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Field research

Field research, field studies, or fieldwork is the collection of raw data outside a laboratory, library, or workplace setting. The approaches and methods used in field research vary across disciplines. For example, biologists who conduct field research may simply observe animals interacting with their environments, whereas social scientists conducting field research may interview or observe people in their natural environments to learn their languages, folklore, and social structures.

This article is about the scientific method. For the military term, see fortification.

Field research involves a range of well-defined, although variable, methods: informal interviews, direct observation, participation in the life of the group, collective discussions, analyses of personal documents produced within the group, self-analysis, results from activities undertaken off- or on-line, and life-histories. Although the method generally is characterized as qualitative research, it may (and often does) include quantitative dimensions.

History[edit]

Field research has a long history. Cultural anthropologists have long used field research to study other cultures. Although the cultures do not have to be different, this has often been the case in the past with the study of so-called primitive cultures, and even in sociology the cultural differences have been ones of class. The work is done... in "'Fields' that is, circumscribed areas of study which have been the subject of social research".[1] Fields could be education, industrial settings, or Amazonian rain forests. Field research may be conducted by ethologists such as Jane Goodall. Alfred Radcliffe-Brown [1910] and Bronisław Malinowski [1922] were early anthropologists who set the models for future work.[2]

Conducting field research[edit]

The quality of results obtained from field research depends on the data gathered in the field. The data in turn, depend upon the field worker, their level of involvement, and ability to see and visualize things that other individuals visiting the area of study may fail to notice. The more open researchers are to new ideas, concepts, and things which they may not have seen in their own culture, the better will be the absorption of those ideas. Better grasping of such material means a better understanding of the forces of culture operating in the area and the ways they modify the lives of the people under study. Social scientists (i.e. anthropologists, social psychologists, etc.) have always been taught to be free from ethnocentrism (i.e. the belief in the superiority of one's own ethnic group), when conducting any type of field research.


When humans themselves are the subject of study, protocols must be devised to reduce the risk of observer bias and the acquisition of too theoretical or idealized explanations of the workings of a culture. Participant observation, data collection, and survey research are examples of field research methods, in contrast to what is often called experimental or lab research.

Interviewing[edit]

Another method of data collection is interviewing, specifically interviewing in the qualitative paradigm. Interviewing can be done in different formats, this all depends on individual researcher preferences, research purpose, and the research question asked.

Analyzing data[edit]

In qualitative research, there are many ways of analyzing data gathered in the field. One of the two most common methods of data analysis are thematic analysis and narrative analysis. As mentioned before, the type of analysis a researcher decides to use depends on the research question asked, the researcher's field, and the researcher's personal method of choice.

A biology class studying flora at a prairie, College of DuPage, United States

A biology class studying flora at a prairie, College of DuPage, United States

- ethnographer of the Yanomamö people of the Amazon

Napoleon Chagnon

- ethnographer (1772–1775) to Captain James Cook

Georg Forster

George M. Foster

Clifford Geertz

Alfred Cort Haddon

Claude Lévi-Strauss

Bronislaw Malinowski

Margaret Mead

Alfred Reginald Radcliffe-Brown

W.H.R. Rivers

Renato Rosaldo

James C. Scott

Colin Turnbull

Victor Turner

Citizen science

Empirical research

Exploration

Observational study

Participant observation

Public Health Advisor

Wildlife observation

Market research

Usability

Industrial design

Requirements analysis

Abu-Lughod, Lila (1988). "Fieldwork of a dutiful daughter". In Altorki, Soraya; Fawzi El-Solh, Camillia (eds.). . Syracuse, NY: Syracuse University Press. ISBN 0815624492.

Arab Women in the Field: studying your own society

Cohen, Nissim; Arieli, Tamar (2011). . Journal of Peace Research. 48 (4): 423–436. doi:10.1177/0022343311405698. S2CID 145328311.

"Field research in conflict environments: methodological challenges and snowball sampling"

Groh, Arnold (2018). Research Methods in Indigenous Contexts. New York, NY: Springer.  9783319727745.

ISBN

Helper, Susan (2000). "Economics and field research: you can observe a lot just by watching". American Economic Review. 90 (2): 228–32. :10.1257/aer.90.2.228. JSTOR 117226.

doi

Jarvie, I. C. (1967). "On theories of fieldwork and the scientific character of social anthropology". Philosophy of Science. 34 (3): 223–242. :10.1086/288154. S2CID 145096759.

doi

Mason, Peter.(2013). "Scientists and Scholars in the Field. Studies in the History of Fieldwork and Expeditions." Journal of the History of Collections. V. 25 (November): 428–430.

and Jeffrey A. Sluka, eds. (2012). Ethnographic Fieldwork: An Anthropological Reader. Oxford Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-470-65715-7.

Robben, Antonius C.G.M.

Rosaldo, Renato (1986). "From the door of his tent: the fieldworker and the inquisitor". In Clifford, James; Marcus, George E. (eds.). . Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520056527.

Writing Culture: the poetics and politics of ethnography

Nelson, Katie. 2019. “Doing Fieldwork: Methods in Cultural Anthropology” in Perspectives: An Open Invitation to Cultural Anthropology 2nd edition, Edited by Nina Brown, Thomas McIlwraith, and Laura Tubelle de González. Arlington: American Anthropological Association. pp. 45–69.  9781931303668

ISBN

Shinbrot, Xoco A.; Treibergs, Kira; Hernández, Lina M Arcila; Esparza, David; Ghezzi-Kopel, Kate; Goebel, Marc; Graham, Olivia J.; Heim, Ashley B.; Smith, Jansen A.; Smith, Michelle K. (2022). . BioScience. 72 (10): 1007–1017. doi:10.1093/biosci/biac070. PMC 9525126. PMID 36196223.

"The Impact of Field Courses on Undergraduate Knowledge, Affect, Behavior, and Skills: A Scoping Review"

Udry, Christopher (2003). "Fieldwork, economic theory and research on institutions in developing countries". American Economic Review. 93 (2): 107–111. :10.1257/000282803321946895.

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Media related to Field work (science) at Wikimedia Commons