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19 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
What is emergent design?
ongoing analysis guiding design decisions
What is a bricolage design?
merging various data collection strategies
What are the steps to designing a qualitative study?
1. select a research tradition
2. select a study site
3. identify gatekeepers, gain entry
4. identify the needed equipment for the field
5. analyze personal biases
What is ethnography?
this describes and interprets a culture and cultural behavior. it requires extensive labor-intensive fieldwork
What is culture?
the way a group of people life- the patterns of activity and the symbolic structures (values and norms) that give such activity significance
What kind of persepective does ethnography seek?
a emic perspective.
This is an insiders view of the culture. it relies on a wide range of data sources (interviews, observations, documents). participant observation is particularly importnat.
What is the result (Product) of an ethnographic study?
an indepth holistic portrait of the culture under study
What is phenomenology?
this focuses on the description and interpretation of people's lived experience.
What question does phenomonology ask?
What is the essence of a phenomenon as it is experienced by people, and what does it mean? This question acknowledges peoples phyiscal ties to their world
What are the four key aspects of experience?
lived space, lived body, lived time, and human reaction
What is the main data source in pehnomenology?
in depth conversations with a small number of particpants who have experienced the phenomenon
What are the stepts in descriptive phenomonology?
Bracketing
Intuiting
Analyzing
Describing
What is bracketing?
identifying and holding in abeyance (suspending) preconcieved views.
What is interpretive phenomenology?
based on hermanuetics, there is an emphasis on interpreting and understanding experiences, not just describing them.
What is grounded theory?
it focuses on the discovery of a basic psychological problem that a defined group of people experience
What is constant comparison?
used in grounded theory to develop and refine theoretically relevant categories
What is a case study/
not in a disciplinary tradition.
These focus on a thorough description and explanation of a single case or small number of cases. Cases can be individuals, families, ggroups, organizaitons, or communities. Data is collected over an extended period.
What is critical theory research?
such research is concerned with a critique of existing social structures and with envisioning new possibilities. transformation is a key objective, and ethnographies are espeically likely t be critical.
What types of studies use participant observers?
not sure... but definitely:

phenomenology and ethnography