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Showing 1 to 15 of 65 results Save | Export
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Sivakumar, Vineetha – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
This article is developed from the contents from one of the chapters the researcher has written as part of her PhD thesis. It discusses various methodological challenges the researcher had to face during the phase of data collection in the prisons of Kerala, India, and the strategies adopted to overcome these challenges. This article is intended…
Descriptors: Correctional Institutions, Research Methodology, Data Collection, Qualitative Research
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Bagnoli, Anna; Clark, Andrew – Journal of Youth Studies, 2010
In this paper we present our experiences of conducting focus groups with young people as part of a participatory approach to research design and participant recruitment. The research is a prospective, 10-year, qualitative, longitudinal project investigating young people's daily lives, relationships, and identities, and the ways these change over…
Descriptors: Research Design, Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Focus Groups
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Smith, Emma – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2008
This paper considers the use of secondary data analysis in educational research. It addresses some of the promises and potential pitfalls that influence its use and explores a possible role for the secondary analysis of numeric data in the "new" political arithmetic tradition of social research. Secondary data analysis is a relatively under-used…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Methodology, Social Sciences, Data Analysis
Quaye, Stephen John – Journal of Research Practice, 2007
Social sciences research is entrenched with particular values, beliefs, norms, and practices that students, faculty, and researchers reproduce over time. In this article, the author argues for extending what counts as research within the social sciences to be more inclusive of differing methodologies and writing genres. Using personal narrative,…
Descriptors: Writing Research, Graduate Students, Research Methodology, Personal Narratives
Schmidt, Frank L. – 1984
The most important problem in psychology and the social sciences today is the failure to produce cumulative knowledge. This situation has led many to conclude that cumulative knowledge and general principles and theories may be impossible to establish in psychology, a conclusion suggesting that psychology can never be a science--only at best a…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Psychology, Research Methodology, Research Problems
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Lauderdale, Pat; And Others – American Sociologist, 1990
Suggests that different levels of analysis and theoretical approaches are less problematic when considered in terms of different degrees of abstraction to the extent that concepts utilized are time and space free. Illustrates the need for multiple levels of analysis and abstraction with two examples: contemporary sexual behavior and explanations…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Research Methodology, Research Problems, Social Science Research
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Nickerson, Carol A. E. – American Journal of Public Health, 1990
Criticizes the methodology of a questionnaire-based study that found a discrepancy between the beliefs of sexually active adolescents about condoms and their use of condoms. Discusses six methodological problems in the study to demonstrate how the overly simplified treatment of complex behavior can lead to invalid conclusions. (FMW)
Descriptors: Attitude Measures, Condoms, Questionnaires, Research Methodology
Palonsky, Stuart B. – 1986
Ethnographers find themselves among a family of researchers referred to as naturalists. This rather diverse family conducts research described by turns as qualitative, participant observational, case study, symbolic interactionist, phenomenological, constructivist, and interpretive. The focus of the ethnographer's inquiry is on the mundane,…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Ethnography, Research Methodology, Research Problems
Kvale, Steinar – 1992
Qualitative research evokes rather stereotyped responses from the mainstream of social science. The following 10 standardized responses to the stimulus "qualitative research interview" (QRI) are discussed: (1) it is not scientific, only common sense; (2) it is not objective, but subjective; (3) it is not trustworthy, but biased; (4) it is not…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Interviews, Qualitative Research, Reliability
Welge, Patricia – 1990
L. A. Marascuilo and R. C. Serlin (1988) note that stepwise regression is a method used frequently in social science research. C. Huberty (1989) characterizes such applications as being "common". In support of this latter statement, a review of dissertations by B. Thompson (1988) demonstrated that dissertation students frequently use…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Doctoral Dissertations, Predictor Variables, Regression (Statistics)
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Keller, George – Review of Higher Education, 1986
Higher education research, still in its adolescence, suffers from (1) seldom addressing major issues, and (2) research methods that are too narrow. The scientific method is not appropriate for studying individuals or social institutions; higher education researchers need to develop a multi-faceted research strategy sensitive to its many ties with…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Higher Education, Research Methodology, Research Problems
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Freudenburg, William R.; Keating, Kenneth M. – Rural Sociology, 1985
Reviews legal requirements for use of social science expertise in environmental impact statements and reasons for the general failure to include such input. Explores possibilities for improving social science involvement including legal challenges, cooperation with environmental and public interest groups, objective research, and more adversarial…
Descriptors: Ethics, Policy Formation, Research Needs, Research Problems
Lincoln, Yvonna S.; Guba, Egon G. – 1987
The central failure of conventional, or positivistic inquiry has been the inability to handle deception in research and the violation of societal ethics, moral and legal caused by such deception. Moral dimensions include tests for whether the research would be approved by reasonable persons, whether it might pass the test of publicity, and whether…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Ethics, Inquiry, Legal Problems
Miller, Michael K.; Farmer, Frank L. – 1986
Theories employed to explain regularities in social behavior often contain explicit or implicit reference to the presence of nonlinear and/or nonadditive (i.e., multiplicative) relationships among germane variables. While such nonadditive features are theoretically important, the inclusion of quadratic or multiplicative terms in structural…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Hypothesis Testing, Interaction, Models
Taeuber, Alma F.; Taeuber, Karl E. – 1988
Research using measures of racial exposure has been appearing with increasing frequency in the literature on race relations. A methodological analysis finds the following problems with these measures: (1) they fail to characterize meaningfully the actual composition of sub-areas; (2) a particular exposure value can describe a wide variety of…
Descriptors: Differences, Measurement Techniques, Racial Distribution, Racial Integration
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