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Showing 1 to 15 of 237 results Save | Export
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McBride, Neil Kenneth – Qualitative Research Journal, 2023
Purpose: Reflexivity involves critical reflection by the qualitative researcher as to the influence of the researcher's culture, history and belief on the conduct and outcome of the research. It is often seen as a practice exercised in the analysis of results in order to attempt to objectify the research. The purpose of this paper is to argue that…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Philosophy, Hermeneutics, Reflection
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Kwanchit Sasiwongsaroj; Mitsuko Ono; Sutpratana Duangkaew; Yumi Kimura – Qualitative Research Journal, 2024
Purpose: This article presents fieldwork perspectives and research reflexivity gained from the cross-national research team, with the aim of promoting better qualitative research practices in transnational research. It focuses on how the team incorporates diverse cultural perspectives and insider and outsider roles to enhance the research in the…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Research Methodology, Foreign Countries, Field Studies
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Lareau, Annette; Rao, Aliya Hamid – Sociological Methods & Research, 2022
There is a dearth of methodological guidance on how to conduct participant observation in private spaces such as family homes. Yet, participant observations can provide deep and valuable data about family processes. This article draws on two ethnographic studies of family life in which researchers conduct in-depth interviews, recruit families, and…
Descriptors: Family Life, Observation, Ethnography, Research Methodology
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Ellis, Sophie; Lanskey, Caroline; Markson, Lucy; Souza, Karen; Barton-Crosby, Jennifer; Lösel, Friedrich – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Retaining participants in longitudinal studies is important but challenging when retracing them after a substantial gap between study phases. Utilising our nine year mixed-methods longitudinal study of 54 families affected by paternal imprisonment, we qualitatively analysed our processes and experiences of retracing participants after a seven year…
Descriptors: Field Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Research Methodology, Participation
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Jonathan Tummons – Ethnography and Education, 2024
The notion of the ethnographer as participant observer, as an active agent rather than passive observer, is well established within conversations about method and methodology. Less well explored is the extent to which the inherent curiosity and inquisitiveness of the ethnographer might be reciprocated: how might this be established and how might…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Ethnography, Participant Observation, Ethics
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Abraham R. Matamanda – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Urban planning research usually requires researchers to undertake fieldwork. This fieldwork is frustrated or enabled by gatekeepers who can influence effective data collection. Traditionally, gatekeepers are perceived as monolithic, neutral, and static individuals, yet they are complex individuals with varying needs and expectations from the…
Descriptors: Politics, Urban Planning, Land Settlement, Social Science Research
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Elizabeth Pérez-Izaguirre; José Miguel Correa Gorospe; Estíbaliz Aberasturi-Apraiz; Aingeru Gutiérrez-Cabello Barragán – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2024
This article examines the processes of educational ethnography and questions the traditional use of the field notebook and research relationships. It forms part of an ongoing collaborative study analyzing university students' learning trajectories. Guided by inclusive ethics, the study proposes that researcher-participant collaboration is…
Descriptors: Notetaking, Student Journals, Ethics, Ethnography
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Ross, Karen; Call-Cummings, Meagan – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2020
Across our combined 15 years of experience as methodologists and research methodology instructors, we have found that the concept of 'failure' is only a small portion of methodological literature and is similarly missing from scholarship on teaching and learning social science research methodology. We define failure in terms of our inability as…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Research Methodology, Failure, Social Science Research
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Rodríguez Menés, Jorge; Rovira, Marti – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
Correspondence studies are popular tools for assessing discrimination against minorities, for example, in the labor market. Typically, two fake "Curriculum Vitae" (CVs) are sent to multiple job openings. The CVs are equivalent except for a mark identifying the disadvantaged. While it is straightforward to establish discrimination from…
Descriptors: Equal Opportunities (Jobs), Minority Groups, Job Applicants, Research Methodology
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Eric W. Schoon – Sociological Methods & Research, 2025
This article explores how researchers adapt to disruptions that cost them access to their field sites, advancing a uniquely sociological perspective on the dynamics of flexibility and adaptation in qualitative methods. Through interviews with 31 ethnographers whose access was preempted or eliminated, I find that adaptation varied systematically…
Descriptors: Field Studies, Researchers, Ethnography, Attitudes
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Giraud, Cécile; Cioffo, Giuseppe Davide; Kervyn de Lettenhove, Maïté; Ramirez Chaves, Carlos – Research Ethics, 2019
Ethics review committees have become a common institution in English-speaking research communities, and are now increasingly being adopted in a variety of research environments. In light of existing debates on the aptness of ethics review boards for assessing research work in the social sciences, this article investigates the ways in which…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Research Methodology, Ethics, Research Committees
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Jakoubek, Marek – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2019
This paper analyses the phenomenon of the death of informants. Based on his own experience with the long-term (1999-2016) research of Voyvodovo -- the only Czech village in Bulgaria, the author shows what the death of one's informants means for the research and the researcher. The author argues that any long-term fieldwork entails emotional…
Descriptors: Death, Field Studies, Interpersonal Relationship, Foreign Countries
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Vuban, Joyce Afuh; Eta, Elizabeth Agbor – Research Ethics, 2019
This article argues that localizing access -- a general ethical principle -- is a workable strategy that can be used in approaching participants in qualitative research across disciplines and in coping with respective institutional practices in order to collect meaningful data. This article is based on the autobiographical, lived experiences of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Data Collection, Field Studies
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Ross, Karen; Call-Cummings, Meagan – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2019
In this article, we interrogate the concept of methodological 'failures' as they arise during fieldwork, in the process of collecting empirical data. We highlight how the techniques of validity horizon matrices and power analysis can be used as methodological tools to illustrate moments in the fieldwork process where these 'failures' occur and to…
Descriptors: Failure, Data Collection, Research Methodology, Validity
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Jo Ferrie; Sharon Greenwood – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
Emotion is an integral part of the knowledge production process, yet is rarely acknowledged within research methods teaching or textbooks. As educators, preparing students for fieldwork is essential, and should go beyond skill-learning, towards building confidence in their ability to react both ethically and appropriately during fieldwork. This…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Field Studies, Research Methodology, Courses
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