首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Building on the base of evidence and interpretation in Hansen’s (1994) qualitative study of working people’s diaries, we assigne
Building on the base of evidence and interpretation in Hansen’s (1994) qualitative study of working people’s diaries, we assigne
admin
2013-01-15
49
问题
Building on the base of evidence and interpretation in Hansen’s (1994) qualitative study of working people’s diaries, we assigned each diarist a set of codes to indicate employment, marital status, number of children, and size of the town in which he or she lived. To analyze the number, location and gender mix of visiting occasions, we coded each day in January and July for every year of the diary, counting the number of named visitors, the visitors’ gender, the size of the visiting occasion (1 to 4 people, or 5 and above), the gender mix of those present during the visit, and the location of the visit. While this may seem straightforward at first glance, the variable nature of the diary entries meant that the coding process was not as uncomplicated as we initially anticipated.
Given the number of diarists and the span of diary-keeping years, we faced the possibility of coding over 200,000 diary days. Because of the labor-intensive nature of the coding and the number of entries, we chose to code only 2 months——January and July——of each year a diarist kept a diary. We chose 2 months that could reflect a range of sociability. Severe January weather in New England impeded mobility, but it also freed those who were farmers from most of their labor——intensive chores. July tended to be haying season for farmers, which meant some people routinely worked all month in the fields——some alone, some with hired help. Further, the clement July weather meant grater mobility for all of the diary keepers. For some people——those who kept a diary for only a single year——the fact that we coded only 2 months out of each year meant we have only 62 "diary-days" to document their social lives. For others, we have several thousand. Limiting ourselves to January and July for each diary year, we nonetheless coded entries for a total of 24,752 diary days. In an effort to capture an accurate picture of visiting patterns, we coded every day of a given month, even those that had no entry or that mentioned only the weather, as well as those that recorded numerous visiting occasions in one day.
Determining a working definition of what constituted a visit was also an unexpected challenge. For example, although schoolteacher Mary Mudge kept a meticulous record of her visiting "rounds," listing names, places, and conversation topics, other diarists were not as forthcoming. A typical entry in farmer John Campbell’s diary (9 July, 1825) was less amenable to our initial coding scheme: "Go to Cart’s for Oxen." (See Hansen and Mcdonald, 1995, for a fuller discussion of the pitfalls of coding diary data.) We therefore created the following coding protocol.
We defined a visit as any occasion in which the diarist names the presence of individuals not of his or her household, the presence of the non-household member serving to distinguish between a community interaction and a household interaction. We also coded as visits public events at which the diarist was present but others in attendance were not named. The most common among these were records of church attendance. Although an entry "went to church" did not result in a finding of specific male or female visitors, it was a community interaction; thus, these entries were coded as gender-mixed visiting occasions of five or more people in a public place. Because of the variable nature of diary-keeping practices, we were careful to record only what we could confidently infer. Therefore, some entries record visits but no named individuals. Others, such as church attendance (which is generally a large-group event) or a visit to one named friend (which is an intimate affair), allowed ns to code the size of the group. Still others, when the location of the visit was specifically mentioned, allowed us to code the diarist as hosting, acting as a guest in another’s home, or interaction at a public place.
One weakness of this study may be ______.
选项
A、h overestimates the level of sociability in the diarists’ lives
B、It underestimates the level of sociability in the diarists’ lives
C、It misinterprets the level of sociability in the diarists’ lives
D、It underrates the level of sociability in the diarists’ lives
答案
B
解析
因为并不是每个人都会每天写日记,所以这项研究的不足之处是会低估社交活动水平。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/mZ8YFFFM
0
考博英语
相关试题推荐
Forreasonsyettobefullyunderstood,oneoutoftenhumanbeingsintheworldisleft-handed,andfromonegenerationtothe
Evenplantscanrunafever,especiallywhenthey’reunderattackbyinsectsordisease.Butunlikehumans,plantscanhavethei
Hedidnotrelishappealingamongsthisfriendsand______oftheircriticismorcensure.
Thereare______differencesbetweentheoryandpractice.
Inrecentyears,Israeliconsumershavegrownmoredemandingasthey’vebecomewealthierandmoreworldly-wise.Foreigntraveli
Thestudyofsocialscienceismorethanthestudyoftheindividualsocialsciences.Althoughitistreethattobeagoodsoci
Althoughpunctualhimself,Dr.Smithwasquiteused______latefortheappointments.
Practicallyspeaking,theartistematuringofthecinemawasthesingle-handedachievementofDavidW.Griffith(1875~1948).Bef
He____veryquicklyafterhisillness.
Proponentsofcreatinglargeprivatesectorsasquicklyaspossibleintransitioneconomiesofferbothpoliticalandeconomicar
随机试题
评估复核
乳腺癌淋巴道转移可累及:
帕金森病亨延顿病可出现
男性,26岁,5d来鼻及牙龈出血,皮肤淤斑,血红蛋白55g,白细胞10.0×109/L,血小板16×109/L。骨髓增生活跃,幼稚细胞占80%,胞质有大小不等颗粒及成堆棒状小体,过氧化酶染色强阳性。本患者临床容易出现
A、辨证论治B、对症治疗C、异病同治D、同病异治E、辨病论治同种疾病,若其表现的证不同,则治法应采用
药品安全是重大的
电缆管的内径与电缆外径之比不得小于()。
对于已经生效的合同,如发现合同条款空缺,致使合同难以履行,则对于合同有关内容的确定方法,下列表述中正确的是( )。
作为未来银行最具发展潜力和专业化服务代表的理财业务,其发展、成熟更加离不开客户关系管理。客户关系管理对理财业务发展的意义有()。
在信号检测实验中,如果击中概率为0.80,虚报概率为0.20,则该实验中的β值为
最新回复
(
0
)