4 Ethnography and KM and Indigenous Research

Descripción

Ethnography
Ryan Bentham
Test por Ryan Bentham, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Ryan Bentham
Creado por Ryan Bentham hace más de 6 años
22
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Resumen del Recurso

Pregunta 1

Pregunta
[blank_start]Ethnography[blank_end] is the scientific description of peoples and cultures with their customs, habits, and mutual differences.
Respuesta
  • Ethnography

Pregunta 2

Pregunta
Ethnography is traditionally a
Respuesta
  • qualitative approach
  • quantitative approach
  • combined qualitative and quantitative approach

Pregunta 3

Pregunta
Ethnography is... A [blank_start]qualitative[blank_end] research [blank_start]process and method[blank_end]: A person [blank_start]conducts[blank_end] an ethnography. A qualitative research [blank_start]product[blank_end]: The [blank_start]outcome[blank_end] of the process is an ethnography. The aim of ethnography is [blank_start]cultural interpretation[blank_end]. Ethnography's roots are in [blank_start]anthropology[blank_end].
Respuesta
  • product
  • qualitative
  • quantitative
  • process and method
  • cultural interpretation
  • anthropology
  • outcome
  • conducts

Pregunta 4

Pregunta
The aim of ethnography is cultural interpretation.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 5

Pregunta
Ethnography is not a qualitative research product
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 6

Pregunta
Ethnography is a qualitative research product and method
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 7

Pregunta
A focus group is a good substitute for conducting an ethnography.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 8

Pregunta
Ethnography is not limited to using qualitative methods with some ethnographers using quantitative methods.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 9

Pregunta
A census is an example of a ethnographic study using quantitative methods
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 10

Pregunta
An ethnographic study should use the [blank_start]methods[blank_end] that create the most [blank_start]holistic[blank_end] understanding of the [blank_start]cultural[blank_end] system or group being studied. Ethnographers' methods [blank_start]choices[blank_end] are aligned to their [blank_start]ontological and epistemological[blank_end] viewpoints. An [blank_start]effective[blank_end] ethnographer is a [blank_start]bricoleur[blank_end] a jack of all trades.
Respuesta
  • methods
  • holistic
  • simplistic
  • cultural
  • choices
  • ontological and epistemological
  • effective
  • bricoleur

Pregunta 11

Pregunta
Classical ethnographic data collection methods include
Respuesta
  • Fieldwork and living in the host community
  • Observing activities of interest
  • Participant observations
  • Recording field notes and observations
  • Interviewing
  • Physical mapping of the site
  • Photography
  • Ethno-semantics
  • Focus group interviews
  • Rapid ethnographic assessments

Pregunta 12

Pregunta
Non-classical ethnographic methods include
Respuesta
  • Rapid ethnographic assessments
  • Focus group interviews
  • Computer-assisted technology e.g. GIS for mapping
  • Ethno-semantics
  • Fieldwork and living in the host communities
  • Photography
  • Conducting household censuses and genealogies
  • Interviewing
  • Recording field notes and observations
  • Observing activities of interest

Pregunta 13

Pregunta
A central tenet of ethnography is that people's behaviour can not be understood in context.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 14

Pregunta
A central tenet of [blank_start]ethnography[blank_end] is that people's behaviour [blank_start]can only[blank_end] be understood in context. The ethnographer is interested in the [blank_start]socio-cultural[blank_end] contexts and processes in which people live their lives as well as the meaning systems that motivate them. People and their actions, behaviours and beliefs are examined within the cultural and [blank_start]societal[blank_end] context in which they take place. The focus is not on separate [blank_start]behavioural[blank_end] acts but on how behavioural processes are linked.
Respuesta
  • ethnography
  • social construction
  • discourses
  • can only
  • can not
  • socio-cultural
  • politico-legal
  • societal
  • legal
  • behavioural
  • cognitive

Pregunta 15

Pregunta
A central [blank_start]tenet[blank_end] of ethnography is that people's [blank_start]behaviour[blank_end] can only be understood in [blank_start]context[blank_end]. The ethnographer is interested in the [blank_start]socio-cultural[blank_end] contexts and processes in which people live their [blank_start]lives[blank_end] as well as the [blank_start]meaning[blank_end] systems that motivate them. People and their actions, behaviours and [blank_start]beliefs[blank_end] are examined within the [blank_start]cultural[blank_end] and societal context in which they take place. The focus is not on [blank_start]separate[blank_end] behavioural acts but on how behavioural processes are [blank_start]linked[blank_end].
Respuesta
  • tenet
  • behaviour
  • context
  • socio-cultural
  • lives
  • meaning
  • beliefs
  • cultural
  • separate
  • linked

Pregunta 16

Pregunta
The primary aim of ethnography is to understand the socio-cultural contexts, processes and meanings of a cultural system from the perspective of the members of that system and produce a descriptive reconstruction of the host communities' own construction of their worlds.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 17

Pregunta
One of the primary aims of ethnographic research is to understand a cultural system from an outsiders perspective.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 18

Pregunta
The emic perspective is from the inside. The etic perspective is from the outside.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 19

Pregunta
The etic perspective is from the inside. The emic perspective is from the outside.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 20

Pregunta
The [blank_start]emic[blank_end] perspective is from the inside. The [blank_start]etic[blank_end] perspective is from the outside.
Respuesta
  • emic
  • etic

