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A fairly common mode of investigation in educational research, especially among researchers interested in classroom teaching practices and teacher education. |
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A process that gives credence to the development of powers of reflective through, discussion, decision and action by ordinary people participating in collective research on private troubles that they have in common |
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Represents a viable practical strategy for social studies requiring systematic, organized and reflective investigation. It is one of the few research approaches that embrace principles of participation, reflections, empowerment and emancipation of people and groups interested in improving their social situation or condition/ |
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Participatory Action Research |
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Is a research framework that evolved from a number of different intellectual traditions. It can be defined as a kind of collective self-reflective enquiry undertaken by participants on social relationship with one another in order to improve some condition or situation with which they are involved. |
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Action Research Is Collaborative |
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These participants include both the researcher and those stakeholders normally referred to in other research as the subjects. Thus it is a highly collaborative, reflective, experiential, and participatory mode of research in which all individuals involved in the study, researcher and subject alike are deliberate and contributing actors in the research enterprise. |
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A social psychologist who was particularly interested in the concept of social change. Action research may have originated with him. |
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Applications Of Action Research |
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In classrooms, schools hospitals, justice agencies and community contexts. Particularly used in nursing research studies and women’s studies. |
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Characteristics Suitable For Action Research |
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A highly rigorous, yet reflective on interpretive, approach to empirical research. The active engagement of individuals traditionally known as subjects as participants and contributors in the research enterprise. The integration of some practical outcomes related to the actual lives of participants in this research project. A spiraling of steps, each of which is composed of some type of planning, action and evaluation. |
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Action Research Can Be Understood As: |
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A means or a model for enacting local, action oriented approaches of investigation and applying small scale theorizing to specific problems in particular situation. |
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Team Approach Of Action Research |
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Definition
Includes a research and member of some organization, community or network (those who may be thought of as a stakeholder in the research effort), who collectively are seeking to improve the organization or situation of participants—in effect, where the goal of the research is not simple research for the sake of research or theory but is an effort at creating a positive social change in the lives of the stakeholders. |
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Assumptions And Values Of Action Research |
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Definition
1. The democratization of knowledge production and sues. 2. Ethical fairness in the benefits of the knowledge generation process. 3. An ecological stance towards society and nature. 4. Appreciation of the capacity of humans to reflect, learn and change. 5. A commitment to positive social change. |
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Johnson’s Descriptors Of Action Research |
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Definition
1. Action Research is Systematic. 2. You Do Not Start with an Answer. 3. An Action Research Study Does Not Have To Be Complicated Or Elaborate To Be Rigorous Or Effective. 4. You Must Plan Your Study adequately Before You Begin to Collect Data. 5. Action Research Projects Vary In Length. 6. Observations Should be Regular, but They do not Necessarily Have to be Long. 7. Action Research Projects Exist on a Continuum from Simple and Informal to Detailed and Formal. 8. Action Research is Sometimes Grounded in Theory. 9. Action Research is Not Necessarily Quantitative. 10. The Results of Quantitative Action Research Projects are Limited |
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Action Research Is Systematic |
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Definition
Data can be collected, analyzed and presented in a variety of ways, but the researcher should create a systematic way of looking at data. Thus it should not be understood as an anything goes type of methodology. Nor is it simply a matter of describing what the researcher thinks about some issue or explaining a pedagogical method that works well in a classroom. It is a planned methodical observation related to ones study focus. |
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You Do Not Start With An Answer |
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Definition
An assumption underlying any research is that you do not begin a prior knowing what you will find through the research before you start. You must begin as an unbiased observer. |
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An Action Research Study Does Not Have To Be Complicated Or Elaborate To Be Rigorous Or Effective. |
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Definition
Many beginning action researchers make the mistake of creating overly thick descriptions of every detail of their study in an attempt to be rigorous. This may be equated with attempting to shoot rabbits with a cannon. If the researcher includes too much detail about the methods, it may become methodologically tip= heavy, compels and confused; this may detract from the research understanding what was actually being sought in the research or what may have been learned. A well organized, cosine description of the study methods is preferable to a confusing complicate description. |
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You Must Plan Your Study Adequately Before You Begin To Collect Data |
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Having a clear plan for conducting your research provides a means for an effective systematic inquiry. The novice researcher should also recognize, however that the best laid plans may need to change and should be flexible enough to accommodate the various changes that may occur during the course of the research. |
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Action Research Projects Vary In Length |
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Definition
