1. Epistemology, Photo Elicitation, Reflexivity and Social Construction

Descrição

Qualitative Research
Ryan Bentham
Quiz por Ryan Bentham, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Ryan Bentham
Criado por Ryan Bentham quase 7 anos atrás
34
0

Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
Qualitative research uses
Responda
  • Images
  • Sounds
  • Observations of behaviours
  • Measurement
  • Words
  • Statistics

Questão 2

Questão
Epistemology is the theory of knowledge, especially with regard to it's methods, validity and scope, and the justified distinction between justified belief and opinion.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 3

Questão
[blank_start]Epistemology[blank_end] is the theory of knowledge, especially with regard to it's methods, validity and scope, and the justified distinction between justified belief and opinion.
Responda
  • Epistemology

Questão 4

Questão
Epistemology is...
Responda
  • the branch of medicine which deals with the incidence, distribution, and possible control of diseases and other factors relating to health.
  • the theory of knowledge, especially with regard to it's methods, validity and scope, and the justified distinction between justified belief and opinion.
  • a set of concepts and categories in a subject area or domain that shows their properties and the relations between them.

Questão 5

Questão
[blank_start]Qualitative[blank_end] research employs a large-grained sieve. [blank_start]Quantitative[blank_end] research is very structured. Sometimes important stuff cannot be [blank_start]quantified[blank_end]. [blank_start]Qualitative[blank_end] is more open-ended. [blank_start]Qualitative[blank_end] methods can help discover the unknown unknowns. Behind numbers, there is usually a [blank_start]qualitative[blank_end] judgement. [blank_start]Quantitative[blank_end] research employs a fine-grained sieve. Some things are better not [blank_start]quantified[blank_end]. [blank_start]Quantitative[blank_end] research is variable-centric.
Responda
  • Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative
  • quantified
  • qualified
  • Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative
  • Quantitative
  • qualitative
  • quantitative
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative
  • quantified
  • qualified
  • Quantitative
  • Qualitative

Questão 6

Questão
[blank_start]Ontology[blank_end]: The nature of reality. [blank_start]Epistemology[blank_end]: The way we know what we know. [blank_start]Ideology[blank_end]: The relevance of values. [blank_start]Methodology[blank_end]: The role of the researcher, relationship with participants and the design of the research.
Responda
  • Ontology
  • Epistemology
  • Ideology
  • Methodology

Questão 7

Questão
Ontology is the way we know what we know.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 8

Questão
Epistemology is the relevance of values.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 9

Questão
Ideology is the relevance of values.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 10

Questão
Ontology is the nature of reality
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 11

Questão
Epistemology is the way we know what we know.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 12

Questão
Epistemology is the
Responda
  • Way we know what we know
  • Nature of reality
  • Relevance of values

Questão 13

Questão
Ideology is
Responda
  • The way we know what we know
  • the relevance of values
  • The nature of reality

Questão 14

Questão
Ontology is
Responda
  • The relevance of values
  • The role of the researcher
  • The nature of reality
  • The way we know what we know

Questão 15

Questão
Methodology is
Responda
  • The role of the researcher
  • The nature of reality
  • The relationship with research participants
  • The design of the research
  • The way we know what we know
  • The relevance of values

Questão 16

Questão
Qualitative methods are not good for understanding participants' lived experiences.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 17

Questão
[blank_start]Ontology[blank_end] is about the nature of reality.
Responda
  • Ontology

Questão 18

Questão
[blank_start]Epistemology[blank_end] is the way we know what we know.
Responda
  • Epistemology

Questão 19

Questão
[blank_start]Ideology[blank_end] is about the relevance of values.
Responda
  • Ideology

Questão 20

Questão
Further investigation of an incident may be required if a participant minimises their experience. For example, a participant says "just normal everyday losing the plot", is further investigation required to find out what losing the plot means?
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 21

Questão
If you are [blank_start]controlling[blank_end] the setting you’re more likely to be [blank_start]quantitative[blank_end], if you are [blank_start]observing[blank_end] you are more likely to be [blank_start]qualitative[blank_end].
Responda
  • controlling
  • quantitative
  • observing
  • qualitative

Questão 22

Questão
Qualitative research is pre-categorised, you say ahead of time what the valid response options will be.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 23

Questão
The distinction between qualitative and quantitative research is very simple and easy to understand.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 24