Pregunta 21

Pregunta
The emic perspective includes
Respuesta
  • The group's perspective or the insider perspective
  • Grasping the point of view of the whole community
  • Hypothesis, theories, interpretative frameworks from outside have no meaning to the members of the community
  • The researcher's perspective or the outsider perspective
  • Important for understanding all aspects of human behaviour e.g. dichotomies

Pregunta 22

Pregunta
The etic perspective includes
Respuesta
  • The group's perspective or the insider perspective
  • Grasping the point of view of the whole community
  • Hypothesis, theories, interpretative frameworks from outside have no meaning to the members of the community
  • The researcher's perspective or the outsider perspective
  • Important for understanding all aspects of human behaviour e.g. dichotomies

Pregunta 23

Pregunta
The etic perspective complements the etic perspective
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 24

Pregunta
The emic perspective helps provide etic validity
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 25

Pregunta
The emic perspective (think M for member) is the insider perspective while the etic perspective (think T for sTranger) is the outsider perspective.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 26

Pregunta
Ontology is about what knowledge is.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 27

Pregunta
Epistemology is about what knowledge is.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 28

Pregunta
Ethnography entails continual observations, asking questions, making inferences and continuing these processes until the questions are answered with as much emic validity as possible.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 29

Pregunta
With ethnographic research, all research findings are not interpretations but concrete fixed findings.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 30

Pregunta
[blank_start]Interpretive bias[blank_end] may come from the researcher or from the interactions between the researcher and the host community. [blank_start]Reflexivity[blank_end] is the best approach to address interpretive validity.
Respuesta
  • Interpretive bias
  • Reflexivity

Pregunta 31

Pregunta
Ethnological research is not concerned with interprative validity.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 32

Pregunta
In terms of an ethnography, reality is
Respuesta
  • constructed by the host community
  • jointly constructed
  • constructed by the researcher

Pregunta 33

Pregunta
Reality is jointly constructed by the ethnographer in conjunction with the host community.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 34

Pregunta
Ethnography can help to Reveal [blank_start]unique insights[blank_end] about a culture. Provide a vehicle to conduct [blank_start]collaborative and participatory[blank_end] research. Help [blank_start]bridge the gap[blank_end] between research and practice. Promote the [blank_start]welfare[blank_end] of communities and their right to [blank_start]self-determination[blank_end].
Respuesta
  • unique insights
  • collaborative and participatory
  • bridge the gap
  • welfare
  • qualitative
  • self-determination
  • self-governance
  • reliance
  • operation

Pregunta 35

Pregunta
According to Case, Todd and Kral, ethnography is a method that resonates with community psychology.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 36

Pregunta
Reciprocity is not important when conducting an ethnography.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 37

Pregunta
The core values of ethnography are not aligned with community psychology.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 38

Pregunta
Indigenous research methodologies include a [blank_start]relational[blank_end] view where the researcher interacts with the knowledge holders. Indigenous research is built on the [blank_start]strength[blank_end] of the relationships, is [blank_start]co-created, reciprocal[blank_end] and the outcomes become [blank_start]collectively held knowledge[blank_end] with the final product requiring [blank_start]community approval[blank_end]. Knowledge holders can also be known as [blank_start]co-researchers[blank_end] to show respect and trust.
Respuesta
  • relational
  • strength
  • co-created, reciprocal
  • collectively held knowledge
  • community approval
  • co-researchers
  • participants
  • epistemological

Pregunta 39

Pregunta
When conducting KM research, disrespect and misappropriation of knowledge or resources can be protected from by establishing [blank_start]a direct and long-term[blank_end] relationship. The [blank_start]more removed and distant[blank_end] a relationship is (i.e. by maintaining impartiality perhaps) the more likely to have breakages. It is possible for [blank_start]non-maori[blank_end] to conduct KM research, but there are challenges which [blank_start]can[blank_end] be overcome by [blank_start]establishing[blank_end] relationships.
Respuesta
  • a direct and long-term
  • an impartial
  • more removed and distant
  • closer
  • non-maori
  • maori
  • can
  • cannot
  • establishing
  • minimising

Pregunta 40

Pregunta
It is not possible to protect from disrespect and misappropriation of knowledge when conducting KM research.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 41

Pregunta
Non-maori cannot conduct KM research.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 42

Pregunta
[blank_start]Pakeha paralysis[blank_end] is when a researcher does not know how to work or interact with [blank_start]maori[blank_end].
Respuesta
  • Pakeha paralysis
  • maori

Pregunta 43

Pregunta
Pakeha paralysis can be overcome.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 44

Pregunta
Pakeha paralysis has positives and negatives.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 45

Pregunta
Pakeha paralysis encourages non-maori researchers to not be complacent and think about how they are interacting with maori.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 46

Pregunta
Pakeha paralysis may cause a researcher to not put forth a good idea or speak up when they should.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 47

Pregunta
Reflexivity and not overstepping boundaries is not important when conducting KM research.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 48

Pregunta
It is important to keep it real when conducting KM research, to come from a position of genuineness.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 49

Pregunta
Non-maori graduates often go back to their communities and contribute as they feel there is an obligation that must be fulfilled.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 50

Pregunta
For a non-maori conducting KM research te reo use is less important when the researcher has an established relationship.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False

Pregunta 51

Pregunta
For non-maori conducting KM research, if there is no existing relationship they do not have to be careful with their use of te reo.
Respuesta
  • True
  • False
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