The length of a data collection in an action research projects, as in any study, is determined based on your questions, the nature of the inquiry, the research setting, and any formal parameters to your study and data collections. |
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Observations Should Be Regular, But They Do Not Necessarily Have To Be Long. |
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Definition
The less experienced a researcher is, the shorter the periods of time would be initially when undertaking observations in the field. Thus, five minutes at a time may be sufficient at first, until the researcher becomes more familiar and comfortable with entering the field to gather data. Gradually, more time may be added to the amount of time spent in the field. While observations need not be long, they do need to be undertaken on a consistent, intentionally planned scheduled. |
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Action Research Projects Exist On A Continuum From Simple And Informal To Detailed And Formal |
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Definition
As with other methodological frameworks, some studies will be short, deliberate, and simple. Other studies will require lengthier, and perhaps more complicated, types of data-collection schemes. It is advisable for inexperienced researcher to begin with simple projects before attempting to undertake too large and complicated a study |
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Action Research Is Sometimes Grounded In Theory |
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Definition
Relating the research question, results, and conclusions to existing theory provides a contexts in which to understand your research and what you may have learned from your study. Linking your research to aspect of the extant literature on the subject is not really an option; it is a requirement of any good study. |
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Action Research Is Not Necessarily Quantitative |
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Definition
Some Beginning Action researchers are under the mistaken belief that action research must be undertaken from this perspective. But many action research projects do not simply compare one thing to another or seek to prove anything in particular. They are not usually causal in nature. Action research projects do not require controls or experiments. The goal of most action research projects is to improve understandings about something, uncover problems, and identify possible solutions to problems. |
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The Results Of Quantitative Action Research Projects Are Limited |
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Definition
When these techniques are used in action research projects caution should be exercised in coming to conclusion and making generalized forecasts to other settings. Caution is necessary because, like case studies, most action research studies are tailored to a particular group or organization and any other stake holders who may be affected by this group or organization. The changed that may be identified as necessary to improve the conditions of these stakeholders may or may not be applicable to other groups and organisations—regardless of how similar rhea other groups and settings may be. |
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Primary Tasks Of Action Research |
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Definition
1. It is intended to uncover or produce information and knowledge that will be directly useful to a group of people (through research, education, and sociopolictal action). 2. It is meant to enlighten and empower the average person in the group, motivating each individual to take up and use the information gathers in the research. |
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The Basics Of Action Research |
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Definition
It is a collaborative approach to research that provides people with the means to take systematic action in an effort to resolve specific problems. This approach endorses consensual, democratise, and participatory strategies to encourage people to examine reflectively their problems or particular issues affecting them or their community. Furthermore it encourages people to formulate accounts and explanations of their situation and to develop plans that may resolve these problems. It focuses on methods and techniques of investigation that take into account the study populations history, culture, interactive activities, and emotional lives. Although it makes use of many traditional data gathering strategies, its orientation and purpose are slightly different. It does not use, for instance, elaborate and complexes routines origination exclusively from the perspective of the researcher; instead, it collaborates with the very people it seeks to study. The language and content of it also differs from other approaches—specifically those that utilize compels, sophisticated, difficult-to-understand statistical techniques. Language and content with this approach are easy to understand by both professional and laypeople alike. |
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Three Basic Phases Of Action Research |
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Looking, Thinking and Action |
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One of the three basic phases of action research. The researcher assesses the situation and creates a picture about what is going on. This involved gathering information, considering who the stakeholders are, and what their interests may be. When evaluating, the researcher defines and describes the problem to be investigated and the context in which it is set. The researcher should also consider what all the stakeholders have been doing. |
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The second of the three basic phases of Action Research. Involved making interpretations and offering some explanation about the case at hand. During evaluation, the researcher analyzes the information collected while looking over the situation and interprets the situation as it currently exists. Next the researcher reflects on what participant have been doing. The participants often share in this process of reflection. This provides a means for further assessment of areas of success and any deficiencies, issues, or problems that may confront the organization or the stakeholders. |
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The third basic phase of action research. The central purpose is to come to some resolve and use it to take this towards improving the lives of the participants (Stakeholders). In terms of evaluation, the researcher considers what might affect the best positive changes in the organization and lives of the participants. Judgments should fall along the lines of the worthiness of a change, its potential effectiveness and appropriateness, and the outcomes of any activities that may be made toward these changes. Working with the stakeholders, the researcher formulates plans for solutions to any problems that have been mutually identifies. These plans are then brought back to the stakeholders for further discussion and elaboration. Ultimately, it is the stakeholders themselves that are responsible for choosing a new plan. |
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Four Basic Stages If Action Research |
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Definition
