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Part Three SOURCES AND COLLECTION OF DATA

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Presentation on theme: "Part Three SOURCES AND COLLECTION OF DATA"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Part Three SOURCES AND COLLECTION OF DATA
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2003 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.,All Rights Reserved.

3 Chapter Thirteen OBSERVATIONAL STUDIES

4 Observation Nonbehavioral observation Behavioral observation

5 Observation Nonbehavioral observation Record analysis
Physical condition analysis Process or activity analysis

6 Observation Behavioral observation Nonverbal analysis
Linguistic analysis Extralinguistic analysis Spatial analysis

7 Advantages of the Observational Method
Collect the original data at the time it occurs Secure information that participants would ignore because it’s so common it is not seen as relevant Only method available to collect certain types of data

8 Advantages of the Observational Method (cont.)
Capture the whole event as it occurs in its natural environment Participants seem to accept an observational intrusion better than they respond to questioning

9 Limitations of the Observational Method
Observer or recording equipment must be at the scene of the event when it takes place Slow process Expensive process Most reliable results are restricted to information that can be learned by overt action or surface indicators

10 Limitations of the Observational Method (cont.)
Research environment is more likely suited to subjective assessment and recording of data than to quantification of events Limited as a way to learn about the past Cannot observe rationale for actions, only actions themselves

11 Relationship between Observer and Participant
Direct or indirect observation Observer’s presence known or unknown to the participant Observer is involved or not involved with the participant

12 Observation Methods Direct Indirect Participant Simple Systematic

13 Guidelines for Selecting Observers
Ability to concentrate in a setting full of distractions Ability to remember details of an experience Ability to be unobtrusive in the observational situation Ability to extract the most from an observational study

14 Observation Data Collection
Who What Event Sampling Time Sampling When How Where


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