Sociological Imagination and Investigation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

Sociological Imagination and Investigation

Description:

... discretely or in an integrated fashion to important effect. ... diary entry or a set of family photos to confirm or contest something said in conversation. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:183
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: Pilki
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Sociological Imagination and Investigation


1
Sociological Imagination and Investigation
  • Mixing methods Sociological imagination or
    epistemological heresy?

2
Mixing our methods An epistemological faux pas?
  • Epistemological and methodological debates are
    routinely set up around the discussion of
    supposedly mutually exclusive (quantitative and
    qualitative) approaches.
  • Quantitative methods are generally seen as
    ideally suited to
  • Questions to which the answers are quantifiable
    e.g. How often do you make use of service x
    every day, once a month, once a year, never ?
  • Questions where only absolute guarantees of
    anonymity would persuade respondents to answer
    honestly e.g. questions about income,
    illegal/deviant activities, voting etc .
  • When you want to be able to say something about
    the whole population.
  • Qualitative methods are seen as preferable when
  • You are interpreting views, opinions, ideas
  • Context is important
  • Research is with vulnerable or hard to reach
    groups
  • Research is into complex or dynamic social
    processes
  • But, different methods can be used either in
    parallel or sequentially and either discretely or
    in an integrated fashion to important effect.

3
Combining methods
  • There are many ways to classify the ways in which
    how different methods can be combined (see Punch
    2005).
  • The three broad approaches of combining methods
    that I want to draw your attention to are
  • Triangulation
  • Parallel use of methods
  • Sequential use of methods

4
Triangulation of data
  • Triangulation is a process of checking the
    inferences drawn from one set of data sources by
    collecting data from others.
  • Within an ethnographic approach you might want
    to check your own observations of a
    situation/event against how it is described to
    you in interview.
  • Alternatively you might use a diary entry or a
    set of family photos to confirm or contest
    something said in conversation.
  • This process of triangulation in ethnographic
    work is a way of improving validity countering
    the view that the researcher gets a very
    partial understanding of the social world. But
    this comes about because it allows you to first
    capture differences and contradictions and work
    through them to try and understand the whole.

5
Parallel use of methods
  • Triangulation is an example of the parallel use
    of methods as a check on inference from that
    data.
  • However, methods can be used discretely in
    parallel in order to provide a different kind of
    data, answering a different question, but helpful
    to the overall research
  • It is common for qualitative researchers to
    employ an element of small-scale survey for the
    purposes of generating descriptive but not
    inferential statistics, for example.
  • The dangers in this kind of parallel work is that
    the data from different sources may simply
    present different types of information that
    cannot be easily integrated and thus produce no
    valuable analytic yield.

6
Mixing methods sequential approaches
  • An alternative approach is to use different
    methods sequentially.
  • The most common example of this is the
    recognition by survey researchers that the
    formulation of questions for questionnaires is
    benefited by using qualitative research methods
    either interview or focus groups to understand
    how respondents are likely to interpret
    questions. The aim of such mixing of methods is
    to reduce misreporting and cross-cultural
    confusion and thus the qualitative element is
    designed to improve the main technique which is
    quantitative.
  • Although less common, qualitative specialists may
    also use quantitative work to identify
    interesting cases for study, or else to
    statistically test hypotheses thrown up by
    ethnographic work.

7
Drug use An empirical example
  • 1. Choosing drugs
  • Which young people begin experimenting with
    drugs and in what contexts? Who chooses not to
    use drugs? Are gender, class, ethnicity or age
    significant factors?
  • 2. The role and function of drugs in youth
    groupings
  • To what extent do drugs talk, symbols, style
    and image shape everyday communication among
    youth? How does this vary for young people who
    use drugs regularly, who have experimented with
    drugs and who have never used?
  • 3. Drugs and youth cultural formations
  • What is the relationship between youth cultural
    style and drug use? Are certain youth style
    groups associated with certain drug preferences
    (in terms of use/non-use and particular drug
    empathies)?
  • 4. Narratives of drug use
  • What, in young peoples own narratives,
    constitutes experimentation with drugs,
    habitual, regular or dependent drug use?
    How important are peer influence, drug
    dealers and personal choice in young peoples
    own narratives of drug decisions?
  • 5. The normalization of drugs
  • Does the accommodation of drug use in the peer
    group, personal drug experimentation and/or
    regular drug use indicate an acceptance of drug
    use as normal?
  • 6. Responses and inputs to drug prevention
    initiatives
  • To what extent do those responsible for leading
    drugs prevention work in Russian cities listen to
    young people's experience? To whom do young
    people talk, and listen, about drug use?

8
Mixing methods Logic and practice
  • We took three regions as case studies and chose
    three different towns/cities in each region as
    fieldwork sites. We employed the following
    methods
  • a representative survey based on self-complete
    questionnaire (n2914) of 14-19 year olds in all
    9 locations
  • semi-structured interviews with a sub-sample of
    survey respondents (n95) in all 9 locations
  • ethnographic studies in 3 of the 9 field sites
    with a total of 19 groups of young people
  • expert interviews with key personnel engaged at
    the regional and city/town level with devising
    and implementing health education responses to
    drug use by young people in 3 of the 9 field
    sites.

9
The quantitative element
  • Method
  • First check no such data exist already e.g. in
    official statistics.
  • Be careful not to confuse incidence with
    prevalence data.
  • Check for already existing survey data (e.g.
    household survey data).
  • Choose a sampling method
  • A mixed method approach may require compromises!
  • Question
  • How many young people encounter drug offers?
  • How many young people experiment with/use drugs?
  • Has drug use been desubculturalised?
  • These are questions about a population in
    general. We therefore need to ask every single
    member of the population about their
    behaviour/attitudes or survey a representative
    sample.

10
The interview element
  • Semi-structured interview (loose interview guide
    with prompts).
  • Importance of teasing out what respondents mean
    by normal.
  • Allows space for respondents to talk about drug
    use experiences in their own words.
  • Allows unexpected outcomes e.g. dont recognise
    beer as alcohol.
  • Students at the mining college in Vorkuta after
    finishing the questionnaire.
  • Although 3 respondents went on to give
    interviews, there was no cross referencing
    between questionnaire and interview responses for
    ethical reasons.

11
The ethnographic element
  • Ethnographic research helped us
  • understand the context (group setting) of drugs
    decisions.
  • check narratives of drug use against behaviour.
  • see drug use trajectories (careers).

This is a photograph of two key informants
seeing the ethnographer off at the railway
station when she left Vorkuta.
12
Expert interview element
  • Expert or elite interviews are used where the
    target respondents are people with specific
    insider, or specialist knowledge.
  • In our case these were individuals from NGOs,
    drugs clinics, local government and education
    departments involved in drugs education.
  • Access to these respondents is obtained
    differently and agreements about confidentiality
    of information provided are often more formal.

13
Conclusion
  • Epistemological divides in the social sciences
    are weakening, but there remains some
    considerable scepticism about mixing methods.
  • We have suggested that there are no absolute
    divisions between deductive and inductive
    approaches or between statistical/survey
    quantitative and interview/observation based
    qualitative methodological techniques.
  • These approaches and methods should be viewed as
    complementary rather than mutually exclusive and
    we should focus on selecting the most appropriate
    methods for a particular question and considering
    how different methods might be integrated (or
    triangulated) in the course of investigation.
  • We should also pay attention to the different
    ways in which methods can be use discretely or
    in an integrated fashion in order to maximise the
    benefits of a mixed method approach.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com