1) Identifying the research question(s), 2) Gathering the information to answer the question(s), 3) Analyzing and interpreting the information, and 4) Sharing the results with the participants. Has a spiralling progression. |
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Definition
It consciously seeks to study something in order to change or improve it. This may be a situation uncovered by the researcher of brought to the attention of the investigator by some interested or involved party. |
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Identifying The Research Question(S) |
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Definition
The first stage of the action research process involved the researcher assisting the people in the research population—the stakeholders—to examine their situation to recognize their problems. Alternately the researcher may identify a problem and bring it to the attention of the stakeholders. It is important for the action research investigator or recognize that the issues to be studied are considered important by the stakeholder and are not simple of interest to the researchers. The task of the researcher is to assist the stakeholders into doing this for themselves and ensure it is answerable. |
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doesn’t always mean throwing out everything, it can be doing more of worked well and doing less of what didn’t work week, and possibly doing something completely different |
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Treat social action and human artifacts as tact. In order words, human action can be seen as a collection of symbols expressing layers of meaning. Interviews and observational data, then, can be transcribed into written text for analysis. How one interprets such a text depends in part on the theoretical orientation taken by the researcher. |
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Approached To The Analysis Of Qualitative Data |
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Definition
1) Interpretive Approaches, 2) Social Anthropological Approaches, 3) Collaborative Social Research Approach—Work with Stakeholders |
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Social Anthropological Approaches |
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Definition
Analysis of this sort of data can be accomplished by setting information down in field notes and then applying the interpretive style of treating this information as text. However, frequently this analytic process required the analysis of multiple sources of data such as diaries, observations, interviews, photographs, and artifacts. Determining what material to include or exclude, how to order the presentation of substantiating materials, and what to report first or last are analytic choices that researcher must make. Researchers following this orientation often have conducted carious sorts of field or case study activities to gather data. In order to accomplish data collection, they have necessarily spent considerable time in a given community, or with a given assortment of individuals in the field. They have participated, indirectly or directly, with many of the individuals residing in or interacting with the study population. This provides the researcher with a special perspective on the material collected during the research, as well as a special understanding of the participants and how these individuals interpret their social worlds. |
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Collaborate Social Research Approaches—Work With Stakeholders |
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Definition
Researcher operating in this research mode work with their subjects in a given setting in order to accomplish some sort of change or action. The analysis of data gathers in such studies is accomplished with the participation of the subjects who are seen by the research as stakeholders in the situation in need of of change or action. Data are collected and then reflexively considered both as feedback to create action and as information to understand a situation, resolve a problem, or satisfy some sort of field experiment. The action analytic strategies applied in this effort may be similar to the interpretive and social anthropological approaches |
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Definition
Content analysis is not inherently either quantitative or qualitative, and may be bother at the same time. Nonetheless, different researchers writing at different times have tended to see the technique exclusively from one or the other perspective. |
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Physically present and countable elements. |
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Manifest Vs. Latent Analyses |
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Another long-standing debate concerning the use of content analysis is whether the analysis should be limited to those element that are physically present and countable or extended to more interpretive content. In the latter case the analysis is extended to an interpretive reading of the symbolism underlying the physical data. One analysis describes the content, while the other seeks to discern its meaning. |
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Interpretive reading of underlying meaning. Seeks to discern its meaning. It is the deep structural meaning covered by the message. |
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Include In Vivo Codes and Sociological Constructs |
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Literal terms used by individuals under investigation. They represent the behavioral processes, which will explain to the researcher how the basic problem of the actors is resolved or processes. These descriptions, offered by the speaker, reveal the speakers orientations and situational definitions. In contrast, sociological constructs are formulated by the analyst. |
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Definition
Are formulated by the analyst. These tend to be based on a combination of things, including the researcher’s scholarly knowledge of the substantive field under study. The results of using these is the addition of certain social scientific meaning that might otherwise be missed in the analysis. They add breadth and depth to observations by reaching beyond local meanings and understanding to broader social scientific ones. |
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Definition
Words, phrases, sentences, paragraphs and sections or chapters, books, writers, ideological stance and subject topic. |
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Words, Phrases, Sentences, Paragraphs And Sections |
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Definition
When using a content analysis strategy to assess written documents, researchers must first decide at what level they plan to sample and what units of analysis will be calculated. |
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Chapters, Books , Writers, Ideological Stance And Subject Topic |
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Definition
When examining other forms of messages, researchers may use any of the preceding levels or may sample at other conceptual levels more appropriate to the specific message. |
