An introduction to using observation in your
Supported Independent Study Project.
Read these notes and be able to discuss with another student the advantages and
disadvantages of using observation both generally, and to gather data for your specific SIS project.
Pie de foto: : "se poser des questions en regardant plus haut" by Bernard Lamailloux licensed under CC BY 2.0
Diapositiva 2
What are observations useful for?
Observations are a way of collecting data about a
situation as it takes place: how people behave and interact; who is involved or
how space is used; or the way things happen. You can watch and record, for
example, who is present, what they are doing, when something happens, or
certain criteria such as how much students say, or how much attention they are
paying. It is more direct than an interview or questionnaire because it shows
what people actually do, not what they say
they do.
There are different types of observation,
depending on how structured they are.
The observer decides what is recorded before the
observation. Rather than recording everything the observer sees, structured
observation uses a code to record events. For example, the observer might use
different numbers to record each time a teacher asks a question, answers a
question, or makes a correction. This produces numerical data so findings are
easy to analyse and the observation can be repeated to test the same things.
However, the observation form needs careful preparation, testing and practice.
The observers also cannot include categories that they do not expect, so some
important events may not be recorded.
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Semi-structured observation
This is less systematic than structured observation. The
observer is looking for certain things but these are not strictly decided
before the observation, so they may record events or behaviour that they did
not expect, and find new things as a result. The data may be more difficult to
record and it is slower to analyse, although less preparation is needed.
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Careful preparation of possible categories is
needed
What you are observing for must help you to
answer your research questions
Testing (piloting) is essential
Observation can be difficult to prepare for
and / or analyse, so this method may be
best suited to students who have done it before or who will use observation in their future academic programme (eg Education, Psychology, other Arts and Social Sciences).
You need to think carefully to predict the
categories you are going to record.
You can’t identify the causes of the behaviour
you observe
There may be issues of reliability – do
different observers see the same things? Do they record them the same way?
A major problem can be that you understand what
you see subjectively, and you may be influenced by your own culture, experience
and beliefs. Different observers may understand the same situation in different
ways.
Limitations
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Cohen, L., Manion, L., and Morrison, K. (2000).
Research Methods in Education. (5th Edition). Routledge.
Open University. Skills for OU Study: Using a questionnaire. Available from: http://www2.open.ac.uk/students/skillsforstudy/using-a-questionnaire.php
Accessed 10.4.16
UCL. Public Engagement Evaluation Toolkit:
Questionnaires. Available from: https://www.ucl.ac.uk/public-engagement/documents/evaluationtoolkits/evaluationmethods/Questionnaire Accessed
10.4.16