Questão
Quantifying things can be a hard habit to give up.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 25

Questão
Quantitative research is often described as...
Responda
  • Research is value free.
  • Research is value-laden.
  • Technical competence is all that matters.
  • Research shaped by the culture, class, gender, life experience etc. of the researcher.
  • Researcher remains distant and uninvolved, subjects are often naive about the research.
  • Researcher is engaged with the research participants who play an active part in the study.
  • Researcher maintains control of the setting, often manipulating an independent variable (e.g. experiments).
  • Researcher observes whatever arises in the setting (e.g. naturalistic research).
  • Large pre-determined. Research often tests a hypothesis.
  • Flexible. Emergent. Research open to whatever is observed.

Questão 26

Questão
Qualitative research is often described as...
Responda
  • Research is value free.
  • Research is value-laden.
  • Technical competence is all that matters.
  • Research shaped by the culture, class, gender, life experience etc. of the researcher.
  • Researcher remains distant and uninvolved, subjects are often naive about the research.
  • Researcher is engaged with the research participants who play an active part in the study.
  • Researcher maintains control of the setting, often manipulating an independent variable (e.g. experiments).
  • Researcher observes whatever arises in the setting (e.g. naturalistic research).
  • Large pre-determined. Research often tests a hypothesis.
  • Flexible. Emergent. Research open to whatever is observed.

Questão 27

Questão
[blank_start]Case-centric[blank_end] research combines a [blank_start]small[blank_end] number of cases with a large number of variables and values. [blank_start]Variable-centric[blank_end] research examines a small number of variables and values over a [blank_start]large[blank_end] number of cases.
Responda
  • Case-centric
  • Variable-centric
  • small
  • large

Questão 28

Questão
What are students' experiences of the University campus? This is an exmaple of which type of research?
Responda
  • Case-centric
  • Variable-centric

Questão 29

Questão
The relationship between gender and safety on campus is an example of which type of research?
Responda
  • Case-centric
  • Variable-centric

Questão 30

Questão
Variable-centric research is [blank_start]quantitative[blank_end]. Case-centric research is [blank_start]qualitative[blank_end].
Responda
  • quantitative
  • qualitative

Questão 31

Questão
Design strategies for qualitative research includes [blank_start]Naturalistic inquiry[blank_end]: Studying real-world situations as they unfold naturally; Nonmanipulative and noncontrolling; Openness to whatever emerges with a lack of predetermined constraints on findings. [blank_start]Emergent design flexibility[blank_end]: Openness to adapting inquiry as understanding deepens and/or situations change; avoids getting locked into a rigid design that eliminates responsiveness and pursues new paths of discovery as they emerge. [blank_start]Purposeful sampling[blank_end]: Cases for study are selected because they are information rich and illuminative. Sampling is aimed at insight about phenomena, not empirical generalisation from a sample to a population.
Responda
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Emergent design flexibility
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Qualitative data
  • Personal experience and engagement
  • Empathic neutrality and mindfulness
  • Dynamic systems
  • Unique case orientation
  • Inductive analysis & creative synthesis
  • Holistic perspective
  • Context sensitivity
  • Voice, perspectives, and reflexivity

Questão 32

Questão
Data collection and fieldwork strategies [blank_start]Qualitative data[blank_end]: Observations that yield detailed, thick descriptions; inquiry in depth; interviews that capture direct quotations about personal perspectives and experiences. [blank_start]Personal experience and engagement[blank_end]: Direct contact with and gets close to the people, situation and phenomenon under study; the researchers' personal experiences are an important part of the inquiry and critical to understanding the phenomenon. [blank_start]Empathic neutrality and mindfulness[blank_end]: Seeks vicarious understanding without judgement (neutrality) by showing openness, sensitivity, respect, awareness, and responsiveness. Being fully present. [blank_start]Dynamic systems[blank_end]: Attention to process; assumes change as ongoing whether the focus is on an individual, organisation, community or culture. Mindful of and attentive to system and situation dynamics.
Responda
  • Qualitative data
  • Personal experience and engagement
  • Empathic neutrality and mindfulness
  • Dynamic systems
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Emergent design flexibility
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Unique case orientation
  • Inductive analysis & creative synthesis
  • Holistic perspective
  • Context sensitivity
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity