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Distinguishing between and among persons, things, and events. Three major procedures are used to identify and develop them in a standard content analysis and to discuss findings in research that use contented analysis: common classes, special classes and theoretical classes. |
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Definition
Assessment whether certain demographic characteristics are related to patterns that may arise during a given data analysis. These classes are used by virtually anyone in society to distinguish between and among person, things, and events. Provide for laypersons a means of designation in the course of everyday thinking and communicating and to engender meaning in their social interaction. Are essential in assessing whether certain demographic characteristics are related to patterns that may arise during a given data analysis |
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Used by members of certain areas to distinguish among the things, person and events within their limited province. Maye be likened to jargon. May be described as out group versus in group classification. |
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Provides and overarching pattern. Those classes that emerge when analyzing data. In most content analysis they provide an overarching pattern. Nomenclature that identifies these classes generally borrows from special classes and accounts for novelty. It is necessary to retain special classes throughout much of the analysis because they emerge at the end. |
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Four Basic Guidelines For Open Coding |
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Definition
1) Ask the data a specific and consistent set of questions, 2) analyze the data minutely, 3) frequently interrupt the coding to write a theoretical notes, and 4) never assume the analytic relevance of any traditional variable until the data shows it to be relent. |
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Ask The Data A Specific And Consistent Set Of Questions |
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Definition
The first of the basic guidelines for open coding. What study are these data pertinent to? The original purpose of the study may not be accomplished and an alternative or unanticipated goal may be identifies. |
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Analyze The Data Minutely |
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Definition
Researcher should remember that they are conducting an intimal coding preclude. In the beginning more is better. Inclosing of many categories, incidents, interactions and the like should eventually be narrowed down to present a refined tightly stated conclusion |
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Never Assume The Analytic Relevance Of Any Traditional Variable |
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Even mundane variables must earn their way into the grounded theory. |
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Definition
Are used to organizer the data and identify findings after open coding has been completed. At first is often a multilevel process that requires several successive sorting. Can include: situation codes, process codes, activity codes, event codes, strategy codes, relationship and social structural codes, narrative codes, and methods codes. |
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Definition
Occurs after open coding is completed and consisted of intensive coding around one category. Similar to the first coding frame. |
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The more organized coding frames are the easier it is to allow the data to talk to you and inform your research question/ |
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Steps Of Using Coding Frames |
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Definition
Identify findings, sort cases into the indicated subdivisions, interpret patterns from the organization scheme & details from interview questions, at this juncture relevant theoretical perspective can be introduced to those the enables to established theory and to its own emerging grounded theory |
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Interrogative Hypothesis Testing |
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Definition
Make a rough hypothesis 1. Based on an observation from the data, 2. Conduct a thorough search of all cases to located negative cases. 3. If a negative case is located either discard or reformulate the hypothesis to account for the negative case, 4. Examine all relevant cases from the sample before determining whether practical certainty is attaining. |
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Only accepting the validity of a hypothesis if you are unable to disprove it |
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Involved the investigator intentionally seeking negative or unique cases until the data are saturated and built into an emerging patter. At that point the investigator looks for confirmation of a developing the our or a specific hypothesis |
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Strengths Of Content Analysis |
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Definition
Although useful when analyzing in-depth interview data Maye also be sued none reactively for archival data. Virtually unobtrusive, cost effective, trend identification over time |
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Weaknesses Of Content Analysis |
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Definition
Limited to examining recorded messages. Often limited to record other felt were worth recording. Ineffective for testing causal relationships. |
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Computer Assisted Qualitative Data Analysis |
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Definition
Can use: Word Processors, text receivers, text base managers, code and retrieve programs, code based theory builders, conceptual network builders, |
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Definition
Create and transcribe text. Allow you to create tax-based filed and to effectively find, move, reproduce, and retrieve sections of the text in each file. This provide means for transcribing interviews or audio portions of video, writing up or editing field notes, coding text for indexing and retrieval purposes and even writing up findings in reports |
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Definition
Locate text in several files. There programs specialize in locating every instance of a specified word, phrase or character string as well hose programs are able to locate combination of these items in on or several files. |
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Definition
Organize, sort and subset. Although similar in function to text retrievers, they provide a great capacity for organizing and sorting, and makes subsets of textual data. |
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Code And Retrieve Programs |
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Definition
Code and display coded sections. Are intended to assist the researcher in dividing text into segments or chunks, attach codes, and find and display these coded section. |
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Code-Based Theory Builders |
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Definition
