Conducting Culturally Sensitive Qualitative Research
DEVIKADIBYACHOUDHURI THE MULTICULTURAL GUIDELINES
One of the key elements of the American Psychological Association’s (APA, 2003) “Guidelines on Multicultural Education, Training, Research, Practice, and Organizational Change for Psychologists” is the notion of a cultural lens. The Multicultural Guidelines define culture as an embodiment of worldview, a complex of systems of values, beliefs, and resultant practices that shape the way individuals make meaning of the world. Using a visual metaphor, a cultural lens is then simply the field of vision that incorporates the landscape of culture. The Multicultural Guidelines invite psychologists to use a cultural lens, acknowledging the ways in which culture shapes their own lens, the multiple meanings that individuals may make about themselves and their contexts, and ways to be responsive and sensitive to such understandings of the world. Specifically, in terms of conducting research, Guideline 4 asks investigators to appreciate the importance of conducting culture-centered research and be sensitive to cultural issues regarding research focus, design, and methods. A cultural lens, by definition, is rooted in the subjective, the internal worldview view of a particular person from his or her particular location intheworld.Thissubjectivityofinternallyconstructedmeaning,asopposedtoapresumedexternallyobjectiverealitytrueforallpersonsin alltimesandcontexts,isthesociallyconstructedpositionofqualitative research.
OVERVIEW OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
The practice of qualitative inquiry covers a variety of research methods and approaches that operate from an interpretive paradigm, developing portrayals of a complex and dynamic reality (Glesne & Peshkin, 1992). Symbolic interactionism (Blumer, 1969), feminist inquiry (Olesen, 1994), grounded theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) action research, case studies, and ethnographies are examples of the plethora of approaches constituting qualitative inquiry (Bogdan & Biklen, 1992). Qualitative research strives to understand the epistemological nature of phenomena through the subjective experiences of the persons who are concerned with such phenomena. Essentially, it is the process of finding out what people think and feel impressionistically and narratively rather than quantifiably. As such, this methodology lends itself particularly well to understanding the experiences and worldviews of diverse persons. For instance, Gibson (2002) looked at the experience of African American grandmothers who were caregivers to grandchildren whose parents were not able to provide them with adequate care. This phenomenon of kinship care, culturally congruent in the African American community, needed a qualitative approach to explore a complex, sensitive, and contextually rich situation and capture the lived experience of this clinically significant group. Qualitative approaches are becoming increasingly popular as a methodology for con.
The document provides an overview of qualitative research. It defines qualitative research as collecting, analyzing, and interpreting subjective data through methods like interviews and observations. Qualitative research aims to understand people's experiences, feelings, and motivations through exploratory, open-ended methods rather than numerical data or variables. The document outlines different types of qualitative research including basic interpretive studies, phenomenology, grounded theory, case studies, ethnography, narrative analysis, and critical/postmodern approaches. It also discusses strengths, weaknesses, data collection techniques, and the analytical process in qualitative research.
Running head ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 1THE ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE.docxSUBHI7
Running head: ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 1
THE ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 5
Research Paper Outline: The Asian Muslim Culture
Name
University
1. Introduction
Culture is observable from a multifaceted approach in the form beliefs, art, morals, law, and customs. In the Asian continent, the Muslim culture has not been given as much focus as Muslims in the Middle East. The focus of this paper is to provide an outline for a research paper on Asian Muslims, a brief annotated bibliography that presents information on culture and practices, a reflection of what has been learned, and what I expect to learn by the end of the research paper.
2. Body Outline
a) The body of the research paper will detail a literature review that examines what other authors have published on the subject.
b) It will also have methodological procedures that entail data collection using existing documents and records.
c) The research paper will provide findings, conclusions, and discussion sections.
d) It will contain the implications of the culture's practices on parties that directly involve with the culture.
3. Annotated Bibliography
Jegatheesan, B., Miller, P. J., & Fowler, S. A. (2010). Autism from a religious perspective: A study of parental beliefs in South Asian Muslim immigrant families. Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities.
The authors of this study provide a focus on Asian Muslims who have children who have Autism. They then interview South Asian Muslims with the aim of ascertaining their beliefs on autism. The methods used for the study were the collection of interviews and conversations that were recorded during an excursion that took a period of 17 months. The results indicated that Asian Muslim families understood that taking care of children with autism had to take place in Muslim terms. The families also contested the understanding provided by experts on the ailment. They believed that the approach presented by experts destabilized rather than supported their children's development. The findings provide insinuations of Muslims perceptions on the contemporary and conventional use of empirical results in the treatment of ailments.
Purkayastha, B. (2010). Interrogating intersectionality: Contemporary globalization and racialized gendering in the lives of highly educated South Asian Americans and their children. Journal of Intercultural Studies, 31(1), 29-47.
The author of the study explores the fit of intersectionality framework when seeking to understand transnational lives. The data used in the survey was obtained from the author’s exploration on South Asian migrant families as well as their youngsters to the United States. The study primarily focuses on highly educated migrants who have intent on maintaining useful family ties. The researcher uses the information to ascertain if the intersectionality methodology can provide an explanation of life that span between actual and hypothetical social worlds. The research concludes b ...
