Social Science fieldwork report
Social Science fieldwork report AG0eX
The field notes were written by hand on lined paper. They consisted of jotted notes and mental triggers (personal notes that would remind me of specific things when it came to writing the notes up). I took some direct observational notes recording what I saw where this was relevant to the research questions and, as I was aiming to get a sense of the culture and working environment, I also made researcher inference notes.
I found the note-taking process itself helpful, as it ensured that I listened carefully and decoded information. Not all the information I recorded was relevant but noting what I found informative contributed to my ability to form an overview on re-reading. However, the reliability of jotted notes alone can be questionable. For example, the notes were not a direct transcription of what the subjects said but consisted of pertinent or interesting information.
Rarely did I have time to transcribe a direct quotation, so relied on my own fairly rapid paraphrasing, which risks changing the meaning. Some technical information was difficult to note down accurately. A tape recorder would have been a better, more accurate method. However, one student brought a tape recorder and was asked to switch it off by a participant who was uneasy about her comments being directly recorded. It seems that subjects feel differently about being recorded or photographed (as opposed to observers taking notes), so specific consent should be sought before using these technologies.
The field notes
were written
by hand on lined paper. They consisted of jotted notes and mental triggers (personal notes that would remind me of specific things when it came to writing the notes up). I took
some
direct observational notes recording what I
saw
where this was relevant to the research questions and, as I was aiming to
get
a sense of the culture and working environment, I
also
made researcher inference notes.
I found the note-taking process itself helpful, as it ensured that I listened
carefully
and decoded information. Not all the information I recorded was relevant
but
noting what I found informative contributed to my ability to form an overview on re-reading.
However
, the reliability of jotted notes alone can be questionable.
For example
, the notes were not a direct transcription of what the subjects said
but
consisted of pertinent or interesting information.
Rarely did I have time to transcribe a direct quotation,
so
relied on my
own
fairly
rapid paraphrasing, which
risks
changing the meaning.
Some
technical information was difficult to
note
down
accurately
. A tape recorder would have been a better, more accurate method.
However
, one student brought a tape recorder and
was asked
to switch it off by a participant who was uneasy about her comments being
directly
recorded. It seems that subjects feel
differently
about
being recorded
or photographed (as opposed to observers taking notes),
so
specific consent should
be sought
before
using these technologies.
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