Code, retrieve and develop theoretical connections. Can help develop higher order classification and connections. |
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Conceptual Network Buildings |
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Definition
Building and testing theory, creating graphic networks. |
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Definition
The work of describing a culture. The essential core of this activity aims to understand another way of life from the native point of view. The end product of field research—namely, the written account of observations. Written accounts of participant observers. A detailed and accurate description of some natural setting that offers no explanations. The systematic study of people and cultures. It is designed to explore phenomena where the researcher observes society from the point of view of the subject of the study. |
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An extremely effective approach for studying illicit drug use and users. |
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The term used to describe field research on the cultural dimension of organizations |
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Ethnographic Interviewing |
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Definition
A type of qualitative research that combines immersive observation and directed one-on-one interviews. Immerse selves in a cultures on a micro level to understand the behaviors and rituals of people interacting with individual products. |
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Definition
May include but is not limited to the religious, linguistic, ethnic, geographic, or racial groupings commonly identified in society. May be a subculture with an identified population. |
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Groups or subgroups with their own identity, membership qualifications and often a particular person which identifies them as members of that culture. |
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Definition
Interviewing an ethnic group may involve a number or prerequisites such as: 1) Dress Code, 2)Linguistic Terms And Norms, 3) Interviewing Environment, and 4)Knowledge of the Culture |
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Definition
One of the cautions in ethnography. To carry out research the interviewer should be dressed according to the interviewee’s culture definition of a professional. When interviewing other cultural groups being overdressed may in itself alienate the interviewer form the participant. |
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Linguistic Terms and Norms |
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Definition
One of the cautions in ethnography. Know which terms to be avoided, terms with unique definitions, protocol in terms of gender interactions. |
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Definition
One of the cautions in ethnography. Great consideration should be given to whether it is formal or informal. The participant should feel safe and free to share the type of information the interviewer is hoping to access. |
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Definition
One of the cautions in ethnography. It is important to be familiar with the participants particular needs based on their group. Use pre-interview procedures and interviewer experience of the group to help understand the norms it before the interview. |
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Definition
Always remember the goal of the study. What is important is to obtain meaning participants form a culture place on a reasonably well defined situation. |
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Definition
To research processes and products in which, to a greater or lesser degree, an investigator: (a) attempts to provide generic propositional answers to questions about social life and organization; (b) strives to pursue such an attempt in a spirit of unfettered or naturalistic inquiry; (c) utilizes data based on deep familiarity with a social setting or situation that is gained by personal participation or an approximation of it; (d) develops the generic propositional analysis over the course of doing research; (e) strives to present data and analyses that are true; (f) seeks to provide data and/or analyses that are new; and (g) presents an analysis that is developed in the senses of being conceptually elaborated, descriptively detailed, and concept-data interpenetrated. |
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Definition
The insiders view of the world. Pertaining to or being a significant unit that functions in contrast with other unites in a language or other system of behavior. |
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Definition
The outsiders view of the world. From the term phonetic it arises in the analysis produced by the researcher. Relating to, or involving analysis of cultural phenomena from the perspective of one who does not participate in the culture being studied. |
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Definition
Refers to the tradition of cultural descriptions and the analysis of various meanings or shared meanings through the interpretation of meaning. Examines what is, where as critical ethnography questions what could be. |
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Definition
Gathered partly through participation and partly through various types of verification. We much understand that it impossible to observe without some process of share interpretation. Ethnography is not just observing, it is also interpreting. Must interpret shared meaning. |
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Term
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Definition
A more reflective approach through it the researcher chooses between various alternatives and makes value-laden judgments of meaning and method in a conscious effort to challenge research, policy and other forms of human activity. What could be versus what is? Is conventional ethnography but with a clear purpose, and which intentionally seeks positive change and empowerment for participants. |
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Term
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Definition
The first step in an ethnographic study is to gain access to a site appropriate for answering the researcher’s general research problem or question. This problem should be addressed in the design stage. Often it is about relationships and making the most out of circumstances as you find them |
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Definition
Become familiar with the people being studied: start at the library, look for referrals and look for argot. Develop a research bargain, identify and befriend a gatekeeper, and seek out guides and information’s. |
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Definition
Researcher presence without causing undue group interference. Danger include: intentional misidentification, accidental misidentification and leaning more than you want to know. |
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Certificates of confidentiality |
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Definition
Issued by the national institutes of health. Protects the privacy or research subjects. Endures researchers cannot be legally compelled to identify research subjects. |
