Primary Qualitative - Participant Observation Flashcards
What is participant observation?
Researcher joins in with the activities of the group
What are the three stages of participant observation?
Getting in
Staying in
Getting out
What does getting in refer to in participant observation?
Researcher must first gain access to the group they wish to observe
They must decide whether to do this overtly or covertly
What does covert participant observation involve?
Often used on criminal or deviant group
Researcher must fully participate in all activities of the group, even if these are illegal
Very difficult to take notes or ask naive questions
What does overt participant observation involve?
Researcher can ask naive questions to get more detail
Being known as an outsider may mean participants open up to them
Easier for researcher to avoid joining in with illegal activities
What does staying in refer to in participant observation?
Researcher has to stay in the group
Can create a problem because the researcher must be involved in the group and remain detached so as to observe objectively
What does it mean if the researcher goes native in participant observation?
Means they identify so closely with the group they can no longer see the group as a researcher and have simply become part of the group
What does getting out refer to in participant observation?
Researcher must leave the group in a way that doesn’t harm relationships or put themselves at risk
What are the advantages of participant observation?
Interpretivists like - high in validity because the researcher sees for themselves what people are actually doing
Interpretivists like verstehen that can be gained
May be only method that is practical to use for a topic
Overt - can ask naive questions to increase validity
What are the disadvantages of participant observation?
Positivists criticise lack of reliability - not standardised
Positivists criticise lack of representativeness - one group observed
Risk of going native
Can be time consuming and expensive
Covert - recording information can be difficult
Covert unethical - deception, no informed consent
Covert - researcher may be involved in criminal acitivity
Personal characteristics of researcher may mean PO isn’t possible for a particular topic
Covert - cannot ask naive questions