Observations

    Cards (18)

    • Participant: observer has direct contact with the group of people they are observing. The researcher becomes a member of the group they are researching 
    • Participant Advantages:
      as the researcher can experience the situation participants are going through, it gives them an increased insight to the experience -> increased validity of the findings
    • Participant Disadvantages(2):
      The researcher may come to identify too strong with those in the study, which may cause them to lose objectivity
      The line between being a researcher and a participant becomes blurred 
    • Natural: spontaneous behaviour is recorded in a natural setting
    • Natural Advantages:
      high external validity, as findings can be generalised to everyday life -> behaviour is studied within the environment where it would usually occurred 
    • Natural Disadvantages:
      Lack of control over variables, making replication difficult
    • Covert: where the researcher does not tell the participants that they are being observed until after the study is complete.
      -> this could cause ethical problems or deception and consent 
    • Covert Advantages:
      no participant reactivity because they do not know they are being observed
      all behaviour observed is natural -> increases the validity of the data
    • Covert Disadvantages:
      Not ethical, as participants do not know they are being watched
    • Non- participant: researcher does not have direct contact with people being served. The observation of participants' behaviour is from a distance
    • Non-Participant Advantages:
      allows researcher to maintain an objectivity psychological distance from their participants, so less danger of them going "native"
    • Non-Participant Disadvantages:
      Researchers may lose valuable insight in a participant observation as they are too far removed from the people and behaviour
    • Controlled: behaviour is observed under controlled lab conditions
    • Controlled Advantages:
      no extraneous variables, so replication is easy
    • Controlled Disadvantages:
      May produce findings that cannot be applied to real life settings
    • Overt: where a researcher tell the participants that they are being observed and what they are being observed for 
    • Overt Advantages:
      Is ethical because participants have agreed to be observed 
    • Overt Disadvantages:
      May produce findings that are not accurate, demand characteristics
    See similar decks