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Project Housekeeping. Remember, no class next week. Proposals due by email Friday night, September 28 th Start some informal ‘fieldwork’ as you finish your proposals: talk to friends @ the topic, start your journal, search the internet . . . . Considering Data Collection.
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Project Housekeeping • Remember, no class next week. • Proposals due by email Friday night, September 28th • Start some informal ‘fieldwork’ as you finish your proposals: talk to friends @ the topic, start your journal, search the internet . . .
Considering Data Collection Project Topic/Purpose Research Questions Epistemology Choosing Method(s) of Data Collection
Various Qual Data Collection Options • Participant-Observation • Conducing Interviews • Conducting Focus Groups • Analysis of Existing Documents • Archival Data • Open-Ended Survey Instruments
Starting Some “Fieldwork” • Remember: search questions are revised, revisited as you proceed . . . • Getting started talking, observing, and/or reviewing documents can help you to hone your research question and/or choice of data collection methods.
Communication RQ Examples • What communication strategies do women mid-level managers in the financial industry use in salary negotiations? • How do young adults talk about the role social media plays in dating? • How do PR manager frame their use of social media in managing a crisis? • How do mid-career, professional Hispanic women viewing ‘Law & Order’ talk about the way that minorities are portrayed in the workplace?
How was the term ‘economic recession’ used in the business media between 2008-2009 to justify corporate downsizing? • How do temporary workers experience and describe working at client organizations? • How do young adults talk about the ethics of social media use/abuse in social situations? • How do single mothers make sense of the benefits and challenges they experience managing work and family?
What is ‘the field’? Originally conceived as literally a ‘physical location’ but . . . For us, its process and a place or your ‘field of vision’ for the project: • Community of connected individuals • Relationships which you negotiate to gain access • Sites where you’ll have conversations and observations • Public discourses that gather for analysis • Going into ‘the field’ means time spent listening and learning. • Key skills as observation, note taking, careful listening, and attention. • Note: Word ‘ethnography’ and ‘ethnographer’ = one who participates and observes another culture or others’ fields of vision.
Stop: Awareness Check Either the subway ride there tonight or this morning or when you were at lunch today: • Describe in as much detail as possible as many people, things, sounds, smells, and/or interactions you experienced or experienced.
What can cause us to pay attention in the daily flow of our days?
Topic: Customer Service Interactions • RQ: What customer service strategies are used by employees in NYC fast-food restaurants, cafes or quick service establishments?
Take a Notebook, couple $$ (if you want) and a Partner • Go somewhere you can unobtrusively observe customer service interactions at food establishment for 20 minutes. • Stay within a few block radius . . . • Starbucks, Chipolte, Gregorys, Pinkberry, Dunkin, Pax, Bauch Coffee Shop, Pizza places, etc. • Come back to Baruch first, sit down for 10 minutes– write field notes, separate notes for each person.
What to pay attention to? • Initial impressions of the setting (especially if you’ve been there before – look again) • Customer service interactions: • Dialogue, common phrases or words used, unusual incidents, ‘easy interactions’, co-worker conversations, body language, physical space, vocal intonation, customer responses, sense of time or pace. • Notice when something ‘changes’ or when you see different types of customer service interaction – describe.
Goal = Create ‘descriptive field notes’ of this setting – not analytical. • Don’t judge, just document. You don’t know what will eventually be important for your analysis. • Watch, take ‘head notes’ – focus on remembering • Yes, you can make quick shorthand notes: jot down memorable phrases; try to avoid analyzing. • But observe don’t just write – experience. • Look, listen carefully – what sounds? What smells? • Catch ‘dialogue’ as best you can – what was said? • “Participate” if you can – get a soda, coffee, etc.
Go . . . Have fun! Observe for 20 minutes; Write up notes for 10. We’ll start class back up at:
Back to your projects: • What challenges might you experience in taking notes during an interview? • Participants’ notice when you write or don’t write. • Not listening, but only making notes. • Other distractions – phones, kids, etc. • What about challenges in taking notes during a focus group? • Audio recording and talk overs? Quality of audio? Video? • Your job = facilitating a conversation; difficult on its own. • Bring another student from class to also take notes; sit and listen.
Best Practices • Get a system for jotting down ‘memorable words’ or phrases during the interview. • Write everything – you don’t know what will eventually matter – construct your data first. • Tell participants up front that you’ll take a few notes, but recording so you can focus on the conversation. • Start a journal: set aside 15 minutes to take notes after every interview; if you remember something later on, add – don’t assume you’ll remember. • Write your reactions as you proceed, just try to note when its your reaction vs. a direct observation.
Have separate sections for your notes and for your ongoing ‘analysis’ – want to be able to tell the difference. • You’ll listen to audio to create full field notes for each interview – combination of journal notes and ‘transcription’ from audio. • Why do notes matter when you are already recording the interview or focus group?
Credibility: How do I begin to establish? • Why do you need to think about this now as you start your projects? • Steps to take to work toward credibility during the data collection stage. • Steps to take during the analysis to work toward credibility. • And, recognizing that data collection and analysis are interrelate processes in qual research.
During Data Collection • Detailed Field Notes. • Asking for clarification and listening checks. • Careful and detailed transcription. • Gathering multiple sources of information • Document data collection process and decisions. • Analysis • Careful documentation of analysis process. • Member checking (if follows your epistemology) • Evidence to illustrate claims. • Exploring data for counter examples. • Ethical portrayal of data. • Document analytic turns.
So much to do, such little time! I look forward to reading proposals starting after the 28th Email with questions, random thoughts, ideas, frustrations, etc. See you in two weeks.