Evaluating The Theoretical And Or Methodological Approach...Sandra Ahn
The document discusses the methodological base of cybernetic reasoning, noting that much of it was developed during World War II through large engineering projects like rockets, radar, and the atomic bomb. Norbert Wiener's work on radar and automated air defense was particularly influential in establishing the "black box" style of reasoning that treats systems as defined by their inputs and outputs. However, the founders of Simulmatics were not involved in military defense projects during WWII, instead working on psychological defense of the homeland through research groups like the Experimental Division for the Study of War Time Communications.
Qualitative And Quantitative Approach To Research QuestionsAshley Jean
The key attributes of Kraft's primary target market segment are millennial mothers. Millennial mothers represent the largest demographic cohort of new mothers. They are well-educated and family-oriented, seeking products that protect their family's financial well-being. As digital natives, millennial mothers are heavy social media users and influencers. They utilize multiple social networks daily to research products and parenting issues online.
This document discusses the key differences between paradigms, methodologies, and methods in research. It defines paradigms as theoretical mindsets or collections of beliefs that underlie a researcher's approach. Methodologies are discipline-specific approaches and processes used in research. Methods are the specific techniques used to collect research data, such as interviews, observation, and artifact collection. The document provides examples of methodologies like ethnography and action research, as well as methods commonly used within those methodologies.
Difference Between Quantitative And Qualitative ResearchMelanie Smith
The document discusses the differences between quantitative and qualitative research methods. It notes that while there may seem to be little difference to those new to research, scholars see vast differences between the two models. It describes how quantitative research relies on empirical data and statistics while qualitative research is more subjective and naturalistic. The document also discusses how qualitative research has become more rigorous over time in its data collection and analysis, and that a combined or integrated approach using both methods can provide a more comprehensive way to study phenomena.
Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data to understand opinions, experiences, and meanings. It focuses on exploring issues, generating hypotheses, and understanding phenomena in context rather than testing predetermined hypotheses. This document provides an overview of different qualitative research methods including basic interpretive studies, phenomenological studies, grounded theory studies, case studies, ethnographic studies, narrative analysis, critical qualitative research, and postmodern research. Examples are provided for each method to illustrate how they have been applied. Strengths and weaknesses of qualitative research are also discussed.
Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data through methods like interviews and observations to understand meanings, concepts, definitions, and descriptions. It focuses on subjective experiences and meanings that people assign rather than counting or measuring. There are several types of qualitative research including basic interpretive studies, phenomenological studies, grounded theory studies, case studies, ethnographic studies, narrative analysis, critical qualitative research, and postmodern research. Each type uses different methods and focuses of analysis but all aim to provide an in-depth understanding of experiences, cultures, or phenomena through a subjective rather than objective lens.
The document provides an overview of qualitative research. It defines qualitative research as collecting, analyzing, and interpreting subjective data through methods like interviews and observations. Qualitative research aims to understand people's experiences, feelings, and motivations through exploratory, open-ended methods rather than numerical data or variables. The document outlines different types of qualitative research including basic interpretive studies, phenomenology, grounded theory, case studies, ethnography, narrative analysis, and critical/postmodern approaches. It also discusses strengths, weaknesses, data collection techniques, and the analytical process in qualitative research.
Running head ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 1THE ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE.docxSUBHI7
Running head: ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 1
THE ASIAN MUSLIM CULTURE 5
Research Paper Outline: The Asian Muslim Culture
Name
University
1. Introduction
Culture is observable from a multifaceted approach in the form beliefs, art, morals, law, and customs. In the Asian continent, the Muslim culture has not been given as much focus as Muslims in the Middle East. The focus of this paper is to provide an outline for a research paper on Asian Muslims, a brief annotated bibliography that presents information on culture and practices, a reflection of what has been learned, and what I expect to learn by the end of the research paper.
2. Body Outline
a) The body of the research paper will detail a literature review that examines what other authors have published on the subject.
b) It will also have methodological procedures that entail data collection using existing documents and records.
c) The research paper will provide findings, conclusions, and discussion sections.
d) It will contain the implications of the culture's practices on parties that directly involve with the culture.
3. Annotated Bibliography
Jegatheesan, B., Miller, P. J., & Fowler, S. A. (2010). Autism from a religious perspective: A study of parental beliefs in South Asian Muslim immigrant families. Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities.
The authors of this study provide a focus on Asian Muslims who have children who have Autism. They then interview South Asian Muslims with the aim of ascertaining their beliefs on autism. The methods used for the study were the collection of interviews and conversations that were recorded during an excursion that took a period of 17 months. The results indicated that Asian Muslim families understood that taking care of children with autism had to take place in Muslim terms. The families also contested the understanding provided by experts on the ailment. They believed that the approach presented by experts destabilized rather than supported their children's development. The findings provide insinuations of Muslims perceptions on the contemporary and conventional use of empirical results in the treatment of ailments.
Purkayastha, B. (2010). Interrogating intersectionality: Contemporary globalization and racialized gendering in the lives of highly educated South Asian Americans and their children. Journal of Intercultural Studies, 31(1), 29-47.
