secondary sources (documents + content analysis) Flashcards

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1
Q

what are secondary sources?

A
  • produced by other people
  • sociologists use a wide variety of qualitative secondary sources in their research
  • qualitative sources include media articles, public reports, private documents, documentaries, paintings etc
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2
Q

what are public documents?

A
  • produced by organisations such as reports from government departments
  • an OFSTED report would be an example
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3
Q

what are personal documents

A
  • letters, diaries, autobiographies
  • first-person accounts
  • interpretivists love these
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4
Q

what are three examples of times historical documents were used as a secondary source?

A
  • LASLETT used parish records to study family structures in pre industrial England - marriages, christenings, funerals
  • ANDERSON used 1851 census to study family structures
  • ARIES used portraits of children and concluded childhood was a recent construct - wealthy could afford paintings - not smiling - artists own interpretation - small sample of privileged children
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5
Q

how do we assess documents?

A
  • AUTHENTICITY - hitlers dairies were fake
  • CREDABILITY - was the author sincere
  • REPRESENTITIVENESS - can we generalise from them?
  • MEANING - what did the author mean - could be translated
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6
Q

advantages of secondary sources:

A
  • with personal documents you get close to the social actor (understandings/meanings)
  • sometimes only available information
  • cheap and readily available
  • save the sociologist time
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7
Q

secondary data theoretical considerations: INTERPRETIVISTS

A
  • see them as valid
  • like the qualitative in depth data
  • provide an insight to the authors world view
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8
Q

secondary data theoretical considerations: POSITIVIST

A
  • dislike them - not reliable/representative
  • not standardised - each one is unique
  • when using these documents the sociologist may impose their own meaning on them
  • however, positivists sometimes use content analysis
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9
Q

what do we look for in content analysis?

A
  • VIDEO TRENDS/HASHTAGS - popular and recurring themes/challenges and viral content. explore how they develop over time and their impact on engagement
  • INFLUENCER STRATEGIES - posting frequently, video length, effects and engagement patterns. explore what strategies they use to employ a local audience
  • AUDIENCE DEMOGRAPHICS - engaging with specific content. age, gender, geographic demographics. look how content looks across different demographics
  • EMOTIONAL APPEALS - categorise emotions expressed and explore how emotional appeal impact video performance and audience reactions
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10
Q

what is content analysis?

A
  • method used for dealing systematically within the contents of documents/social media
  • allows researcher to quantify qualitive data
  • first the researcher makes up different categories then counts how many times they occur
  • this is often used in media reporting on crime
  • LOBBAN used this method to analyse gender roles in children’s reading schemes
  • very cheap and easy method
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11
Q

ethical considerations on documentations and content

A
  • if they are published documents there is no ethical issues
  • personal documents need authors consent
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12
Q

using documents to study education

A

schools and colleges generate lots of public documents
e.g:
- school websites
- prospectuses
- OFSTED reports
- school policies on bullying, racism etc

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13
Q

practice considerations with school documents

A
  • easy to access if published
  • save the sociologist time and money
  • GEWIRTZ used prospectuses to study marketisation
  • personal documents are harder to access
  • confidential information about pupils would be hard to access
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14
Q

how reliable are school documents?

A
  • school registers could be a reliable source
  • LOBBAN used stories from reading schemes to research into gender roles - content analysis
  • this was reliable as it could be checked
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