Deck 14: Nonreactive Qualitative Research

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Question
Why is equivalence of crucial importance in historical research? Which feature of quantitative research does the problem of equivalence most closely resemble? What specific types of equivalence should be of utmost concern to the historical researcher? How are potential problems with equivalence dealt with?
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Question
Outline,in chronological order,each of the six steps in a historical research project.
Question
Describe five features that are specific and unique to historical research.
Question
Which of the following is a characteristic of a distinct historical research method?

A)It focuses on the macro-level only and excludes the micro-level.
B)It tests hypotheses about precisely operationalized variables.
C)It uses a deductive approach.
D)It sees causality as contingent and uses combinational explanation.
E)None of the above.
Question
Historical research helps a researcher identify aspects of social life that are

A)specific to a particular point in time.
B)general across time or units.
C)hidden within a particular context.
D)narrowly defined within a particular historical context.
E)empirically specific to one unit of analysis.
Question
Professor Regina Aniger is in an archive,gathering evidence on a group of elite male politicians and governors in the 1770s for a book she is writing on how political conflict shaped the West.She discovers that all the existing evidence and documents about them ignore the roles of commoners.What does this missing information refer to?

A)Equivalence
B)Primary data
C)Synthesis
D)Missing cases
E)Silences
Question
Which of the following statements is FALSE about historical research?

A)Historical researchers are flexible and adjust their initial concepts.They question or focus based on what they find in the evidence.
B)Historical researchers attempt to control bias that may arise from a point of view or perspective.They are totally neutral and objective.
C)Historical researchers often use “grounded theory.”
D)Historical researchers focus on sequence and process.They tend to see social reality as constructed over time.
E)Historical researchers “translate”another culture or time period into terms that a reader can understand.
Question
What types of historical evidence do historical researchers draw upon? Who would have produced this evidence?
Question
Describe five specific similarities between historical research and field studies.Be certain to emphasize how both approaches are firmly grounded in the interpretive approach in social science research.
Question
In relation to primary sources,what two criteria does a historical researcher use in order to evaluate documents and other sources? Briefly describe this evaluation process and the kinds of issues that each mode of evaluation is concerned with.
Question
Describe the main feature that quantitative content analysis and qualitative content analysis have in common with each other.What are the key differences between quantitative content analysis and qualitative analysis?
Question
Students often use the labels "qualitative content analysis" and "discourse analysis" interchangeably,but they pertain to distinct practices.What is discourse analysis and what makes it unique?
Question
Which one of the following features is common to both historical research and field research?

A)Historical approaches and field research try to discover universal laws about human social behaviour.
B)Both perspectives share the view that people construct meaning within structures.
C)Both approaches attempt to link the macro to micro levels of analysis of social reality.
D)Both perspectives assume that social forces shape individual behaviour.
E)Historical approaches and field research both remove the researcher’s perspective from the research process.
Question
What are some problems that the historical researcher confronts when dealing with narrative history (accounts of the past written by historians)?
Question
Which the following,according to positivists,is a weakness of historical research?

A)It helps researchers examine aspects of social life that are general across units.
B)It raises new questions and stimulates theory.
C)It exposes weaknesses in research design.
D)It is often based on a small number of cases.
E)It helps researchers develop concepts that are not specific to one culture or historical period.
Question
Which of the following research questions is directly applicable to historical research?

A)How do recent changes in big cities like London,Toronto,New York,and Tokyo reveal the rise of a new urban global system?
B)What was it like to live in a hamlet in a remote region of the Yukon during the Gold Rush days?
C)What is the causal relationship between gender and occupational earnings?
D)How do residents feel about recent episodes of vandalism in their neighbourhood?
E)How do members of the Amish community in the Kitchener-Waterloo region engage in helping behaviour?
Question
What are three different approaches a researcher can use when undertaking content analysis? Describe each one.
Question
Which approach to qualitative content analysis identified by Hsiu-Fang and Shannon (2005)most closely resembles quantitative content analysis?

A)Conventional
B)Statistical
C)Inductive
D)Summative
E)Directed
Question
In culture A,teachers' primary role is to provide intellectual training for a fee.In culture B,teachers are community members who provide informal instruction to young persons,especially with regards to moral matters.However,when writing a book on teachers,Emit Elliot claims teachers in culture B perform the same function as teachers in culture A.What mistake is Emit making?