The author of the study explores the fit of intersectionality framework when seeking to understand transnational lives. The data used in the survey was obtained from the author’s exploration on South Asian migrant families as well as their youngsters to the United States. The study primarily focuses on highly educated migrants who have intent on maintaining useful family ties. The researcher uses the information to ascertain if the intersectionality methodology can provide an explanation of life that span between actual and hypothetical social worlds. The research concludes b ...
Evaluating The Theoretical And Or Methodological Approach...Sandra Ahn
The document discusses the methodological base of cybernetic reasoning, noting that much of it was developed during World War II through large engineering projects like rockets, radar, and the atomic bomb. Norbert Wiener's work on radar and automated air defense was particularly influential in establishing the "black box" style of reasoning that treats systems as defined by their inputs and outputs. However, the founders of Simulmatics were not involved in military defense projects during WWII, instead working on psychological defense of the homeland through research groups like the Experimental Division for the Study of War Time Communications.
Qualitative And Quantitative Approach To Research QuestionsAshley Jean
The key attributes of Kraft's primary target market segment are millennial mothers. Millennial mothers represent the largest demographic cohort of new mothers. They are well-educated and family-oriented, seeking products that protect their family's financial well-being. As digital natives, millennial mothers are heavy social media users and influencers. They utilize multiple social networks daily to research products and parenting issues online.
This document discusses the key differences between paradigms, methodologies, and methods in research. It defines paradigms as theoretical mindsets or collections of beliefs that underlie a researcher's approach. Methodologies are discipline-specific approaches and processes used in research. Methods are the specific techniques used to collect research data, such as interviews, observation, and artifact collection. The document provides examples of methodologies like ethnography and action research, as well as methods commonly used within those methodologies.
Difference Between Quantitative And Qualitative ResearchMelanie Smith
The document discusses the differences between quantitative and qualitative research methods. It notes that while there may seem to be little difference to those new to research, scholars see vast differences between the two models. It describes how quantitative research relies on empirical data and statistics while qualitative research is more subjective and naturalistic. The document also discusses how qualitative research has become more rigorous over time in its data collection and analysis, and that a combined or integrated approach using both methods can provide a more comprehensive way to study phenomena.
Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data to understand opinions, experiences, and meanings. It focuses on exploring issues, generating hypotheses, and understanding phenomena in context rather than testing predetermined hypotheses. This document provides an overview of different qualitative research methods including basic interpretive studies, phenomenological studies, grounded theory studies, case studies, ethnographic studies, narrative analysis, critical qualitative research, and postmodern research. Examples are provided for each method to illustrate how they have been applied. Strengths and weaknesses of qualitative research are also discussed.
Qualitative research involves collecting and analyzing non-numerical data through methods like interviews and observations to understand meanings, concepts, definitions, and descriptions. It focuses on subjective experiences and meanings that people assign rather than counting or measuring. There are several types of qualitative research including basic interpretive studies, phenomenological studies, grounded theory studies, case studies, ethnographic studies, narrative analysis, critical qualitative research, and postmodern research. Each type uses different methods and focuses of analysis but all aim to provide an in-depth understanding of experiences, cultures, or phenomena through a subjective rather than objective lens.
The document provides an overview of qualitative research methods, outlining key concepts in the first session. It defines qualitative research as a strategy for collecting and interpreting non-numerical data through methods like observation and interviews. The characteristics of qualitative research include exploring phenomena in their natural settings and interpreting findings from an emergent and holistic viewpoint. Examples of qualitative research types discussed are narrative research, ethnography, phenomenology, case studies, and grounded theory. The document concludes by listing common steps and examples of qualitative studies conducted in healthcare contexts.
41. International Markets and Profit Sanctuaries Read the Te.docxtroutmanboris
This document discusses the use of qualitative research methods in psychology and education. It provides an overview of why researchers may choose qualitative methods, including that they allow for an in-depth understanding of participants' experiences and perspectives. The document also outlines some key characteristics of qualitative research, such as using an inductive approach and collecting various types of empirical materials from participants. Examples are provided of qualitative studies focusing on topics like schizophrenia, racial/ethnic minorities, people with disabilities, feminist issues, and immigrant groups.
1Introduction The Multicultural PersonBoth the nature of what.docxdrennanmicah
1
Introduction: The Multicultural Person
Both the nature of what we take to be a self and its expression are inherently cultural (Bhatia & Stam, 2005, p. 419).
Each individual’s many aspects are not fragmented and distanced from one another or hierarchically ordered on behalf of a ruling center but remain in full interconnectedness and communication (Sampson, 1985, p. 1209).
There are a great variety of categories to which we simultaneously belong … Belonging to each one of the membership groups can be quite important, depending on the particular context … the importance of one identity need not obliterate the importance of others (Sen, 2006, p. 19).
Each of us is a multicultural human being. This simple and basic proposition, most descriptive of those of us who live in contemporary heterogeneous societies, constitutes the basic (though complex) theme of this book. Within its pages the reader will find attempts to explain, illustrate and argue for the value of this assertion. A major stimulus for pursuit of this is the belief that the study and understanding of behavior, when guided by the premise of individual multiculturalism, will increase the authenticity of our knowledge and the reliability of our predictions. This, in turn, should enhance the relevance and efficacy of the applications of our work to significant life situations – in the interest of advancing human welfare.
