Buch, Englisch, 1664 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 131 mm, Gewicht: 3135 g
Buch, Englisch, 1664 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 131 mm, Gewicht: 3135 g
Reihe: SAGE Benchmarks in Social Research Methods
ISBN: 978-1-84787-930-1
Verlag: SAGE PUBN
Insufficient attention to collecting data is often to blame when a research project founders. So how can we avoid, at best, redoing the research and at worst, scrapping the project due to a lack of sufficient data? Data collection is the foundation of high quality research, but it is often given less attention than later steps in a research project, such as coding and analyzing data. The first step in implementing a research design is collecting the data. You first have to take care to gather appropriate types of and amount of data, because making adjustments later in the project can be prohibitive. This major work focuses on this neglected aspect of the research process. It is divided into five main sections that correspond to the broad types of research design and their associated sampling methods. The five categories of research design used to organize the selection are: 1. Surveys 2. Interviews 3. Experiments 4. Observations, including ethnographic 5. Archival and public sources of data In each of the five sections, quantitative and qualitative data collection is discussed because each of these design types can be used to collect either or both types of data.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
VOLUME 1
Section 1: What Counts as Relevant Data?
Reconceptualizing Knowledge Accumulation in Sociology - Andrew Abbott
The Elephant in the Living Room: Or extending the conversation about the politics of evidence - Norman Denzin
Comparative Perspectives and Competing Explanations: Taking on the newly configured reductionist challenge to sociology - Troy Duster
Neurological Imaging as Evidence in Political Science - Dustin Tingley
History of and in Sociology - Charles Tilly
What has Sociology to Contribute to the Study of Inequality Trends? A historical and comparative perspective - Thomas DiPrete
The Imagination and Social Life - Jacqueline Adams
Naturalistic Inquiry and the Saturation Concept - Glenn Bowen
Replication Standards for Quantitative Social Science - Jeremy Freese
Improving Data Quality: Actors, incentives, and capabilities - Yoshiko Herrera and Devesh Kapur
VOLUME 2
Section 2: Data Collection in Survey Research
Section 2a: Survey Sampling for Data Collection
Participatory Survey Research - Emilio Parrado et al
An Empirical Test of Respondent-Driven Sampling - Cyprain Wejnert
Longitudinal Research at the Turn of the Century - Vilma Ortiz and Estella Godinez Ballon
Nonresponse Rates and Nonresponse Bias in Household Surveys - Robert Groves
Section 2b: Measurement in Survey Data Collection
Limitations of Stranger-Interviewers in Rural Kenya - Alexander Weinreb
Measuring Induced Abortion in Mexico: A comparison of four methodologies - Diana Lara et al
Meta-Analysis of Randomized Response Research - Gerty Lensvelt-Mulders et al
Sample Surveys with Sensitive Questions: A nonrandomized response approach - Ming Tan et al
Section 3: Interview Methods for Collecting Data
Section 3a: Eliciting Useful Responses (Data) in Interview Research
What to do With 'I Don't Know:' Elicitation in ethnographic and survey interviews - Hilary Parsons Dick
The Great Interview: 25 strategies for studying people in bed - Joseph Hermanowicz
Collecting Data from Elites and Ultra Elites: Telephone and face-to-face interviews with macroeconomists - Neil Stephens
Section 3b: Multiple Formats for Interview Data Collection
Eliciting Managers' Personal Values: An adaptation of the laddering interview method - Humphrey Bourne and Mark Jenkins
Learning in Focus Groups: An analytical dimension for enhancing focus group research - Victoria Wibeck et al
Fieldworker or Foreigner? Ethnographic interviewing in nonnative languages - Michaela Winchatz
Condom Semiotics: Meaning and condom use in rural Malawi - Iddo Tavory and Ann Swidler
Section 3c: Coding Interview Data
Analyzing Interview Data: The development and evolution of a coding system - Cynthia Weston et al
Intercoder Reliability for Validating Conclusions Drawn From Open-Ended Interview Data - Karen Kurasaki
Problematics of Grounded Theory: Innovations for developing an increasingly rigorous qualitative method - Jason Adam Wasserman et al
VOLUME 3
Section 4: Experiments and Data Collection
Section 4a: Varieties of Experimental Data Gathering
'Economic Man' in Cross-Cultural Perspective: Behavioral experiments in 15 small-scale societies - Joseph Henrich et al
The False Enforcement of Unpopular Norms - Robb Willer et al
Reasons and Inclusion: The foundation of deliberation - Erik Schneiderhan and Shamus Khan
Experimental Ethnography: The marriage of qualitative and quantitative research - Lawrence Sherman and Heather Strang
Section 4b: Collecting Data in Survey Experiments
An Experimental Comparison of Methods of Measuring Ethnicity - Tom Smith
Does Race Matter n Neighborhood Preferences? Results from a video experiment - Maria Krysan et al
Insiders, outsiders, and the editing inconsistent survey data - Mariano Sana and Alexander Weinreb
Section 4c: Alternatives to Randomized Control Trials for Gathering Data
Grades of evidence: Vari