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fieldnotes-script

This presentation outlines the importance and mechanics of taking fieldnotes in qualitative research, particularly during observations. It covers the types of fieldnotes, including condensed accounts, expanded accounts, fieldwork journals, and reflective memos, emphasizing the need for detailed descriptions and personal reflections. The document highlights that effective fieldnotes are essential for capturing cultural contexts and enhancing the analysis process in research.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
11 views

fieldnotes-script

This presentation outlines the importance and mechanics of taking fieldnotes in qualitative research, particularly during observations. It covers the types of fieldnotes, including condensed accounts, expanded accounts, fieldwork journals, and reflective memos, emphasizing the need for detailed descriptions and personal reflections. The document highlights that effective fieldnotes are essential for capturing cultural contexts and enhancing the analysis process in research.

Uploaded by

adreetachy997
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Fieldnotes (Pope – SP20) 1

Welcome to the presentation on fieldnotes! There are several things we will accomplish in this
brief screencast, I’ve included them as learning objectives.

Learning Objectives

By the end of this screencast, you will be able to:


• Understand what fieldnotes are
• Determine when and how to take fieldnotes
• Identify appropriate content for fieldnotes
• Distinguish between description and reflection in fieldnotes

Fieldnotes

Here is a brief overview of what fieldnotes are. Some of these concepts will be examined in
greater detail throughout the presentation.

**Fieldnotes are what Spradley calls an “ethnographic record.” What this means is that
fieldnotes are the record of your fieldwork that provides a description of the “culture” you’re
working with for your study. Fieldnotes are most often taken during observations, but a
researcher could also take fieldnotes for other research methods. For example, during an
interview or focus group to either compliment an audio recording or serve as the data set if an
interviewee or focus group member declines to be audio recorded. Flick (2019) explains that
fieldnotes taken during interviews should “contain the essentials of the interviewee’s answers
and information about the proceeding of the interview” (p. 340).

In this presentation, we will focus on fieldnotes for observations.

**In fieldnotes, the researcher attempts to make a detailed record that includes rich description
of the setting and situation they observed. Researchers attempt to write down what people do,
what people say, and the objects they use in the observed event. In fieldnotes, researchers work
to be as detailed about the context of the observation as possible.

**Bogdan & Biklen (2016) explain that the success of a study, particularly one that relies on
observations, is determined by the details and accurate information included in fieldnotes.
Fieldnotes are more than this though, their content can be much more comprehensive and
researchers can write fieldnotes or memos that track goings on throughout every stage of the
study. They explain, “Fieldnotes can provide any study with a personal log that helps the
researcher keep track of the development of the project, to visualize how the research plan has
been affected by the data collected, and to remain aware of how he or she has been influenced by
the data” (p. 116).

The Mechanics of Taking Fieldnotes

**Researchers may take fieldnotes by hand or electronically. However, if you take fieldnotes by
hand while in the field, Bogdan and Biklen (2016) recommend all researchers type their
expanded fieldnote accounts when the observation is over. Furthermore, they encourage

For teaching purposes only


Fieldnotes (Pope – SP20) 2

researchers to develop a plan for storing and organizing fieldnotes and other qualitative data
collected during a study from the outset of this project and to follow this plan to the end of the
study. Using technology in these ways allows a researcher to have a more streamlined analysis
process.

**Each time a researcher enters the field for an observation, a new set of fieldnotes should be
taken. This means that researchers don’t have one document with pages of pages of fieldnotes
from all the observations they’ve conducted throughout a study.

**At the beginning of every set of fieldnotes, researchers to write front matter that provides brief
details of where and when the observation occurred. This front matter could include the location,
time, date, set up of observation site, participants in attendance, etc.

**Finally, some researchers will draw an image of the set up of the observation site. This helps
in recall for provide details necessary in the fieldnotes. Researchers may also take pictures of the
site. Pictures are usually taken with the consent of the site organizers. They also will not
typically have participants in the pictures unless express consent has been given.

Content of Fieldnotes

According to Spradley, there are 4 types of fieldnotes.

**The first is the condensed account. This is taken while a researcher is in the field during which
time they attempt to jot down as much about the scene as possible. This includes what they see
participants do, what tools they use, and direct quotes of what they say. In the early stages of
observations, when researchers are still conducting descriptive observations, these condensed
accounts should be as comprehensive and broad as possible. These versions are an account of
what the researcher witnessed and, because it’s impossible to write down everything, often these
accounts include “phrases, single words, and unconnected sentences” (p. 69). Researchers
attempt to record key activities and phrases during these accounts.