A)Mistake of contextual generalizability
B)Mistake of conceptual generalizability
C)Mistake of historical compatibility
D)Mistake of contextual equivalence
E)Mistake of conceptual equivalence
Question
What are the main emphases of historical research? What sorts of research questions does it address? What types of research is it most appropriate for?
Question
Which of the following statements best describes the fundamental premises of oral history?

A)Oral history consists of the events,beliefs,or feelings in the past that were directly experienced.
B)Oral history is a type of writing about a historical setting in which the writer attempts to “tell a story”by following chronological order,describing particular people and events,and focusing on many colourful details.
C)Oral history precisely measures and operationalizes variables.
D)Oral history is information about events or settings that is documented or written later by historians or others who did not directly participate in the events or setting.
E)Oral history consists of files,records,or documents that are maintained in a relatively consistent manner over a period of time.
Question
________ means evaluating the authenticity of a document to be certain that it is not a fake or a forgery.

A)Back translation
B)Narrative history
C)Internal criticism
D)External criticism
E)Equivalence
Question
At what stage are codes developed in research that employs conventional content analysis?

A)Before the project begins
B)Literature review
C)Data collection
D)Data analysis
E)Once others are informed
Question
Graduate student Fanny Farquarson's thesis involves qualitative content analysis of self-help literature for men in unhappy marriages.Before commencing with analysis,Fanny reviews existing theory on gender and marriage and uses it to develop coding categories.Which approach to qualitative content analysis identified by Hsiu-Fang and Shannon (2005)is Fanny using?

A)Directed
B)Summative
C)Conventional
D)Inductive
E)Deductive
Question
Terry Timmons likes historical research that presents the past in a neat,tidy way.When writing up his own historical research,Terry weaves his findings about historical events and settings into coherent wholes and includes as many interesting and colourful details as possible.Which sort of historical writing does Terry produce?

A)Discursive history
B)Contingent history
C)Recollected history
D)Oral history
E)Narrative history
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of the steps in historical research projects?

A)Locating evidence
B)Compressing data
C)Organizing evidence
D)Synthesizing
E)Writing a report
Question
In social scientific research,__________ refers to a discipline that studies the past,while __________ is the method of doing historical research.

A)history;historiography
B)historiography;history
C)sociology;narrative history
D)sociology;historiography
E)history;narrative history
Question
Which of the following statements best describes the difference between qualitative content analysis and quantitative content analysis?

A)In qualitative approaches to content analysis,manifest content is usually the focus,while in quantitative approaches attention shifts to revealing implied meanings and motives.
B)Quantitative content analysts use segments of text to identify instances of a code,while qualitative content analysts are more likely to examine entire texts at once for their meaning.
C)Quantitative content analysis organizes and links general themes into a coherent theory about social life,while in qualitative content analysis the goal is to identify general themes that run through the different texts.
D)Qualitative content analysis often finds patterns by using sophisticated statistical techniques,while in quantitative content analysis patterns and linkages are discovered through the coding process.
E)Quantitative content analysis is presented through the use of statistical tables,while qualitative content analysis provides evidence in the form of graphs and summarized statistics.
Question
Which of the following statements is an example of evaluating a letter by General Peabody written in 1900 using the technique of "internal criticism"?

A)Checking that a letter was not actually written in 1864
B)Checking to be sure that general’s wife was not the letter’s author
C)Checking that the general witnessed events referred to in the letter and that the meanings within the letter are consistent
D)Asking why the letter survived to the present
E)Researching the type of paper on which the letter was written
Question
A great deal of primary historical data is located in archives.Which of the following statements is correct about doing archival research?

A)Virtually all archival materials are now stored electronically,so scanning through large amounts of material online is very easy.
B)Most archives are located in one or two large cities,so even if one needs to visit an archive,it is easy to find one.Most are open 7 days a week,12 hours a day.
C)Archival materials are usually very well-organized and sorted.All material is clearly labelled and categorized for easy searching.
D)Archival research is often painstakingly slow.Often there are gaps or holes in a series of papers or destroyed documents,but reading new material can reveal new ideas or connections.
E)Common events and individual persons are easy to track in archival material.All materials are in one location,and everything related to a person or event of interest will be clearly connected and include everything of relevance.
Question
Key elements of the narrative form include conjuncture,symbolized as __________.

