5 – Field Work
Why Should I Care?
Some of the best social science comes from field work, but many people are not convinced because it is often exploratory, or descriptive, work.
Definitions
Field work: Research that involves studying social phenomena as they occur in the real world, naturally, without intervention.
Anthropology: A social science discipline that studies the physical evolution and variety of humans, as well as the nature and variety of human cultures.
Usefulness
To record and analyze human activity as it happens in its natural setting. To fully understand someone else’s point of view.
See p. 159
Objects of Measurement
Type of Object |
Yes |
No |
Maybe |
Example |
Personal Characteristic |
X |
|
|
Height |
Socio-Demographic Characteristic |
X |
|
Age, language, religion |
|
Opinion |
|
|
X |
|
Motivations |
X |
|
|
|
Ideology |
|
|
X |
|
Biases / Prejudice |
X |
|
|
No one here has ever played with Black dolls |
Preferences |
X |
|
|
|
Personal History / Background |
XX |
|
|
I failed grade 6. It was hard to go through |
Family Dynamics |
X |
|
|
|
Cultural History |
X |
|
|
|
Perception / Self-Perception |
X |
|
|
|
Aptitude /Ability |
X |
|
|
|
Behaviour |
X |
|
|
Hawthorne Effect |
Level of Knowledge |
X |
|
|
|
Sampling
Populations are defined by culture, civilization, society.
Sampling is usually a small group of people, however they may represent a large percentage of the population, however there are no benchmarks for percentages. Sampling is non-random, convenient and/or purposive.
Types of Field Work
- Participant
- Non-Participant
Instruments
Interview: typical use of personal interviews, usually informal when dealing, for example, with Indigenous Peoples.
Recordings: lots of note-taking, audio and video recordings of surroundings, landscape, objects, architecture, etc.
NOTA - Artefacts: Archeology is a big help for anthropologists trying to figure out past civilizations. It is not “Field Work”, but Unobtrusive Measurement.
Scientific Power
Exploratory: very much so when dealing with “first contact” societies.
Descriptive: very much so, as the method implies lots of description, understanding, figuring out of customs, ways and technologies.
Explanatory: not in a scientific sense of establishing cause. In such an inductive approach, you can go as far as say it can be explanatory, but you cannot be 100 percent certain of predictions.
Steps
- Identify topic, population, sample and “loose” hypothesis
- Operational definitions: set specific definitions of each variable, in a way you can quickly identify their occurrence, and count their frequency
- Choose location
- Get to know the location and population sample
- Figure out exactly where to go and when, to see what you are looking for
- Get to know your camera, recorder, notepad, laptop, etc. Do a trial run.
- Do the field study: collect and record data.
- Analyze and Report.
Advantages
p. 172
- Holism get the big picture
- Depth detail, description
- Complexity analysis, adding variables and relationships
- Meaning how people understand their own lives
Disadvantages
p. 173
- Settling-in takes time and trust
- Ethnocentrism cultural bias
- Talk may not equate actions walking the walk, talking the talk
- Hawthorne Effect non-participant, participant
Reporting
Spatial Maps
Descriptive Text
Synthesis Tables
Recherches amérindiennes au Québec, Société Recherches amérindiennes au Québec
Anthropologica, Canadian Anthropology Society
L'Homme. Revue française d'anthropologie, Éditions de l’École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales.
American Anthropologist, American Anthropological Association
Preferred Disciplines
Anthropology, Sociology, Geography
Other Non-scientific Disciplines
Applications in Journalism, Documentary Films, Sustainable Development Consulting, Mining & Forestry, Military & Diplomacy, Translation services
Not useful for
Historians, Economists, Political Scientists, Psychologists
Think Piece
If you have ancestors from outside Montreal, how would you design a field research study to learn about their culture
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