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Definition
Ambient: dangerous research setting, or Situational: danger is triggered by the researcher’s presence. |
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Definition
1) Take in the physical setting. 2) Develop relationships with inhabitants. 3) Track, observe, eavesdrop and ask questions. 4) Locate subgroups and stars |
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Definition
Narrative accounts of what goes on in the lives of study subjects: verbal exchanges, practices and connections. Include: cryptic jottings, detailed descriptions, analytic notes, subjective reflection |
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Definition
Brief statements, unusual terms, taken in the files |
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Definition
Include texture, sensation, color and minutiae |
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Personal observations and emotions |
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Strategies of Recollection |
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Definition
Record key words and key phrases while in the field. Make notes about the sequence of events. Limit the time you remain in the setting. Write full notes immediately after exiting the field. Write notes before sharing through with others. |
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Analyzing Ethnographic Data |
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Definition
1) Read the field notes, 2) Reinforce hypotheses or themes, 3) Generate new hypotheses or themes, and 4) Systematically code patterns. |
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Definition
Systematic method for classification into discrete groupings: seek mutually exclusive categories, create an exhaustive grouping of elements, and make theoretically meaningful appraisals. |
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Definition
Graphic displays of how well people get along with one another: positive peer nominations, negative peer nominations, peer rating procedures. |
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Unobtrusive Research Methods |
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Definition
All strategies amount to examining and assessing human traces. What people of, how they behave and structure their daily lives, and even how humans are affected by certain ideological stances can all be observed in traces people either intentionally or inadvertently leave behind. Includes public and private archival strategies |
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Definition
Can include public or private records. |
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Term
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Definition
Records are viewed as prepared for the expressive purpose of examination by others. Although access may be restricted to certain groups they are typically prepared for some audience. They tend to be written in more or less a standardise form and arranged systematically. Types Include: Physical Erosion and Accession, Running Record, Actuarial Records, Official Documentary Records |
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Definition
Typical are intended for private or personal audiences. Except for published versions of a diary or personal memoirs (which in effect become public), they reach extremely small—if any—audience. Includes unsolicited documents and solicited documents. Include: autobiographies, diaries and letters, home movies and videos, and altruistic and creative artifacts. In some cases they occur naturally and are discovered by the investigator, in orders the must be requested. |
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Definition
Physical items left behind by human’s fen as the result of some unconscious or unintentional activity that tell us something about these individuals. Because they have been left behind without the producer’s knowledge of their potential usefulness to social scientists, these pieces of research information are non-reactively produces. They include erosion measure and accretion measures. They are largely free of any reactive measurements effects. However, interpreting and affixing meaning to them is problematic and may severely bias the results. Researchers must always remember to obtain corroboration. |
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Definition
Indicators of wearing down or away. Include several types of evidence indicating that varying degrees of selective wear or use have occurred on some object or material. In most cases it is used with other techniques in order to corroborate one another. |
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Definition
Indicators of accumulation or buildup. Represent deposits over time. These traces are elements laid down naturally, without intrusion from researchers. |
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Definition
Provides large quantities of inexpensive data nor active to the presence of investigators standard format. They tend to use more or less standard formats and filing systems, which make locating pieces of data and creating research filing systems and analysis easier. |
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Produced for special or limited audiences. Available to the public under certain circumstances. Includes birth records, application information. Tend to be produced for special or limited audiences but are typically available to the public under certain circumstances. These include birth and death records, records of marriages and divorces, application information help by insurance and credit companies, tittles, land and deed information, and similar demographic or residential types of records. |
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Official Documentary Records |
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Produces for special or limited audiences/ organizational records, files, and communications. Includes: police reports, finical records, graveyard tombstones, hospital admittance recurs, police incident reports, computer-accessed bulletin boards, motor vehicle registries, newspaper morgues, movie rental stores and even credit companies billing records. |
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Often the key to solving criminal cases and is frequently the key to resolving social scientific questions in research |
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Commercial Media Accounts |
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Written m drawn or recorded materials produced for general or mass consumption. Includes: newspapers, DVDs, maps, blogs, comics, television transcripts. Represents any written, drawn, or recorded material produced for general or mass consumption. |
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Discovered naturally by the investigates |
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Requested by investigators |
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Types of Privates Archives |
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Autobiographies, diaries and letters, home movies and videos, artistic and creative artifacts |
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Perhaps the most widely accepted form of personal document. Three types include: comprehensive, topical and edited. |