A)if X,then Y
B)if not X,then not Y
C)if X,then not Y
D)if not X,then Y
E)None of the above
Question
Primary historical evidence on racism in British Columbia in the early 1900s would potentially include which of the following items?

A)An article written in 1972 titled “White Canada Forever”
B)A Vancouver police department report found in the back of an old filing cabinet detailing police raids on Japanese Canadian businesses conducted in 1928
C)A magazine article in last month’s Maclean’s magazine comparing recent attempts to change immigration laws with the Chinese Canadian Head Tax years
D)Signed documents by mining company owners on illegal labour practices against Japanese Canadians
E)B and D only
Question
In conventional qualitative content analysis,the coding process begins

A)with keywords.
B)with theory.
C)with selecting only the latent codes.
D)prior to data analysis.
E)with observation.
Question
A specific type of qualitative analysis of texts that focuses on how knowledge and meaning are created through the use of language is

A)summative content analysis.
B)directed content analysis.
C)discourse analysis.
D)conventional content analysis.
E)quantitative content analysis.
Question
Professor Randy Rudiment conducted a study of First Nations in Ontario between 1880 and 1920.He interviewed elderly Aboriginals about what they remembered about their childhood and the stories told to them by their parents and grandparents.His data is an example of

A)running records.
B)recollections.
C)supporting evidence.
D)nonsource-based knowledge.
E)primary sources.
Question
Which of the following is NOT one of the general steps taken in performing a critical discourse analysis?

A)Discuss your emerging themes with colleagues.
B)Keep notes around any themes you see emerging.
C)Move from a general research question into a more narrowly defined topic area.
D)Read your data numerous times to familiarize yourself with its content.
E)Identify the data you wish to study (i.e.,the form of your text)and collect that data.
Question
You read a book called British Columbia at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.While reading it you notice that the author discusses only the lives and ideas of five individuals based upon their diaries.The author avoids making any sort of generalizations or integrating some possible themes.What problem with secondary sources is illustrated with this example?

A)Historians often use vague concepts with inconsistent definitions to organize the primary sources they read.
B)Historians select a tiny fraction of the mass of information they read,but the selection process is largely unseen and unknown.
C)Historians often have to rely recollections that are distorted by the imperfections of memory.
D)Historians,especially those who write in a narrative form,separate out significant from trivial information,but rarely make their social theories explicit.
E)Historians are influenced by various “schools”of historiography.
Question
Which social theorist is most closely associated with critical discourse analysis?

A)Max Weber
B)Michel Foucault
C)Rutherford
D)Emile Durkheim
E)Karl Marx
Question
Professor Freeze Iceberg visited the national historical library and also the archives at Revenue Canada.He looked up the tax records paid each year by the 20 largest companies in Canada between 1950 and the present.This type of data is best classified as

A)running records.
B)recollections.
C)secondary sources.
D)primary sources.
E)supporting evidence.
Question
Which of the following is not one of the four types of historical evidence or data?

A)Running records
B)Primary data
C)Narrative history
D)Secondary sources
E)Recollections
Question
Define the following:running records
Question
Define the following:equivalence
Question
Define the following:contextual equivalence
Question
Define the following:historiography
Question
Define the following:history
Question
Define the following:archives
Question
Define the following:external criticism
Question
Define the following:oral history
Question
Define the following:narrative history
Question
Define the following:recollections
Question
Define the following:internal criticism
Question
Summative content analysis begins with __________.Directed content analysis begins with __________.Conventional content analysis begins with __________.