Questão 33

Questão
Analysis strategies [blank_start]Unique case orientation[blank_end]: Assumes that each case is special and unique; the first level of analysis is being true to, respecting, and capturing the details of the individual cases being studied; cross-case analysis follows from and depends on the quality of individual case studies. [blank_start]Inductive analysis & creative synthesis[blank_end]: Immersion in the details and specifics of the data to discover important patterns, themes, and interrelationships; begins by exploring, then confirming, guided by analytical principles rather than rules, ends with a creative synthesis. [blank_start]Holistic perspective[blank_end]: The whole phenomenon under study is understood as a complex system that is more than the sum of its parts; focus on complex interdependencies and system dynamics that cannot meaningfully be reduced to a few discrete variables and linear, causeeffect relationships. [blank_start]Context sensitivity[blank_end]: Places findings in a social, historical, and temporal context; careful about, even dubious of, the possibility or meaningfulness of generalizations across time and space; emphasizes instead careful comparative case analyses and extrapolating patterns for possible transferability and adaptation in new settings. [blank_start]Voice, perspective, and reflexivity[blank_end]: The qualitative analyst owns and is reflective about her or his own voice and perspective; a credible voice conveys authenticity and trustworthiness; complete objectivity being impossible and pure subjectivity undermining credibility, the researcher’s focus becomes balance—understanding and depicting the world authentically in all its complexity while being self-analytical, politically aware, and reflexive in consciousness
Responda
  • Unique case orientation
  • Inductive analysis & creative synthesis
  • Holistic perspective
  • Context sensitivity
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Emergent design flexibility
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Qualitative data
  • Personal experience and engagement
  • Empathic neutrality and mindfulness
  • Dynamic systems

Questão 34

Questão
What is Studying real-world situations as they unfold naturally; Nonmanipulative and noncontrolling; Openness to whatever emerges with a lack of predetermined constraints on findings.
Responda
  • Context sensitivity
  • Holistic perspective
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Personal experience and engagement

Questão 35

Questão
What is Openness to adapting inquiry as understanding deepens and/or situations change; avoids getting locked into a rigid design that eliminates responsiveness and pursues new paths of discovery as they emerge.
Responda
  • Emergent design and flexibility
  • Inductive analysis & creativity synthesis
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Dynamic systems

Questão 36

Questão
What is Cases for study are selected because they are information rich and illuminative. Sampling is aimed at insight about phenomena, not empirical generalisation from a sample to a population.
Responda
  • Qualitative data
  • Holistic perspective
  • Unique case orientation
  • Purposeful sampling

Questão 37

Questão
What is Observations that yield detailed, thick descriptions; inquiry in depth; interviews that capture direct quotations about personal perspectives and experiences.
Responda
  • Empathic neutrality and midnfulness
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Qualitative data
  • Personal experience and engagement

Questão 38

Questão
What is Direct contact with and gets close to the people, situation and phenomenon under study; the researchers' personal experiences are an important part of the inquiry and critical to understanding the phenomenon.
Responda
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Personal experience and engagement
  • Context sensitivity
  • Purposeful sampling

Questão 39

Questão
What is Seeks vicarious understanding without judgement (neutrality) by showing openness, sensitivity, respect, awareness, and responsiveness. Being fully present.
Responda
  • Empathic neutrality and mindfulness
  • Holistic perspective
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Inductive analysis & creative synthesis

Questão 40

Questão
What is Attention to process; assumes change as ongoing whether the focus is on an individual, organisation, community or culture. Mindful of and attentive to system and situation dynamics.
Responda
  • Emergent design flexibility
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Unique case orientation
  • Dynamic systems

Questão 41

Questão
What is Assumes that each case is special and unique; the first level of analysis is being true to, respecting, and capturing the details of the individual cases being studied; cross-case analysis follows from and depends on the quality of individual case studies.
Responda
  • Holistic perspective
  • Unique case orientation
  • Context sensitivity
  • Qualitative data

Questão 42

Questão
What is Immersion in the details and specifics of the data to discover important patterns, themes, and interrelationships; begins by exploring, then confirming, guided by analytical principles rather than rules, ends with a creative synthesis.
Responda
  • Qualitative data
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Inductive analysis & creative synthesis
  • Context sensitvity