Multicultural Psychology and Cross-Cultural Psychology
This book needs to be distinguished from those that are in the tradition of cross-cultural psychology or mainstream multicultural psychology. The latter, as defined by Mio, Barker-Hackett, and Tumambing (2006, p. 32) “is the systematic study of all aspects of human behavior as it occurs in settings where people of different backgrounds encounter one another.” Multicultural psychologists prefer a salad bowl rather than a melting pot as metaphorical image, viewing the United States, for example, as a society in which groups maintain their distinctiveness (Moodley & Curling, 2006). They stress and argue for the necessary development of multicultural competence by psychologists and others. Such competence includes understanding of your own culture, respect for other cultures, and acquiring appropriate culturally sensitive interpersonal skills. To this end, professional guidelines have been proposed (and adopted) for education, training, and practice. Such guidelines are approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) for practice with persons of color (APA, 2003), practice with sexual minorities (APA, 2000), and practice with girls and women (APA, 2007).
The emphases in cross-cultural psychology are two-fold: first, to understand and appreciate the relationships among cultural factors and human functioning (Wallace, 2006); and second, to compare world cultures as well as subcultures within a single society. Cultures are compared on values, world-views, dominant practices, beliefs, and structures in order to re.
This document provides an overview of qualitative research. It defines qualitative research as focusing on understanding human behavior and reasons for behavior through words rather than numbers. The document outlines different qualitative research approaches like phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography, biographical studies, and case studies. It compares qualitative and quantitative research and discusses qualitative research purposes, methods of data collection including interviews, observations, documents, and focus groups. The document also covers qualitative sampling strategies, designing a qualitative study, and concerns of qualitative researchers.
This document provides an overview of narrative inquiry as a research method. It defines narrative inquiry as generating data in the form of stories and typologies of stories. It compares narrative inquiry to other methods and notes that it preserves the complexity and temporal context of lived experience. Examples are provided of narrative inquiry research projects conducted at the University of Sydney, including one exploring narratives around childhood sexual abuse and another exploring motivations for choosing psychology as a career.
This document discusses quantitative research methodologies and combining quantitative and qualitative approaches. It provides examples of religious and Islamic studies research topics that could be examined using various methods. Specifically, it discusses:
1) The benefits of combining quantitative and qualitative methods, such as developing research questions, increasing validity, and providing complementary perspectives.
2) Examples of religious phenomena that could be studied in isolation using quantitative methods, such as levels of religious commitment, faith, piety, and morality.
3) The limitations of studying isolated religious phenomena through quantitative research alone, such as an inability to consider nuanced participant experiences or address normative questions.
William Allan Kritsonis, Editor-in-Chief, NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS (Founded 1982). Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, Distinguished Alumnus, Central Washington University, College of Education and Professional Studies, Ellensburg, Washington; Invited Guest Lecturer, Oxford Round Table, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Hall of Honor, Prairie View A&M University/Member of the Texas A&M University System.
This article summarizes research on the effects of labeling students as learning disabled. The author reviewed 34 studies from 1970 to 2000 that addressed the impact of the learning disabled label. Four key themes emerged from the literature: 1) Labels can influence the expectations, stereotypes and attitudes of teachers and peers towards students; 2) Labels may lead to stigmatization, rejection and social distance from others; 3) There is a disconnect between expressed attitudes towards labeled students and actual treatment of them; 4) The influence of a label depends on other salient information provided about the student. The author aims to synthesize both qualitative and quantitative research on this topic.
The document discusses factors that influence people in New Zealand to use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). CAM is broadly defined as health practices outside of mainstream medicine in a given society. The New Zealand health system uses a definition of CAM as practices intended to prevent or treat illness or promote well-being that are self-defined as such by users. While New Zealand lacks recent data on CAM use, past surveys show little is known about the social and psychological reasons behind why people choose CAM. More research is needed to better understand people's motivations for using CAM in New Zealand.
Comparing And Contrasting Qualitative And Quantitative...Ashley Fisher
This document discusses the history and evolution of social research on natural disasters. It began during the Cold War when governments wanted to understand how citizens would react during crises like a nuclear attack. Researchers studied natural disasters to learn about social behavior under extreme conditions. The Disaster Research Center was founded to conduct qualitative studies through interviews and observations after disasters. While foundational, the document argues this research is now at a threshold where it needs to evolve to address modern challenges.
8Some Implications for Research and Practice[C]ultural meanings,.docxsleeperharwell
8
Some Implications for Research and Practice
[C]ultural meanings, practices, norms, and social institutions … constitute the matrix in which are embedded the intentions, rules, practices, and activities through which people live their lives (Fiske, Kitayama, Markus & Nisbett, 1998, p. 917).
What goals or objectives must our profession and society adopt to become truly multicultural in vision, values, and practice? (Sue, Bingham, Porche-Burke & Vasquez, 1999, p. 1067).
This final chapter is the most difficult one to write. The quotations above suggest the complexity of understanding individual behavior within a cultural matrix. With the broad definition of culture proposed in this book, applicable to all significant groups that meet the criteria, complexity increases. To take seriously the multicultural nature of persons is to raise theoretical and empirical questions that are very difficult to answer. As a science and profession, we are not accustomed to thinking routinely and easily of individuals in this way. Our discipline will be enriched, however, if we can design creative new research strategies to address these questions.