A)theory;theory;data
B)data;theory;data
C)data;keywords;theory
D)theory;data;keywords
E)keywords;theory;data
Question
Define the following:directed content analysis
Question
Define the following:conceptual equivalence
Question
Define the following:post facto explanations
Question
Define the following:discourse analysis
Question
Define the following:primary sources
Question
Define the following:critical discourse analysis
Question
Define the following:qualitative content analysis
Question
Define the following:conventional content analysis
Question
Define the following:secondary sources
Question
<a name="_GoBack"></a>Define the following:summative content analysis
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Deck 14: Nonreactive Qualitative Research
1
Why is equivalence of crucial importance in historical research? Which feature of quantitative research does the problem of equivalence most closely resemble? What specific types of equivalence should be of utmost concern to the historical researcher? How are potential problems with equivalence dealt with?
Not answer
2
Outline,in chronological order,each of the six steps in a historical research project.
Not answer
3
Describe five features that are specific and unique to historical research.
Not answer
4
Which of the following is a characteristic of a distinct historical research method?

A)It focuses on the macro-level only and excludes the micro-level.
B)It tests hypotheses about precisely operationalized variables.
C)It uses a deductive approach.
D)It sees causality as contingent and uses combinational explanation.
E)None of the above.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Historical research helps a researcher identify aspects of social life that are

A)specific to a particular point in time.
B)general across time or units.
C)hidden within a particular context.
D)narrowly defined within a particular historical context.
E)empirically specific to one unit of analysis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Professor Regina Aniger is in an archive,gathering evidence on a group of elite male politicians and governors in the 1770s for a book she is writing on how political conflict shaped the West.She discovers that all the existing evidence and documents about them ignore the roles of commoners.What does this missing information refer to?

A)Equivalence
B)Primary data
C)Synthesis
D)Missing cases
E)Silences
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following statements is FALSE about historical research?

A)Historical researchers are flexible and adjust their initial concepts.They question or focus based on what they find in the evidence.
B)Historical researchers attempt to control bias that may arise from a point of view or perspective.They are totally neutral and objective.
C)Historical researchers often use “grounded theory.”
D)Historical researchers focus on sequence and process.They tend to see social reality as constructed over time.
E)Historical researchers “translate”another culture or time period into terms that a reader can understand.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
What types of historical evidence do historical researchers draw upon? Who would have produced this evidence?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Describe five specific similarities between historical research and field studies.Be certain to emphasize how both approaches are firmly grounded in the interpretive approach in social science research.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
In relation to primary sources,what two criteria does a historical researcher use in order to evaluate documents and other sources? Briefly describe this evaluation process and the kinds of issues that each mode of evaluation is concerned with.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Describe the main feature that quantitative content analysis and qualitative content analysis have in common with each other.What are the key differences between quantitative content analysis and qualitative analysis?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Students often use the labels "qualitative content analysis" and "discourse analysis" interchangeably,but they pertain to distinct practices.What is discourse analysis and what makes it unique?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Which one of the following features is common to both historical research and field research?

A)Historical approaches and field research try to discover universal laws about human social behaviour.
B)Both perspectives share the view that people construct meaning within structures.
C)Both approaches attempt to link the macro to micro levels of analysis of social reality.
D)Both perspectives assume that social forces shape individual behaviour.
E)Historical approaches and field research both remove the researcher’s perspective from the research process.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What are some problems that the historical researcher confronts when dealing with narrative history (accounts of the past written by historians)?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which the following,according to positivists,is a weakness of historical research?

A)It helps researchers examine aspects of social life that are general across units.
B)It raises new questions and stimulates theory.
C)It exposes weaknesses in research design.
D)It is often based on a small number of cases.
E)It helps researchers develop concepts that are not specific to one culture or historical period.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Which of the following research questions is directly applicable to historical research?

A)How do recent changes in big cities like London,Toronto,New York,and Tokyo reveal the rise of a new urban global system?
B)What was it like to live in a hamlet in a remote region of the Yukon during the Gold Rush days?
C)What is the causal relationship between gender and occupational earnings?
D)How do residents feel about recent episodes of vandalism in their neighbourhood?
E)How do members of the Amish community in the Kitchener-Waterloo region engage in helping behaviour?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
What are three different approaches a researcher can use when undertaking content analysis? Describe each one.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Which approach to qualitative content analysis identified by Hsiu-Fang and Shannon (2005)most closely resembles quantitative content analysis?

A)Conventional
B)Statistical
C)Inductive
D)Summative
E)Directed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
In culture A,teachers' primary role is to provide intellectual training for a fee.In culture B,teachers are community members who provide informal instruction to young persons,especially with regards to moral matters.However,when writing a book on teachers,Emit Elliot claims teachers in culture B perform the same function as teachers in culture A.What mistake is Emit making?