Questão 43

Questão
What is The whole phenomenon under study is understood as a complex system that is more than the sum of its parts; focus on complex interdependencies and system dynamics that cannot meaningfully be reduced to a few discrete variables and linear, causeeffect relationships.
Responda
  • Holistic perspective
  • Context sensitivity
  • Naturalistic inquiry
  • Personal experience and engagement

Questão 44

Questão
What is Places findings in a social, historical, and temporal context; careful about, even dubious of, the possibility or meaningfulness of generalizations across time and space; emphasizes instead careful comparative case analyses and extrapolating patterns for possible transferability and adaptation in new settings.
Responda
  • Purposeful sampling
  • Personal experience and engagement
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Context sensitivity

Questão 45

Questão
What is The qualitative analyst owns and is reflective about her or his own voice and perspective; a credible voice conveys authenticity and trustworthiness; complete objectivity being impossible and pure subjectivity undermining credibility, the researcher’s focus becomes balance—understanding and depicting the world authentically in all its complexity while being self-analytical, politically aware, and reflexive in consciousness
Responda
  • Voice, perspective, and reflexivity
  • Holistic perspective
  • Unique case orientation
  • Qualitative data

Questão 46

Questão
Photo elicitation is also called
Responda
  • Photo voice
  • Photo novella
  • Participatory photography
  • Photo diary

Questão 47

Questão
Social construction of knowledge includes
Responda
  • Constructing meaning through interactions with others
  • The idea or notion that appears to be natural and obvious to people who accept it
  • Are collectively held beliefs
  • Can and do change: groups may actively work to renegotiate meanings associated with them

Questão 48

Questão
According to social construction
Responda
  • There are multiple, socially constructed realities
  • Researched shaped by the culture, class, gender, life experience etc. of the researcher
  • There is a single, objective reality that exists "out there"
  • Techincal competence of the researcher is all that matters

Questão 49

Questão
In quantitative research, the researcher is the instrument
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 50

Questão
Social constructions are singularly held beliefs?
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 51

Questão
Do we construct meaning through interactions with others?
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 52

Questão
It is possible for social constructions to change.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 53

Questão
In qualitative research the researcher is the [blank_start]instrument[blank_end].
Responda
  • instrument
  • experiment
  • participant
  • social construct

Questão 54

Questão
Reflexivity is the construction of meaning through interactions with others.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 55

Questão
Reflexivity is the critical self-evaluation of researcher's positionality.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 56

Questão
Reflexivity understands that a researchers positionality [blank_start]may[blank_end] affect the research process and outcome.
Responda
  • may
  • will
  • won't

Questão 57

Questão
[blank_start]Reflexivity[blank_end] is the process of a continual internal dialogue and critical self-evaluation of researcher's positionality as well as active acknowledgement and explicit recognition that this problem may affect the research process and outcome.
Responda
  • Reflexivity

Questão 58

Questão
Researcher positioning can include which of the following:
Responda
  • Gender, race and affiliation
  • Age
  • Sexual orientation
  • Immigration status
  • Personal experiences
  • Linguistic tradtion
  • Beliefs and biases
  • Preferences
  • Theoretical, political and ideological stances
  • Emotional responses to participant

Questão 59

Questão
Things that are relevant to a researchers positioning for reflexivity is not dependent on the context
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 60

Questão
A researcher's [blank_start]position[blank_end] is relevant because it can affect access to the 'field', it may shape the nature of the researcher-participant relationship, it may affect the way in which we construct the world, use language, pose questions, choose our frameworks, and how we make meaning of the information we gather.
Responda
  • position

Questão 61

Questão
The position of the researcher may shape the nature of the researcher-participant relationship. However, this will not affect the information that participants are willing to share.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 62

Questão
The position of the researcher may affect the way they construct the world which will affect how meaning is made from gathered information.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 63

Questão
Reflexivity can be achieved by
Responda
  • Having multiple researchers
  • Being transparent with participants
  • Keeping a journal
  • Restricting access to participants
  • Conducting double-blind studies
  • Randomly assigning participants to conditions

Questão 64

Questão
Keeping a journal will help with reflexivity
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 65

Questão
What should be recorded in a journal to assist with reflexivity?
Responda
  • Experiences and feelings
  • Decisions and how they were made
  • Milage
  • Equipment used
  • The number of cups of tea consumed

Questão 66

Questão
For reflexivity purposes, once a journal entry has been written it should not be reviewed.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 67

Questão
[blank_start]Transparent positioning[blank_end] is about being open and clear about a researcher's position.
Responda
  • Transparent positioning

Questão 68

Questão
[blank_start]2.[blank_end] Devising an initial theme for taking pictures [blank_start]4.[blank_end] Selecting photographs for discussion [blank_start]1.[blank_end] Photovoice training [blank_start]6.[blank_end] Codifying issues, themes, theories [blank_start]5.[blank_end] Contextualising and storytelling [blank_start]3.[blank_end] Taking pictures
Responda
  • 2.
  • 4.
  • 1.
  • 6.
  • 5.
  • 3.

