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Participant Observation Advantages and Disadvantages
Descripción
AS level Sociology Mapa Mental sobre Participant Observation Advantages and Disadvantages, creado por Ronnie Barter el 28/02/2018.
Sin etiquetas
participant observation
sociology
as level
Mapa Mental por
Ronnie Barter
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
Ronnie Barter
hace casi 7 años
842
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Resumen del Recurso
Participant Observation Advantages and Disadvantages
Advantages
Validity
What people say they do in questionnaires is different from what they may do.
Produces rich qualitative data
Insight
Allows sociologist to feel empathy for participants.
Gives insight into peoples private and un-influenced lives
Flexibility
Sociologists don't start with a set hypothesis
Sociologists may change their mind and can alter their research accordingly
Practical Advantages
May be the only way to study certain groups
Such as criminals
Such as religious sects
Allows sociologist to build rapport with those being studied
Disadvantages
Practical Disadvantages
Time consuming as well as costly
Personally stressful and demanding
Requires observational skills
Personal characteristics may cause issues with being covert
Groups may be able to refuse or restrict access
Ethical issues
Covert observation creates ethical difficulties as it intrinsically requires deception
Some groups may not have the ability to refuse participant obeervation and they may not consent to being observed
Representitiveness
Due to the cost and the amount of time it would take very few people can be observed
Lack of representativeness leads to an inability to accurately/effectively generalise
"Internally" valid insights are not externally valid
Reliability
Reliability is the ability to repeat a research method and get similar/the same results
Participant observation depends on the skills of the researcher meaning that it would be difficult for a different researcher to replicate it
A groups actions may be due to a variety of different pre-existing reasons which are impossible to control for
Bias
Researchers run the risk of...
"Going native"
Loyalty or fear of reprisal may push a sociologist to hide sensitive information
Sociologists may romanticise a group and come to see them as an underdog and justify their actions
Validity
Validity may be damaged as sociologists decide what is worth recording
A sociologist may only record what fits their prejudices
May not create a "naturalistic" account
The Hawthorne Effect damages validity
Lack of structure
Interactionalists favour participant observation as they see society on a small scale
Structural sociologists (such as marxists) reject this arguing that the observer tends to ignore the wider structural forces changing our behaivour
Structuralists believe that looking at life through the eyes of the actor will never give us the complete picture
For example if the actors aren't aware of structural influences in their life
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