A)Mistake of contextual generalizability
B)Mistake of conceptual generalizability
C)Mistake of historical compatibility
D)Mistake of contextual equivalence
E)Mistake of conceptual equivalence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
What are the main emphases of historical research? What sorts of research questions does it address? What types of research is it most appropriate for?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which of the following statements best describes the fundamental premises of oral history?

A)Oral history consists of the events,beliefs,or feelings in the past that were directly experienced.
B)Oral history is a type of writing about a historical setting in which the writer attempts to “tell a story”by following chronological order,describing particular people and events,and focusing on many colourful details.
C)Oral history precisely measures and operationalizes variables.
D)Oral history is information about events or settings that is documented or written later by historians or others who did not directly participate in the events or setting.
E)Oral history consists of files,records,or documents that are maintained in a relatively consistent manner over a period of time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
________ means evaluating the authenticity of a document to be certain that it is not a fake or a forgery.

A)Back translation
B)Narrative history
C)Internal criticism
D)External criticism
E)Equivalence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
At what stage are codes developed in research that employs conventional content analysis?

A)Before the project begins
B)Literature review
C)Data collection
D)Data analysis
E)Once others are informed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Graduate student Fanny Farquarson's thesis involves qualitative content analysis of self-help literature for men in unhappy marriages.Before commencing with analysis,Fanny reviews existing theory on gender and marriage and uses it to develop coding categories.Which approach to qualitative content analysis identified by Hsiu-Fang and Shannon (2005)is Fanny using?

A)Directed
B)Summative
C)Conventional
D)Inductive
E)Deductive
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Terry Timmons likes historical research that presents the past in a neat,tidy way.When writing up his own historical research,Terry weaves his findings about historical events and settings into coherent wholes and includes as many interesting and colourful details as possible.Which sort of historical writing does Terry produce?

A)Discursive history
B)Contingent history
C)Recollected history
D)Oral history
E)Narrative history
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
Which of the following is NOT one of the steps in historical research projects?

A)Locating evidence
B)Compressing data
C)Organizing evidence
D)Synthesizing
E)Writing a report
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In social scientific research,__________ refers to a discipline that studies the past,while __________ is the method of doing historical research.

A)history;historiography
B)historiography;history
C)sociology;narrative history
D)sociology;historiography
E)history;narrative history
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Which of the following statements best describes the difference between qualitative content analysis and quantitative content analysis?

A)In qualitative approaches to content analysis,manifest content is usually the focus,while in quantitative approaches attention shifts to revealing implied meanings and motives.
B)Quantitative content analysts use segments of text to identify instances of a code,while qualitative content analysts are more likely to examine entire texts at once for their meaning.
C)Quantitative content analysis organizes and links general themes into a coherent theory about social life,while in qualitative content analysis the goal is to identify general themes that run through the different texts.
D)Qualitative content analysis often finds patterns by using sophisticated statistical techniques,while in quantitative content analysis patterns and linkages are discovered through the coding process.
E)Quantitative content analysis is presented through the use of statistical tables,while qualitative content analysis provides evidence in the form of graphs and summarized statistics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Which of the following statements is an example of evaluating a letter by General Peabody written in 1900 using the technique of "internal criticism"?

A)Checking that a letter was not actually written in 1864
B)Checking to be sure that general’s wife was not the letter’s author
C)Checking that the general witnessed events referred to in the letter and that the meanings within the letter are consistent
D)Asking why the letter survived to the present
E)Researching the type of paper on which the letter was written
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
A great deal of primary historical data is located in archives.Which of the following statements is correct about doing archival research?

A)Virtually all archival materials are now stored electronically,so scanning through large amounts of material online is very easy.
B)Most archives are located in one or two large cities,so even if one needs to visit an archive,it is easy to find one.Most are open 7 days a week,12 hours a day.
C)Archival materials are usually very well-organized and sorted.All material is clearly labelled and categorized for easy searching.
D)Archival research is often painstakingly slow.Often there are gaps or holes in a series of papers or destroyed documents,but reading new material can reveal new ideas or connections.
E)Common events and individual persons are easy to track in archival material.All materials are in one location,and everything related to a person or event of interest will be clearly connected and include everything of relevance.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Key elements of the narrative form include conjuncture,symbolized as __________.