Questão 69

Questão
Photo elicitation studies should be directed, by providing guidance on what and how particiaptns should take photos.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 70

Questão
Photo elicitation is...
Responda
  • a process
  • a single step
  • not a good way to conduct research
  • quantitative

Questão 71

Questão
[blank_start]Photo elicitation[blank_end] provides [blank_start]participants[blank_end] the opportunity to tell tales about their [blank_start]everyday[blank_end] experience
Responda
  • Photo elicitation
  • Social construction
  • participants
  • subjects
  • everyday
  • objective

Questão 72

Questão
Photo elicitation studies allow access to what some researchers conceptualise as the 'unknown unknowns'. Things that the researcher may not even be aware of when conducting a study.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 73

Questão
What are some of the unknown unknowns mentioned in the 'Picture this' study on sexuality and schooling conducted by Lousia Allen?
Responda
  • Learning about sexuality from graffiti
  • Learning about sexuality from sports
  • The 5cm rule
  • Unofficial spaces
  • Learning about sexuality from peers

Questão 74

Questão
Reasons given for why photo elicitation studies in schools are unconventional from the 'Picture this' sexualities and schooling study by Lousia Allen include:
Responda
  • Schools are risk-averse
  • Teenagers are already self-centered, giving them cameras will only inflate their sense of self importance.
  • Cameras incite anxieties around issues of privacy and appropriate use
  • Teenagers don't have the maturity to take relevant photos

Questão 75

Questão
Participants are unlikely to take staged or premeditated photos in a photo elicitation study, they are more likely to take opportunistic photos. Answer in reference to the 'Picture this' sexuality and schooling study by Louisa Allen.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 76

Questão
Some participants in the 'Picture this' sexuality and schooling study by Louisa Allen were initially uncertain about what photos to capture. This may have been attributable to the way sexuality is both 'everywhere and nowhere' at school.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 77

Questão
Researchers are often disappointed on first viewing participant images as they appear mundane and uninteresting.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 78

Questão
The following can be/are socially constructed:
Responda
  • Colours
  • Language
  • Food
  • Gestures
  • People

Questão 79

Questão
Stereotypes are not forms of social construction.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 80

Questão
[blank_start]social movements[blank_end] such as [blank_start]civil rights and feminism[blank_end] can in part be seen as [blank_start]collective[blank_end] efforts to change [blank_start]socially constructed ideas[blank_end] about the world.
Responda
  • social movements
  • civil rights and feminism
  • collective
  • socially constructed ideas

Questão 81

Questão
Examples of social constructions: [blank_start]Language[blank_end]: The word cat, it doesn't look like a cat, but we as a society have decided it represents sounds that make up the word cat. [blank_start]Colours[blank_end]: Pink is for girls, blue is for boys. [blank_start]Food[blank_end]: Eating bacon and eggs for breakfast is western, in Korea vegetable soup for breakfast. Fortune cookies are not a Chinese invention but Japanese, in America Chinese food is served with fortune cookies. [blank_start]Gestures[blank_end]: Thumbs up means good or well done in western society. In Iraq, it means screw you. Discussion around Michelle and Barak Obama fist bumping and what it means, apparaently it can have links to terrorism? [blank_start]People[blank_end]: Women love shopping. American Indians are closer to nature.
Responda
  • Language
  • Colours
  • Food
  • Gestures
  • People

Questão 82

Questão
A [blank_start]symbol[blank_end] is a thing that stands in for another thing e.g. the USA Flag represents the United States and it's people.
Responda
  • symbol

Questão 83

Questão
[blank_start]Social constructions[blank_end] are collectively held beliefs where a culture agrees on a meaning. They can be difficult to change. [blank_start]Stereotypes[blank_end] are forms of social constructions.
Responda
  • Social constructions
  • Stereotypes