The implications for practice may be least problematic because, whether in counseling, therapy, or education, theoretical emphasis has long been on taking into account “the whole person.” And in these areas, there is typically one-on-one interaction between persons – between client and mental health worker, or between student and teacher. An individual’s unique social identities or cultural memberships will be evident in behavior – overt or subtle. Whether they are recognized, acknowledged, respected and used positively in the actual practice of counseling, therapy, or education (beyond statements of theory) is a central concern. In research, a multicultural perspective presents a different set of interrelated problems pertaining to sampling, study design, methods, data analysis and interpretation.Research
Each participant or respondent in an investigation brings to it unique experiences and beliefs, perceptions, and response potentials that reflect far greater individual complexity and far more cultural memberships than most researchers are prepared to identify. We agree with Shields (2008, p. 304) that “[t]he facts of our lives reveal that there is no single identity category that satisfactorily describes how we respond to our social environment or are responded to by others.” We also agree with Mann and Kelley (1997, p. 392) that “knowledge is and should be situated in people’s diverse social locations.… [and] grounded in the social biography of … the observed.” Such agreement, however, does not lead easily or directly to researchable empirical questions that can be investigated in a practical way. Multiple issues and problems face the researcher who is accustomed to obtaining demographic descriptions of participants that are usually limited to age, ethnicity, and gender, or to the single-identity or group-members.
This study examined the effects of multicultural education on students' conceptions of social identity. Surveys were administered to students in multicultural courses and a non-multicultural comparison course to measure changes in gender, racial, socioeconomic, religious, and sexual orientation identity. The results showed that gender and socioeconomic identity increased significantly over time for all students. Sexual orientation identity increased more for students in multicultural courses compared to the non-multicultural course. Certain minority groups like Jewish, bisexual, and Asian American students experienced greater changes in specific social identities. Younger students also tended to experience greater social identity changes.
This document discusses various types of qualitative research methods including basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, grounded theory research, historical studies, narrative research, and phenomenological research. It provides descriptions and comparisons of these different approaches. For basic qualitative studies, the goal is to understand a phenomenon or experience from the participant's perspective through techniques like interviews and observation. Case study research provides an in-depth look at a single unit or case using multiple data sources. Content analysis examines written or visual materials to describe their characteristics and identify themes. Ethnographic research studies culture and social behavior of a group in their natural setting through immersion and observation.
The document discusses 8 types of qualitative research methods including basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, grounded theory research, historical studies, narrative research, and phenomenological research. It provides descriptions and examples of each method, focusing on the goals, data collection techniques, and key characteristics of basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, and grounded theory research. The document is intended to inform readers about these common qualitative research approaches.
Community engagement 101 CBPR Overview.pptxBonnieDuran1
1. Introductions /Share past experience and future plans for CBPR research
2. Define and describe community-based participatory research (CBPR) for health in AI/AN communities
3. Explore the history of CBPR
4. Identify and describe theoretical approaches that align with AIAN CBPR.
KATIES POST The crisis case I chose to discuss this week is th.docxdonnajames55
KATIE'S POST:
The crisis case I chose to discuss this week is the Tennessee Valley and the Kingston ash slide. On December 22, 2008, Tennessee Valley Authority who uses coal to generate electricity, had one of their containment pods that holds sludge from the ash wall begin to leak. The leak then caused the wall to eventually crumble. The leak then flowed into the Emory River that is located nearby. The river flowed into a nearby community, destroyed several houses, and forced families to evacuate the area.
Chapter 5 discusses the importance of organization members accepting that crisis can start quickly and unexpectedly. Two months before the leak, TVA was informed of a wet spot located on one retaining wall that suggested a leak was present. The moisture was eroding the structure's integrity, but TVA continued to add ash to the pond. TVA organization leaders ignored the warning signs of a potential crisis. TVA then accepted blame for the spill and began dredging the Emory River shortly after the incident. No other independent party was allowed to assess the dredging plan before it launched. If TVA's plan failed, the organization would have been at fault once again.
Upon further investigation of the crisis, lawyers were able to identify six primary failures in TVA's systems, controls, standards, and culture. “Lack of clarity and accountability for ultimate responsibility, lack of standardization, training, and metrics, siloed responsibilities and poor communication, lack of checks and balances, lack of prevention priority and resources, and being reactive instead of proactive” (Ulmer, Sellnow,& Seeger, 87).
Unfortunately, this unintentional crises could have been avoided had the proper crisis management, quality assurance, and procedures been put in place. TVA's negligence cost people their homes, polluted the river, and the uncertainty of long-term health conditions from being exposed to the ash's toxins. "The community was not able to locate reliable information about potential short- and long-term health effects, uncertainty about the extent of environmental damage, and feared plummeting property values" (Ritchie, Little, & Campbell, 179). TVA was at fault for several things, but the most significant fault they did not consider is the risk of storing large volumes of fly ash near the Emory River that flowed into a nearby community.
