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Showing 1 to 15 of 24 results Save | Export
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Collins, J. Michael – Journal of Financial Counseling and Planning, 2017
Field experiments, which are a powerful research technique, are common in some fields, but they have not been widely used in studying the effect of financial and counseling planning interventions. Financial services can benefit from the expanded use of field experiments to explore potential causal mechanisms for the effects of financial planning…
Descriptors: Field Studies, Money Management, Counseling Services, Intervention
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Tachaiyaphum, Nutthida – Waikato Journal of Education, 2022
World-wide responses to the global pandemic, such as travel restrictions, border closures and lockdowns, have posed new challenges to researchers. For qualitative researchers conducting fieldwork, gathering data in person can be inapplicable (Howlett, 2021). My research investigates English as a Foreign Language (EFL) pre-service teachers' beliefs…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Research Methodology, Educational Research
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Patton, Michael Quinn – American Journal of Evaluation, 2015
Our understanding of programs is enhanced when trained, skilled, and observant evaluators go "into the field"--the real world where programs are conducted--paying attention to what's going on, systematically documenting what they see, and reporting what they learn. The article opens by presenting and illustrating twelve reasons for…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Design Requirements, Field Studies
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Rands, Sean A. – Bioscience Education, 2011
The design of experimental ecological fieldwork is difficult to teach to classes, particularly when protocols for data collection are normally carefully controlled by the class organiser. Normally, reinforcement of the some problems of experimental design such as the avoidance of pseudoreplication and appropriate sampling techniques does not occur…
Descriptors: Research Design, Field Studies, Biology, Science Instruction
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Hays, Danica G.; Wood, Chris – Journal of Counseling & Development, 2011
Research traditions serve as a blueprint or guide for a variety of design decisions throughout qualitative inquiry. This article presents 6 qualitative research traditions: grounded theory, phenomenology, consensual qualitative research, ethnography, narratology, and participatory action research. For each tradition, the authors describe its…
Descriptors: Grounded Theory, Qualitative Research, Action Research, Ethnography
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Goussinsky, Ruhama; Reshef, Arie; Yanay-Ventura, Galit; Yassour-Borochowitz, Dalit – Qualitative Report, 2011
Qualitative research is an inherent part of the human services profession, since it emphasizes the great and multifaceted complexity characterizing human experience and the sociocultural context in which humans act. In the department of human services at Emek Yezreel College, Israel, we have developed a three-phase model to ensure a relatively…
Descriptors: Methods Courses, Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Foreign Countries
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Davis, Stephen L. – American Indian Culture and Research Journal, 2008
The conduct of fieldwork is an adventure, a voyage into the unknown. The author has several times had the opportunity to reflect on his fieldwork, which was most often conducted among remote Indigenous groups, initially in Australia and then wider afield in Thailand, the Philippines, and Africa. He is struck by the significant amount of time,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Populations, Foreign Countries, Researchers, Field Experience Programs
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Farrington, David P. – Evaluation Review, 2003
Discusses advantages of randomized experiments and key issues raised in this special issue. Focuses on growth and decrease in the use of randomized experiments by the California Youth Authority, the U.S. National Institute of Justice, and the British Home Office. Calls for increased recognition of the importance of randomized experiments. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Palmer, Ted; Petrosino, Anthony – Evaluation Review, 2003
Describes the randomized field trials conducted by the California Youth Authority in the 1960s and 1970s and discusses why such rigorous tests were used and why they eventually came to be used less often. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Shepherd, Jonathan P. – Evaluation Review, 2003
Discusses the contrast between the frequency of randomized clinical trials in the health sciences and the relative famine of such studies in criminology. Attributes this difference to the contexts in which research is done and the difference in the status of situational research in the two disciplines. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Weisburd, David – Evaluation Review, 2003
Although some argue that randomization of treatments or interventions violates accepted norms of conduct of social science research, this article makes the case that there is a moral imperative for the conduct of randomized experiments in crime and justice studies. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Ethics, Experiments, Field Studies
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Jeffrey, Bob; Troman, Geoff – British Educational Research Journal, 2004
Ethnography derives from traditional anthropology, where time in the field is needed to discern both the depth and complexity of social structures and relations. Funding bodies, seeking quick completion, might see ethnographies as unlikely to satisfy 'value for money' criteria, in spite of the rewards to be gained from time-consuming 'thick…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Educational Research, Time, Time Management
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Nuttall, Christopher – Evaluation Review, 2003
Describes the history of the random experiment in the Home Office in the United Kingdom and demonstrates that research and the conduct of research is not an altogether rational process and that fashion, personality, and politics play a role in research policy and methodology choice. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Foreign Countries
Marshall, Catherine; Lynch, Kathleen Kelley – 1985
The microcomputer offers social science field researchers a valuable tool for managing qualitative research data. In addition to the flexibility and efficiency of the microcomputer, the logic governing its programming and operation imposes a framework on the research process which necessitates that research decisions and strategies be explicit and…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Data Collection, Field Studies, Hypothesis Testing
Kwok, Percy – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2004
Based on field studies in five East Asian societies, the paper has three research agendas of portraying mass tutorial schools. The first is to depict those similarities and differences between functioning, infrastructure and popularity of East Asian tutorial schools by means of a 3-layered cultural model and six descriptive indicators. The second…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Comparative Education, Tests, Tutoring
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