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1 Reading Activity Method Time-Use Diaries for Studying Reading Practices M Cecil Smith Northern Illinois University
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2 Time-use diaries Widely used in sociological research Method originated in the 1920s in the Soviet Union Time-use diaries have been used to study: Sexual activities Leisure activities Nutritional practices Workplace productivity Child-rearing Distribution of household labor Television viewing habits (Nielson ratings)
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3 Time-use diaries Time is a behavioral indicator of values and preferences “Time diary data can be construed as evidence of the value people put on the activities in which they engage and in very real behavioral terms” Time diary data show a clear relationship between general attitudes toward activities, such as reading, and time spent on these activities▪ (Robinson, 1988)
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4 Categories of time use PRODUCTIVE functions Contracted time (paid work) Committed time (housework & family care) MAINTENANCE functions Personal time (sleeping, eating, grooming) EXPRESSIVE functions Free time (TV, reading, socializing) (Reading can be found across all of these)
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5 Types of time-use diaries Retrospective (recall) “What do you do on a typical day?” subject to recall error “What did you do yesterday?” more accurate recall Prospective Record activity as it occurs
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6 Time-use studies Multi-national time use study (Szalai, 1972) 12 countries participated Survey Research Center, U of Michigan (1965) N = 1,244 adults; 24 hr. diary (Robinson, 1977) Survey Research Center, U of Michigan (1975) N = 1,519 adults; 24 hr. diary (Robinson, 1976)
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7 Advantages of time-use diaries More accurate and unbiased data Participant recall problems diminished Better for obtaining data on low-frequency events Can capture a wide variety of behavioral and related (i.e., affective) data
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8 Disadvantages of time-use diaries Increased “participant burden” Decreased cooperation Participant reactivity Yields missing data when no behavior is recorded, does this indicate that no behavior occurred? Huge volume of data increases labor and data processing / analyses costs
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9 Alternatives to time-use diaries Direct observation of behavior Interviews Paper-and-pencil surveys / questionnaires Experience Sampling Method (ESM) Electronic trackers Telephone calls
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10 Reliability & validity of time- use diaries Reliability frequently determined with alternate- form diaries (including phone calls, mail-back diaries, and personal interviews) Validity frequently determined with independent observations, degree of correspondence between spousal couples, “shadow” technique In general, time-use diaries are reliable and valid
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11 Time-use diaries in reading research Greaney (1980) Irish 5 th graders Neuman (1982) 4 th, 5 th, 6 th graders Anderson, Wilson, & Fielding (1988) 5 th graders Taylor, Frye, & Maryuyama (1988) 5 th & 6 th graders Smith (2000) adults
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12 The Reading Activity Method (RAM) Notebook format (portable!) Instructions (detailed) Questionnaires Multiple data-gathering sheets
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13 Day: ___ Hour SourceSettingAmt. Mins. Amt. Pages PurpseEffort 5-1 StratsEnjoy 5-1 6 a – 7 a 7 a – 8 a 8 a – 9 a 9 – 10 a 10 – 11 a 11 – 12 a RAM Diary Form
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14 Research questions What are the characteristics of adults’ everyday reading practices? How does the setting and the purpose for reading interact to determine selection of reading material, reading effort and enjoyment, and uses of learning strategies? What are the associations of age, occupation, and education with reading practices?
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15 Sample characteristics N = 154 adults 20 – 84 years of age 88 females, 66 males 84% White Occupations: 26% business; 24% clerical, sales, service, production; 23% disciplinary & health care; 23% crafts & trades; 4% not in labor force Graduate students recruited one participant each 5 participants had <HS diploma; 6 had doctoral degrees; median educ attainment of sample = 15 years
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16 Design of study Participants recruited in 5 waves over a period of 28 months (1993-1995) Waves ranged from 26 – 40 persons each Participants were asked to keep a RAM diary for 5 days (Time 1) Three follow-up times over a 1-year period recorded RAM diary for 3 or 5 days (over 1 or 2 weeks) 90% of sample kept diary for requested number of days 30% kept diaries for at least 2 times of measurement Only Time 1 data have been analyzed
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17 Role of theory and associated research literature Readership studies W.S. Gray & B. Rogers: Maturity in Reading (1956) Surveys of adults’ reading habits National Adult Literacy Survey (1992) More reading associated with higher levels of literacy proficiency (Smith, 1996) Practice engagement theory (Reder, 1994) literacy skills develop within particular contexts of practice literacy develops primarily through individuals’ participation in literacy activities, rather than through school learning
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18 Design integrity 12% of sample randomly phone interviewed Estimate of actual amount of reading recorded Diary at hand all, most, some, none of time Difficulty of diary recording Alternate form reliability study 119 university students 1 day diary 24 hour recall RAM participants monitored for compliance 2 phone calls during recording period
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19 Limitations of RAM Cannot compare reading to other activities that might support, undermine, or be unrelated to respondents’ reading (e.g., TV viewing, child- rearing, hobbies) Biases respondents toward reading (R is aware that reading is focus of study; may over- report reading activity) Robinson recommends open-ended rather than specific activity focus
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20 Lessons learned Less is more Play close attention to the methodological literature Don’t over-complicate the design and data collection procedures Have a good data analysis plan in place Time-use diaries are a useful tool for studying everyday literacy practices
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21 Download this presentation http://www.cedu.niu.edu/~smith/Conferences/2005/Diary Method.ppt http://www.cedu.niu.edu/~smith/Conferences/2005/Diary Method.ppt
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