Ulmer, R. R., Sellnow, T. L., & Seeger, M. W. (2017). Effective crisis communication: Moving from crisis to opportunity. Sage Publications.
Ritchie, L. A., Little, J., & Campbell, N. M. (2018). Resource Loss and Psychosocial Stress in the Aftermath of the 2008 Tennessee Valley Authority Coal Ash Spill. International journal of mass emergencies and disasters, 36(2), 179.
.
Kate Chopins concise The Story of an Hour. What does Joseph.docxdonnajames55
Kate Chopin's concise "The Story of an Hour".
* What does Josephine represent in the story? What does Richards represent?
*The doctors said Mrs. M. died of "heart disease - of joy that kills." How is this ironic?
* What are some themes in the story? What are some symbols?
.
K-2nd Grade
3rd-5th Grade
6th-8th Grade
Major Concepts, Principles, and Learning Theories (To be completed in Topic 3)
Cognitive
Linguistic
Social
Emotional
Physical
.
Just Walk on By by Brent Staples My firs.docxdonnajames55
Just Walk on By
by Brent Staples
My first victim was a woman—white, well dressed, probably in
her early twenties. I came upon her late one evening on a deserted street
in Hyde Park, a relatively affluent neighborhood in an otherwise mean,
impoverished section of Chicago. As I swung onto the avenue behind her,
there seemed to be a discreet, uninflammatory distance between us. Not so.
She cast back a worried glance. To her, the youngish black man—a broad
six feet two inches with a beard and billowing hair, both hands shoved
into the pockets of a bulky military jacket—seemed menacingly close.
After a few more quick glimpses, she picked up her pace and was soon
running in earnest. Within seconds she disappeared into a cross street.
That was more than a decade ago. I was 23 years old, a graduate
student newly arrived at the University of Chicago. It was in the echo of
that terrified woman’s footfalls that I first began to know the unwieldy
inheritance I’d come into—the ability to alter public space in ugly ways. It
was clear that she thought herself the quarry of a mugger, a rapist, or
worse. Suffering a bout of insomnia, however, I was stalking sleep, not
defenseless wayfarers. As a softy who is scarcely able to take a knife
to raw chicken—let alone hold it to a person’s throat—I was surprised,
embarrassed, and dismayed all at once. Her flight made me feel like an
accomplice in tyranny. It also made it clear that I was indistinguishable
from the muggers who occasionally seeped into the area from the
surrounding ghetto. That first encounter, and those that followed signified
that a vast unnerving gulf lay between nighttime pedestrians—particularly
women—and me. And I soon gathered that being perceived as dangerous
is a hazard in itself. I only needed to turn a corner into a dicey situation,
or crowd some frightened, armed person in a foyer somewhere, or make
an errant move after being pulled over by a policeman. Where fear and
weapons meet—and they often do in urban America—there is always the
possibility of death.
In that first year, my first away from my hometown, I was to
become thoroughly familiar with the language of fear. At dark, shadowy
intersections in Chicago, I could cross in front of a car stopped at a traffic
light and elicit the thunk, thunk, thunk, thunk of the driver—black, white,
male, or female—hammering down the door locks. On less traveled streets
after dark, I grew accustomed to but never comfortable with people who
crossed to the other side of the street rather than pass me. Then there were
the standard unpleasantries with police, doormen, bouncers, cab drivers,
and others whose business it is to screen out troublesome individuals
before there is any nastiness.
I moved to New York nearly two years ago and I have remained an
avid night walker. In central Manhattan, the near-constant crowd cover
minimizes tense one-on-one stre.
Just make it simple. and not have to be good, its the first draft. .docxdonnajames55
Just make it simple. and not have to be good, it's the first draft.
I want it a complete essay of 2 pages before 10 am on Sunday.
The instructions in the second file. There is a picture in the third file.
CDT (Central Daylight Time)
UTC/GMT -5 hours
.
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Both the nature of what we take to be a self and its expression are inherently cultural (Bhatia & Stam, 2005, p. 419).
Each individual’s many aspects are not fragmented and distanced from one another or hierarchically ordered on behalf of a ruling center but remain in full interconnectedness and communication (Sampson, 1985, p. 1209).
There are a great variety of categories to which we simultaneously belong … Belonging to each one of the membership groups can be quite important, depending on the particular context … the importance of one identity need not obliterate the importance of others (Sen, 2006, p. 19).
Each of us is a multicultural human being. This simple and basic proposition, most descriptive of those of us who live in contemporary heterogeneous societies, constitutes the basic (though complex) theme of this book. Within its pages the reader will find attempts to explain, illustrate and argue for the value of this assertion. A major stimulus for pursuit of this is the belief that the study and understanding of behavior, when guided by the premise of individual multiculturalism, will increase the authenticity of our knowledge and the reliability of our predictions. This, in turn, should enhance the relevance and efficacy of the applications of our work to significant life situations – in the interest of advancing human welfare.