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Comprehensive Autobiography |
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Spans the life from earlier recall to writing of the word and includes descriptions of life experiences, personal insights, and anecdotal reminiscences. Inexperienced research are usually most familiar with this type. |
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Fragmented picture or excision from subjects’ life. In contrast to the rounded and complete description of experiences offered in a comprehensive one they offer a fragmented picture. |
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Researchers revise and provide commentary. Eliminating any repetition in descriptions, making lengthy discourses short and crisp, and highlighting and amplifying selected segments of the material while deleting others. Researchers should only revise for the sake of clarity. |
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Multiple procedure triangulation |
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So vital when working with archival data in order to reduce sources of error. |
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Gathering Information to Answer the Question |
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Definition
The second step in the basics of action research. Any information can potentially be used to answer the question or solve the problems that have been identified. The investigator is guided by the research question. Some problems may direct the investigator towards interviews, ethnographic or observational data, or archival data. It is often necessary to triangulate their studies in order to strengthen findings. |
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Analyzing and Interesting the Information |
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Definition
The third step in the basics of action research. At this stage participants need to focus on making sense of the information that has been gathered. Data analysis, from the action research perspective, involves examination of the data in relation to potential resolutions to the questions or problems identified during the first stage of the research process. The actual task will depend on the data-gathering method or methods used in stage 2 of this research process. The overall effort will be to create descriptive accounts based on the information captured by various data-collection technologies. |
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Procedure for using interview and ethnographic data in action research |
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Definition
The same techniques used in interviewing, focus groups and ethnographic research may also be used in an action research framework. In most cases analysis involves creating categories or themes and then posting answers to questions or statements from the fieldwork into these categories. The data are sorted into piles that share some broader characteristics. After accomplishing this you can then write a summary that captures the essence of each broader categorical characteristic. This material will be used to create descriptive accounts of the stakeholders |
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Guiding Questions of Analysis: Why, What, How, Who, Where, When? |
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Definition
It is likely to provide further history and context to the material, in a manner similar to a focus group interview. In addition, this process provides a means for participants to reflect on things that they themselves have discusses (captured in the data) or that other participants have mentioned. |
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Descriptive Accounts and Reports |
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Definition
The two major comers in developing and are. 1st it is capital that account reflect the perceptions of all stakeholders in the study population. If accounts exclude portions of the group, the resulting analysis may provide inadequate bases for viable action. Account then need to be created collaboratively. 2nd except in situation in which the stakeholders amount to only a very few people, all of them usually cannot be included in all steps of the process all of the times. In such situations, the investigator needs to make every effort to regularly keep all stakeholders informed of various activities and provide opportunities for people to read various accounts as they develop, not simply after the project is complete. In this way, these individuals can also be afforded the opportunity to provide their own input by way of feedback to what they have read. |
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Sharing the results with the Participants |
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Definition
One of the operative principles of action research is to inform and empower people to work collectively to produce some beneficial change. This necessarily includes both informal and formal meetings with the investigator at every stage of the research process. It is also important to do once the study is complete. May provides some sort of report to each participant. Meetings and presentations tend to be better suited, perhaps accompanied by the full report for those who desire it. Technology may be used, you can create a website, or online presentation. |
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maximize participation by many of the participants |
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Focus Groups, In-Group Forums, Informal Meetings, Agency institution and community group meetings |
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In which people with similar interests or agendas discuss particular issues. |
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In which people from single-interest or stakeholder groups discuss particular issues. |
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that form spontaneously in response of particular circumstances or issues |
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Or departmental meetings that provide personnel with opportunities to discuss common interests or agendas |
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In which community members meet to explore interests or agendas |
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When to Use and when Not to Use Action Research |
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Definition
One should not use it if you want to draw comparisons, simply describe or explore a group or organization, or plan to undertake some form of inferential evaluation of a situation, setting, set of events, or phenomenon. The emphasis is not so much what information the researcher can rather and then take away from the settings, but, what information can the researcher gather with the assistance of the stakeholders, to be shared and used to actuate change in the setting or situations for personal and social improvement. Tends to be a more reflective approach. |
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Definition
To stand with and alongside the community or group under study, not outside as an objective observer or external consultant. They contribute expertise when needed as participants in the process. They collaborate with local practitioners as well as stakeholders in the group or community. Other participate contribute their physical and or intellectual resources to the research process. As a partner with the study population. Must be holistic, encompassing a broad combination of aspects of relationships and interactions with the stakeholders. |