**As soon as possible after the observation has ended and the researcher leaves the field, the
researcher “should fill in details and recall things that were not recorded on the spot” (pp. 69-70).
The expanded account is a detailed narrative of the observation, a time when the researcher uses
rich description to bring what they observed alive in writing. Think of the expanded account as
the time when the researcher writes a comprehensive story detailing the scene they witnessed.
When reading the account, researchers should feel transported back to the scene and if others
read the account they should feel as if they were there themselves. These accounts show the
researchers voice, require detailed recall, and have a touch of creative writing to them.

**It may also be helpful for researchers to keep a fieldwork journal where they can draw the
scene in front of them and keep a “record of experiences, ideas, fears, mistakes, confusions,
breakthroughs, and problems that arise during fieldwork. A journal represents the personal side
of fieldwork; it includes reactions to informants and feelings you sense from others” (p. 71).

For teaching purposes only


Fieldnotes (Pope – SP20) 3

**Finally, researchers may use fieldnotes as a form of analysis and interpretation. This type of
fieldnotes would not be attached to a particular observation (or even type of research method)
but would allow the researcher a time to take a deeper look at their data and what may be
becoming clear to them throughout the research process. Spradley describes this type of
fieldnotes as a time for “generalizations, analysis of cultural meanings, interpretations, and
insights” into what is being studied (p. 72). This type of fieldnotes may be called memos,
analysis memos, or the like and is where researchers begin the analysis process. They are often
written during data generation and allow a researcher to track their interpretations and analytical
thinking from the outset of the data collection period and into an analysis period.

Description vs. Reflection

In expanded and condensed accounts, the content of fieldnotes can be organized into two
different areas, description and reflection.

**Descriptive fieldnotes are a time where a researcher describes a scene in as much detail as
possible. Much of what was discussed earlier in this presentation would be included in the
descriptive fieldnote category. This is the majority of the content of fieldnotes and the researcher
attempts to objectively and accurately describe what they witnessed during the observation. It is
important during descriptive accounts to be clear, do not use abstract wording or phrasing, and
provide detail of what was witnessed rather than the researcher’s assessment of what was
witnessed. This aspect of fieldnotes is not a summarization, but a detailed account in
chronological order of what happened. Researchers write what people were actually doing or
saying. Researchers provide accounts of what people looked like, what the dialogue was, what
the setting looked or felt like, the activities they observed, and even their own behavior.

**As an example of appropriate detail, Bogdan and Biklen provide these two snippets from
fieldnotes: Instead of writing “The child looked a mess,” the researcher should be more specific.
What made the researcher characterize that child as a “mess?” More appropriate to fieldnotes
would be, “The child, who was seven or eight years old, wore faded, muddy dungarees with both
knees ripped. His nose was running in a half inch stream down to his mouth, and his face was
streaked clean where he had rubbed it with his wet fingers.”

**Researchers will also take reflective fieldnotes. These reflective fieldnotes are what Spradley
recommends keeping in a fieldwork journal. In reflective fieldnotes, researchers include a more
personal account of or from the observation. This type of fieldnotes can be taken during the
observation or after.

**If they’re recorded during the observation, they should be distinguished from the descriptive
account in formatting (perhaps through italization, underlining, or separation into another
paragraph with a label “reflection”). This would be a time where a researcher would provide
assessment, wonderings, or considerations of the possible meaning of what they witnessed.
Bogdan and Biklen call reflections made during the observation “observer’s comments” (p. 119).
This would be phrases, sentences, or short paragraphs during which time a researcher records
their thought process during the observation.

For teaching purposes only


Fieldnotes (Pope – SP20) 4

**If recorded after the completion of the observation, these reflective fieldnotes could be
compiled into a memo. These memos would be longer reflections and would be an opportunity
for a researcher to keep their description and their reflection separate. Researcher would think
about upcoming or current analysis, how they’ve conducted their study and if any changes are
warranted, their own behavior in the study and how that may be impacting the trajectory of the
study, ethical issues, and questions or inquiry they have to consider moving forward.

References

Fieldnotes are an integral form of data in a qualitative research project, particularly for projects
that use observations as a data generation method. Fieldnotes are descriptive, reflective, and
analytical. They are versatile, and learning to take good fieldnotes is a necessary skill in the
qualitative researcher’s arsenal.

Bogdan, R. C., & Biklen, S. K. (2016). Qualitative research for education: An introduction to
theories and methods (5th ed.). India: Pearson.

Flick, U. (2019). An introduction to qualitative research (6th ed.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE.

Spradley, J. P. (1980). Participant observation. Wadsworth, Cengage Learning.

For teaching purposes only

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