Multicultural Psychology and Cross-Cultural Psychology
This book needs to be distinguished from those that are in the tradition of cross-cultural psychology or mainstream multicultural psychology. The latter, as defined by Mio, Barker-Hackett, and Tumambing (2006, p. 32) “is the systematic study of all aspects of human behavior as it occurs in settings where people of different backgrounds encounter one another.” Multicultural psychologists prefer a salad bowl rather than a melting pot as metaphorical image, viewing the United States, for example, as a society in which groups maintain their distinctiveness (Moodley & Curling, 2006). They stress and argue for the necessary development of multicultural competence by psychologists and others. Such competence includes understanding of your own culture, respect for other cultures, and acquiring appropriate culturally sensitive interpersonal skills. To this end, professional guidelines have been proposed (and adopted) for education, training, and practice. Such guidelines are approved by the American Psychological Association (APA) for practice with persons of color (APA, 2003), practice with sexual minorities (APA, 2000), and practice with girls and women (APA, 2007).
The emphases in cross-cultural psychology are two-fold: first, to understand and appreciate the relationships among cultural factors and human functioning (Wallace, 2006); and second, to compare world cultures as well as subcultures within a single society. Cultures are compared on values, world-views, dominant practices, beliefs, and structures in order to re.
This document provides an overview of qualitative research. It defines qualitative research as focusing on understanding human behavior and reasons for behavior through words rather than numbers. The document outlines different qualitative research approaches like phenomenology, grounded theory, ethnography, biographical studies, and case studies. It compares qualitative and quantitative research and discusses qualitative research purposes, methods of data collection including interviews, observations, documents, and focus groups. The document also covers qualitative sampling strategies, designing a qualitative study, and concerns of qualitative researchers.
This document provides an overview of narrative inquiry as a research method. It defines narrative inquiry as generating data in the form of stories and typologies of stories. It compares narrative inquiry to other methods and notes that it preserves the complexity and temporal context of lived experience. Examples are provided of narrative inquiry research projects conducted at the University of Sydney, including one exploring narratives around childhood sexual abuse and another exploring motivations for choosing psychology as a career.
This document discusses quantitative research methodologies and combining quantitative and qualitative approaches. It provides examples of religious and Islamic studies research topics that could be examined using various methods. Specifically, it discusses:
1) The benefits of combining quantitative and qualitative methods, such as developing research questions, increasing validity, and providing complementary perspectives.
2) Examples of religious phenomena that could be studied in isolation using quantitative methods, such as levels of religious commitment, faith, piety, and morality.
3) The limitations of studying isolated religious phenomena through quantitative research alone, such as an inability to consider nuanced participant experiences or address normative questions.
William Allan Kritsonis, Editor-in-Chief, NATIONAL FORUM JOURNALS (Founded 1982). Dr. William Allan Kritsonis, Distinguished Alumnus, Central Washington University, College of Education and Professional Studies, Ellensburg, Washington; Invited Guest Lecturer, Oxford Round Table, University of Oxford, United Kingdom; Hall of Honor, Prairie View A&M University/Member of the Texas A&M University System.
This article summarizes research on the effects of labeling students as learning disabled. The author reviewed 34 studies from 1970 to 2000 that addressed the impact of the learning disabled label. Four key themes emerged from the literature: 1) Labels can influence the expectations, stereotypes and attitudes of teachers and peers towards students; 2) Labels may lead to stigmatization, rejection and social distance from others; 3) There is a disconnect between expressed attitudes towards labeled students and actual treatment of them; 4) The influence of a label depends on other salient information provided about the student. The author aims to synthesize both qualitative and quantitative research on this topic.
The document discusses factors that influence people in New Zealand to use complementary and alternative medicine (CAM). CAM is broadly defined as health practices outside of mainstream medicine in a given society. The New Zealand health system uses a definition of CAM as practices intended to prevent or treat illness or promote well-being that are self-defined as such by users. While New Zealand lacks recent data on CAM use, past surveys show little is known about the social and psychological reasons behind why people choose CAM. More research is needed to better understand people's motivations for using CAM in New Zealand.
Comparing And Contrasting Qualitative And Quantitative...Ashley Fisher
This document discusses the history and evolution of social research on natural disasters. It began during the Cold War when governments wanted to understand how citizens would react during crises like a nuclear attack. Researchers studied natural disasters to learn about social behavior under extreme conditions. The Disaster Research Center was founded to conduct qualitative studies through interviews and observations after disasters. While foundational, the document argues this research is now at a threshold where it needs to evolve to address modern challenges.
8Some Implications for Research and Practice[C]ultural meanings,.docxsleeperharwell
8
Some Implications for Research and Practice
[C]ultural meanings, practices, norms, and social institutions … constitute the matrix in which are embedded the intentions, rules, practices, and activities through which people live their lives (Fiske, Kitayama, Markus & Nisbett, 1998, p. 917).
What goals or objectives must our profession and society adopt to become truly multicultural in vision, values, and practice? (Sue, Bingham, Porche-Burke & Vasquez, 1999, p. 1067).
This final chapter is the most difficult one to write. The quotations above suggest the complexity of understanding individual behavior within a cultural matrix. With the broad definition of culture proposed in this book, applicable to all significant groups that meet the criteria, complexity increases. To take seriously the multicultural nature of persons is to raise theoretical and empirical questions that are very difficult to answer. As a science and profession, we are not accustomed to thinking routinely and easily of individuals in this way. Our discipline will be enriched, however, if we can design creative new research strategies to address these questions.
