c) Sequence record on timescale

(b) Sequence record

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Enhancing validity

• Select cases/settings on the basis of their potential for being representative of the population.

• Study cases in one field that are similar to cases in another.

• Stay in the field long enough to observe or experience the full range of routines and behaviours that typify the case.

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Enhancing reliability

• Record observed events so that the data can be reviewed and, if necessary, re-interpreted by another researcher.

• Keep very comprehensive notes, as some details that appeared hardly relevant at the time of the observation may later prove to be crucial.

• Use structure in the data gathering process (e.g., coding events).

• Triangulation – multiple methods of data collection.

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Writing up observational data

Accounts could include:• The context of the study

(physical setting, history, etc.).

• The number of participants.• The activities taking place.• The division of labour and

hierarchies.• Significant events.• Members’ perspectives and

meanings.• Social rules and basic

patterns of order.

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Summary• Observation is more than just ‘seeing’; it also involves complex

combinations of all the senses and the interpretation of observed events.

• Observation can be overt or covert and involve the active participation of the observer or non-participation.

• One of the challenges of the observational approach is the gathering of data, particularly if the observer is a covert participant.

• Field notes should be as comprehensive as possible and should be taken either as events are observed or as soon as possible afterwards.

• Observational methods will often be triangulated with other research approaches, such as interviews and questionnaires.

• For structured observation, coding schedules will be used based on the principle of either noting events over a period of time or noting when an event occurs.

• Ethical issues arise, particularly where covert observation is being used. Researchers may do well to make use of a code of ethics drawn up by the relevant professional body, if such a code exists.