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Definition
Grundy Identifies three modes: technical, practical and emancipating. Halter and Schwarts-Barcott’s there types included: that of a technical collaborative approach, a mutual collaborative approach, and an enhancement approach. McKernan three types the scientific-technical view of problem solving, the practical-deliberate mode, and a critical emancipating. Greenwood and Levin three types of participatory evaluation: Constructive evaluation, utilization and participation, and empowerment evaluation. If we collapse these generally similar categories, we derive something like a technical/scientific/collaborative mode, a practical/mutual collaborative/ deliberate mode, and an emancipating/ enhancing/critical mode. |
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Technical/Scientific/Collaborative Mode |
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Definition
Early advocates of action research advocated a fairly rigorous scientific method of problem solving. From this approach, the primary goal was to test a particular intervention based on a pre-specified theoretical framework. In other words, the researcher is apart from the group; he or she identifies a problem after collaborating with the practitioner and then provides information to this practitioner who facilitates its implementation with the group. |
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A Practical/Mutual Collaborative/Deliberate Mode |
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Definition
The researcher and the practitioner come together and collaboratively identify potential problems and issues, their underlying causes, and possible interventions. The research problem is defined only after the researcher and practitioner have assessed the situation and reached a mutual understanding. The communication flow in this mode of action research starts with the researcher and facilitator working collaboratively and then flows from the practitioner (facilitator) to the group of stakeholders. It creates a more flexible as it embraces a greater concern for empowering and emancipating stakeholders working with the practitioner. The gain in flexibility and effects of emancipating participants does, however, reduce some degree of measurement precision and control over interpretations, interactive communications, and detailed descriptions |
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Emancipating or Empowering/Enhancing/ |
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Promotes emancipatory praxis in the participating practitioners; that is, it promotes a critical consciousness which exhibits itself in political as well as practical action to promote change. |
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Definition
There are actually two distinct goals in this approach to action research. The first goal is an attempt to increase the closeness between the day-to-day problems encountered by practitioners in specific settings and the theories used to explain and resolve the problem; in other words, an attempt to bring together theory and book knowledge with real-world situations, issues, and experiences. The second goal is to assist practitioners in lifting their veil of clouded understandings and help them to better understand fundamental problems by raising their collective consciousness. |
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Development of social criticism |
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Definition
Has three parts: theory, enlightenment, and action. The generation of action-oriented policy, then, may be seen as following from this mode of action research and this tri-part notion of theory, enlightenment, and action. It is actually the coming together of theory and enlightenment that provides the emancipation and empowerment to the participants, which then leads to action and change. |
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Definition
The use of photographs in ethnographic research has begun to move toward a greater action research orientation. The current trend among some action researchers is to use photographs as a means to enable the investigator to gain perceptual access to the world from the viewpoint of individuals who have not traditionally held control over the means of imaging the world. Researchers literally give their subjects a camera and ask them to photograph certain aspects of their lives. |
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1. Empowering and enabling people to reflect their personal and community concerns. 2. To encourage a dialogue and to transfer knowledge and information about personal and community issues through discussions about photographs among participants. 3. To access the perception of those not in control of various issues and to share this information with those who are in control (policymakers, politicians, healthcare professionals, educators, etc.). |
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Something that can be changed, such as a characteristic or value. Variables are generally used in psychology experiments to determine if changes to one thing result in changes to another. Also anything which may affect what you are observing or what you understand from your observation. |
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Is the variable that is controlled and manipulated by the experimenter |
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The variable that is measured or is of interest to the experimenter. |
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A research method commonly used by psychologists and other social scientists. This technique involves observing subjects in their natural environment. This type of research is often utilized in situations where conducting lab research is unrealistic, cost prohibitive, or would unduly affect the subject's behavior. |
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Advantages of Naturalistic Observation |
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That it allows the researcher to directly observe the subject in a natural setting. It allows researchers to study things that cannot be manipulated in a lab due to ethical concerns. It can help support the external validity of research |
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Disadvantages of Naturalistic Observation |
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Include the fact that it can be difficult to determine the exact cause of a behavior and the experimenter cannot control for outside variables. People may behave differently when they know they are being watched. People may try to behave in a certain way in order to conform to what they think the researchers expects to see. Different observers may draw different conclusions from the same witnessed behavior. |
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Data that can’t be accounted for – proceed like it doesn’t exist, Can’t explain it |
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First is organizing into themes, second is discovering big picture meaning = interpretation |
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