Observational design

    Cards (5)

    • structured
      • allow researcher to quantify observations using a pre determined list of behaviours and sampling methods
      • data produced likely to be numerical and quantitative - straight forward analysing and comparing behaviour observed between participants
    • unstructured
      • researcher writes down everything they see
      • tends to produce accounts of behaviour that are rich in detail
      • method appropriate when observations are small scale and involve few participants
      • qualitative data - difficult to analyse
      • observer bias risk
    • behavioural categories
      • when a target behaviour is broken up into components that are observable and measurable
      • researcher needs to involve all the ways in which the target behaviour may occur within their behavioural categories
      • data collection more objective and structured
      • make sure categories are unambiguous - should not require further interpretation
      • categories should be exclusive and should not overlap
    • event sampling
      • counting the number of times a behaviour occurs in a target group or individual
      • useful when the target population or event happens frequently and could be missed if time sampling was used
      • however if the event is too complex the observer may overlook important details
    • time sampling
      • recording behaviour within a pre established time frame
      • effective in reducing the number of observations that have to be made
      • however the instances when behaviour is sampled might be unrepresentative of the whole observation