Questão 84

Questão
There is an assumption among researchers that bias or skewedness in a research study is undesireable.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 85

Questão
[blank_start]preconceptions[blank_end] are not the same as [blank_start]bias[blank_end], unless the researcher fails to mention them. Different researchers will approach a study from different [blank_start]positions[blank_end] or perspectives. This might lead to different, although equally [blank_start]valid[blank_end], [blank_start]understandings[blank_end] of a particular situation under study. While some may see these different ways of [blank_start]knowing[blank_end] as a [blank_start]reliability[blank_end] problem, others feel that these different ways of seeing provide a [blank_start]richer[blank_end], more developed understanding of [blank_start]complex[blank_end] phenomena. Understanding something about the position, perspective, beliefs and [blank_start]values[blank_end] of the researcher is an issue in all [blank_start]research[blank_end], but particulary in [blank_start]qualitative[blank_end] research where the researcher is often constructed as the [blank_start]human research instrument[blank_end].
Responda
  • preconceptions
  • bias
  • positions
  • valid
  • understandings
  • knowing
  • reliability
  • richer
  • complex
  • values
  • research
  • qualitative
  • quantitative
  • human research instrument

Questão 86

Questão
One way to foster reflexivity and reflexive research design [blank_start]is to[blank_end] report research perspectives, positions, values and beliefs in manuscripts and other publications. Many believe this is [blank_start]valuable[blank_end] and [blank_start]essential[blank_end] to briefly report in manuscripts, as best as possible, how one's preconceptions, beliefs, values, assumptions and position may have come into play during the research process.
Responda
  • is to
  • is not to
  • valuable
  • a waste of time
  • essential
  • unnecessary

Questão 87

Questão
Fostering reflexivity and good reflexive design includes only one researcher.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 88

Questão
A journal is a good way to foster reflexivity and encourage good reflexive research design.
Responda
  • True
  • False

Questão 89

Questão
We construct meaning through interactions with others when
Responda
  • face to face
  • interacting with media
  • Both face to face and interacting with the media

Questão 90

Questão
[blank_start]Collectively[blank_end] held beliefs are an idea or notion that appears to be [blank_start]natural and obvious[blank_end] to people who [blank_start]accept[blank_end] it (war, beneficiaries, beauty). However, if they can be [blank_start]constructed[blank_end], they can be [blank_start]deconstructed[blank_end] (i.e. the term queer is now a matter of pride).
Responda
  • Collectively
  • Individually
  • natural and obvious
  • unnatural and illogical
  • accept
  • reject
  • constructed
  • deconstructed

Questão 91

Questão
[blank_start]Positivist/experimental/quantitative[blank_end] research does tend to take a view that there is a single objective reality that exists “out there”. Technical competence of the researcher is all that matters. [blank_start]Social construction/critical psychology[blank_end]: There are multiple socially constructed realities. I.e. 9/11 world trade centre, compared to a battery factory in India exploded where 5000 people died. Or the Alleppey Junta regime (1973). Research shaped by culture, class, gender, life experience of the researcher.
Responda
  • Positivist/experimental/quantitative
  • Social construction/critical psychology
  • Social construction/critical psychology
  • Positivist/experimental/quantitative

Questão 92

Questão
In qualitative research, the researcher is the [blank_start]instrument[blank_end]. [blank_start]Reflexivity[blank_end] the process of a continual internal dialogue and critical self-evaluation of the researcher’s positionality. Position in the field: Insiders or Outsiders. [blank_start]Insiders[blank_end] are generally favoured and don't have to make participants at ease. i.e. for tightly knit or religious communities. [blank_start]Outsiders[blank_end] can be good as they may have an objective view but have to get participants to feel at ease.
Responda
  • instrument
  • participant
  • Reflexivity
  • Social construction
  • Insiders
  • Outsiders

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Philosophy- St. Augustine
Chantal Sallade
Philosophy
Rebecca Harbury
Epistemology - Perception
penguincej
Qualitative Research Final Exam
Courtney Westerberg
Philosophy terms
ShayMahoney
Direct Realism
Jess Murphy
QUALITATIVE ANALYSIS
Hanin Lewa
Perception: AQA Philosophy
Grace Westrep
Science & Psychology
Kyle Simpson