Sociology - research methods

Cards (259)

  • Main groups/settings in education
    *Pupils
    *Teachers
    *Parents
    *Classrooms
    *Schools
  • Researching pupils - Malcolm Hill (2005)
    He suggests that there are three major differences between studying young people and adults:
    *Power and status
    *Ability and understanding
    *Vulnerability
    These raise different practical, ethical, and theoretical issues that researches need to take into account when researching pupils.
  • Young people
    • Generally have less power and status than adults
    • This makes it more difficult for them to express their attitudes and views openly
  • Power and status differences
    • Schools give hierarchical power to teachers over pupils
  • Formal research methods
    • Tend to reinforce power differences
    • The researcher determines the question not the young person
  • Power and status differences between adult researchers and young participants
    Sociologists need to consider ways to overcome
  • Ways to overcome power and status differences
    • Group interviews rather than formal one to one interviews
  • Some power and status will still remain, whatever research method is used
  • Pupils' attitudes to power and status differences between pupils and teachers
    Likely to affect how they relate and respond to the researcher
  • Pupils
    • Vocabulary, powers of self expression, thinking skills and confidence are likely to be more limited than adults
    • Limitations in understanding make it more difficult to get informed consent - because the pupil might not understand the way the researcher has explained or presented it
    • Use language in a different way to adults - making constructions of appropriately worded questions demanding
    • Memory is less developed than an adults
    • Not a homogenous group - they are not all the same (Class, age, gender, ethnicity all create differences between pupils)
  • The researcher will have to take all of the differences between pupils into account
  • Young people
    • More vulnerable to physical and psychological harm than adults
    • Raises special ethical issues for the researcher
    • Researcher should consider whether participation of young people is necessary
  • Informed consent
    • Not enough (from parents or teachers)
    • Young person should be aware of what the research entails and give their own consent
  • Child protection issues are VERY important
  • Researcher should
    Take into consideration whether the pupil (participant) might get stressed
  • Gatekeepers

    Controlling access to pupils (parents, teachers, head teachers, local authorities, school boards and governments)
  • Child protection laws
    Such as the Safeguarding Vulnerable groups act (2006) which operate a vetting and barring scheme on adults working in schools / childcare settings
  • Teachers
    Must be DBS checked in order to work with children in any setting
  • Organisations with codes of practice for researching young people
    • UNICEF
    • Barnardos
    • The national children's bureau
  • Advantage of studying pupils
    • They are legally required to attend school, so sociologists will know where to find their target research group
  • Disadvantage of studying pupils
    • If the target group has anti-school attitudes (many who may truant from school)
    • Children are only in school during the week (school day) and term time
  • Researching Teachers - Hill
    Teachers often feel overworked and may be less than cooperative, even when they want to be helpful.
    This may mean that interviews and questionnaires need to be kept short - this would restrict the amount of data that can be gathered.
    However, as educators and professionals, teachers are likely to be sympathetic to educational research.
  • Power relationships in the school
    • Not equal
    • Teachers have more status and power because they are older, they have experience and responsibilities within the school
  • Nature of the classroom
    • Reinforces power of the teacher
    • 'My classroom' - researcher may be viewed as a trespasser
  • Teachers are not independent even in 'their' classroom
  • Head teachers, governors, parents and pupils constrain what teachers cannot do
  • Cover
    Researcher needs to develop a 'cover' if they intend to carry out covert research - perhaps representing themselves as a supply teacher, or a classroom assistant
  • Groups with lower status within the school (supply teacher, classroom assistant) may not be treated as equals by other teachers
  • Impression management
    Teachers 'put on a show' for pupils and others by manipulating the impression that people have of them
  • Teachers
    • Used to being observed and scrutinised (e.g. in Ofsted inspections)
    • May be more willing to be observed by a researcher as it's something they are accustomed to experiencing
  • Erving Goffman (1969)
    'Impression management' - teachers 'put on a show' for pupils and others by manipulating the impression that people have of us
  • Social actors
    • Behave differently when acting out a role 'front stage' as opposed to when they are 'back stage'
  • Researchers might have to get behind the public face that teachers put on
  • Some researchers study teachers in their backstage setting (e.g. the staff room)
  • Getting backstage poses problems; the staffroom (e.g.) is usually small, and a newcomer (researcher) will stand out and may be treated with suspicion
  • Teachers are aware that they could put their career at risk by answering certain questions or by saying critical statements
  • Head teachers may try to influence what members of the staff are picked, could make it not representative of the whole school
  • Classrooms
    • Have clear social and physical boundaries
    • Highly controlled setting
    • School and teacher control classroom layout, access, pupils' tasks, activities, noise levels, dress and language
  • The classroom behaviour that the researcher observes may not actually represent and reflect what the pupils really think and feel
  • In classrooms, teachers and pupils are skilled at hiding true expressions, reactions, thoughts and feelings which would therefore be concealed from the researcher