A)if X,then Y
B)if not X,then not Y
C)if X,then not Y
D)if not X,then Y
E)None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Primary historical evidence on racism in British Columbia in the early 1900s would potentially include which of the following items?

A)An article written in 1972 titled “White Canada Forever”
B)A Vancouver police department report found in the back of an old filing cabinet detailing police raids on Japanese Canadian businesses conducted in 1928
C)A magazine article in last month’s Maclean’s magazine comparing recent attempts to change immigration laws with the Chinese Canadian Head Tax years
D)Signed documents by mining company owners on illegal labour practices against Japanese Canadians
E)B and D only
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In conventional qualitative content analysis,the coding process begins

A)with keywords.
B)with theory.
C)with selecting only the latent codes.
D)prior to data analysis.
E)with observation.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
A specific type of qualitative analysis of texts that focuses on how knowledge and meaning are created through the use of language is

A)summative content analysis.
B)directed content analysis.
C)discourse analysis.
D)conventional content analysis.
E)quantitative content analysis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Professor Randy Rudiment conducted a study of First Nations in Ontario between 1880 and 1920.He interviewed elderly Aboriginals about what they remembered about their childhood and the stories told to them by their parents and grandparents.His data is an example of

A)running records.
B)recollections.
C)supporting evidence.
D)nonsource-based knowledge.
E)primary sources.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Which of the following is NOT one of the general steps taken in performing a critical discourse analysis?

A)Discuss your emerging themes with colleagues.
B)Keep notes around any themes you see emerging.
C)Move from a general research question into a more narrowly defined topic area.
D)Read your data numerous times to familiarize yourself with its content.
E)Identify the data you wish to study (i.e.,the form of your text)and collect that data.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
You read a book called British Columbia at the Turn of the Twentieth Century.While reading it you notice that the author discusses only the lives and ideas of five individuals based upon their diaries.The author avoids making any sort of generalizations or integrating some possible themes.What problem with secondary sources is illustrated with this example?

A)Historians often use vague concepts with inconsistent definitions to organize the primary sources they read.
B)Historians select a tiny fraction of the mass of information they read,but the selection process is largely unseen and unknown.
C)Historians often have to rely recollections that are distorted by the imperfections of memory.
D)Historians,especially those who write in a narrative form,separate out significant from trivial information,but rarely make their social theories explicit.
E)Historians are influenced by various “schools”of historiography.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Which social theorist is most closely associated with critical discourse analysis?

A)Max Weber
B)Michel Foucault
C)Rutherford
D)Emile Durkheim
E)Karl Marx
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 62 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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39
Professor Freeze Iceberg visited the national historical library and also the archives at Revenue Canada.He looked up the tax records paid each year by the 20 largest companies in Canada between 1950 and the present.This type of data is best classified as

A)running records.
B)recollections.
C)secondary sources.
D)primary sources.
E)supporting evidence.
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40
Which of the following is not one of the four types of historical evidence or data?

A)Running records
B)Primary data
C)Narrative history
D)Secondary sources
E)Recollections
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41
Define the following:running records
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42
Define the following:equivalence
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43
Define the following:contextual equivalence
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44
Define the following:historiography
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45
Define the following:history
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46
Define the following:archives
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47
Define the following:external criticism
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48
Define the following:oral history
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49
Define the following:narrative history
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50
Define the following:recollections
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51
Define the following:internal criticism
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52
Summative content analysis begins with __________.Directed content analysis begins with __________.Conventional content analysis begins with __________.

A)theory;theory;data
B)data;theory;data
C)data;keywords;theory
D)theory;data;keywords
E)keywords;theory;data
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53
Define the following:directed content analysis
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54
Define the following:conceptual equivalence
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55
Define the following:post facto explanations
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56
Define the following:discourse analysis
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57
Define the following:primary sources
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58
Define the following:critical discourse analysis
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59
Define the following:qualitative content analysis
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60
Define the following:conventional content analysis
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61
Define the following:secondary sources
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62
<a name="_GoBack"></a>Define the following:summative content analysis
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