Naturalistic = carried out in a real-world setting
Controlled = conducted under more controlled circumstances, such as in a lab
Overt = participants are aware they are being studied
Covert = participants are not aware that they are being studied
"under cover"
Nonparticipant observation = researcher observes from outside the group or situation.
Participant = observer becomes part of the group they are studying
Behavioural categories can be used to record particular instances of behaviour as psychologists are unable to observe a continuous stream of behaviours.
Event sampling (an observational design) = recordings take place as the behaviour occurs
e.g. the number of times a student talks
Time sampling (an observational design) = recordings take place at specified time intervals
e.g. every minute
Observational techniques:
strength: Capture what people do - people often act differently from how they say they will in self-report methods, observations are useful as they give insight into spontaneous behaviour
limitation: risk of observer bias - researcher's interpretation of the situation may be affected by expectations, bias can be reduced by using more than one observer
Naturalistic observation evaluation:
strength: high external validity as in a natural context, behaviour is more likely to be spontaneous and therefore it is more generalisable to everyday life
limitation: low control means there may be uncontrolled CVs/EVs. This makes it more difficult to detect patterns
Controlled observations evaluation:
strength: can be replicated as they are more easily repeated due to standardised procedures. This means that findings can be checked to see if they occur again
limitation: low external validity as behaviour may be forced as a result of the setting. This means that findings cannot be generalised to everyday life.
Covert observations evaluation:
strength: demand characteristics are reduced as participants don't know they are being watched so their behaviour becomes more natural. This increases the internal validity of the findings
limitation: ethically questionable as people may not want their behaviour recorded. therefore participants' right to privacy may be affected
Overt observation evaluation:
strength: more ethically acceptable as participants have given their consent to be studied. They have the right to withdraw.
limitation: demand characteristics as knowledge of being studied influences behaviour
Participant observation evaluation:
strength: can lead to greater insight as the researcher experiences the situation as the participants do. This enhances the external validity of the findings.
limitation: possible loss of objectivity as the researcher may identify too strongly with those they are studying. This threatens the objectivity and internal validity of the findings.
Non-participant observation evaluation:
strength: more objective as the researcher maintains an objective distance so there is less chance of bias. This may increase the internal validity of the findings
limitation: loss of insight as the researcher may be too far removed from those they are studying. This may reduce the external validity of the findings.
Observational design: behavioural categories
Behavioural categories - the target behaviour to be observed should be broken up into a set of observable categories.
Behavioural categories:
limitations
difficult to make clear and unambiguous as categories should be self-evident and not overlap but this is not always possible to achieve. For example 'smiling' and 'grinning' would be poor categories
ignored categories - all forms of behaviour should be in the list as 'dumped' behaviours go unrecorded.
Event samping:
strength: useful for infrequent behaviour. the researcher will still pick up behaviours that do not occur at regular intervals. such behaviours could be easily missed using time sampling
limitation: complex behaviour oversimplified - if the event is too complex, important details may go unrecorded. this may impact the validity of the findings.
Time sampling:
strength: reduces the number of observations as rather than recording everything that is seen, data is recorded at certain intervals. This makes the observation more structured and systematic.
limitation: may be unrepresentative as the researcher may miss important details outside of the timescale. This means it may not reflect the whole behaviour.
When designing my own observational study:
use subheadings
use the bullet points given to guide my answer and do not stray from them as it will not gain marks