The implications for practice may be least problematic because, whether in counseling, therapy, or education, theoretical emphasis has long been on taking into account “the whole person.” And in these areas, there is typically one-on-one interaction between persons – between client and mental health worker, or between student and teacher. An individual’s unique social identities or cultural memberships will be evident in behavior – overt or subtle. Whether they are recognized, acknowledged, respected and used positively in the actual practice of counseling, therapy, or education (beyond statements of theory) is a central concern. In research, a multicultural perspective presents a different set of interrelated problems pertaining to sampling, study design, methods, data analysis and interpretation.Research
Each participant or respondent in an investigation brings to it unique experiences and beliefs, perceptions, and response potentials that reflect far greater individual complexity and far more cultural memberships than most researchers are prepared to identify. We agree with Shields (2008, p. 304) that “[t]he facts of our lives reveal that there is no single identity category that satisfactorily describes how we respond to our social environment or are responded to by others.” We also agree with Mann and Kelley (1997, p. 392) that “knowledge is and should be situated in people’s diverse social locations.… [and] grounded in the social biography of … the observed.” Such agreement, however, does not lead easily or directly to researchable empirical questions that can be investigated in a practical way. Multiple issues and problems face the researcher who is accustomed to obtaining demographic descriptions of participants that are usually limited to age, ethnicity, and gender, or to the single-identity or group-members.
This study examined the effects of multicultural education on students' conceptions of social identity. Surveys were administered to students in multicultural courses and a non-multicultural comparison course to measure changes in gender, racial, socioeconomic, religious, and sexual orientation identity. The results showed that gender and socioeconomic identity increased significantly over time for all students. Sexual orientation identity increased more for students in multicultural courses compared to the non-multicultural course. Certain minority groups like Jewish, bisexual, and Asian American students experienced greater changes in specific social identities. Younger students also tended to experience greater social identity changes.
This document discusses various types of qualitative research methods including basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, grounded theory research, historical studies, narrative research, and phenomenological research. It provides descriptions and comparisons of these different approaches. For basic qualitative studies, the goal is to understand a phenomenon or experience from the participant's perspective through techniques like interviews and observation. Case study research provides an in-depth look at a single unit or case using multiple data sources. Content analysis examines written or visual materials to describe their characteristics and identify themes. Ethnographic research studies culture and social behavior of a group in their natural setting through immersion and observation.
The document discusses 8 types of qualitative research methods including basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, grounded theory research, historical studies, narrative research, and phenomenological research. It provides descriptions and examples of each method, focusing on the goals, data collection techniques, and key characteristics of basic qualitative studies, case study research, content analysis, ethnographic studies, and grounded theory research. The document is intended to inform readers about these common qualitative research approaches.
Community engagement 101 CBPR Overview.pptxBonnieDuran1
1. Introductions /Share past experience and future plans for CBPR research
2. Define and describe community-based participatory research (CBPR) for health in AI/AN communities
3. Explore the history of CBPR
4. Identify and describe theoretical approaches that align with AIAN CBPR.
Similar to Conducting Culturally Sensitive Qualitative Research DEVIKADIBYA.docx (15)
KATIES POST The crisis case I chose to discuss this week is th.docxdonnajames55
KATIE'S POST:
The crisis case I chose to discuss this week is the Tennessee Valley and the Kingston ash slide. On December 22, 2008, Tennessee Valley Authority who uses coal to generate electricity, had one of their containment pods that holds sludge from the ash wall begin to leak. The leak then caused the wall to eventually crumble. The leak then flowed into the Emory River that is located nearby. The river flowed into a nearby community, destroyed several houses, and forced families to evacuate the area.
Chapter 5 discusses the importance of organization members accepting that crisis can start quickly and unexpectedly. Two months before the leak, TVA was informed of a wet spot located on one retaining wall that suggested a leak was present. The moisture was eroding the structure's integrity, but TVA continued to add ash to the pond. TVA organization leaders ignored the warning signs of a potential crisis. TVA then accepted blame for the spill and began dredging the Emory River shortly after the incident. No other independent party was allowed to assess the dredging plan before it launched. If TVA's plan failed, the organization would have been at fault once again.
Upon further investigation of the crisis, lawyers were able to identify six primary failures in TVA's systems, controls, standards, and culture. “Lack of clarity and accountability for ultimate responsibility, lack of standardization, training, and metrics, siloed responsibilities and poor communication, lack of checks and balances, lack of prevention priority and resources, and being reactive instead of proactive” (Ulmer, Sellnow,& Seeger, 87).
Unfortunately, this unintentional crises could have been avoided had the proper crisis management, quality assurance, and procedures been put in place. TVA's negligence cost people their homes, polluted the river, and the uncertainty of long-term health conditions from being exposed to the ash's toxins. "The community was not able to locate reliable information about potential short- and long-term health effects, uncertainty about the extent of environmental damage, and feared plummeting property values" (Ritchie, Little, & Campbell, 179). TVA was at fault for several things, but the most significant fault they did not consider is the risk of storing large volumes of fly ash near the Emory River that flowed into a nearby community.
Ulmer, R. R., Sellnow, T. L., & Seeger, M. W. (2017). Effective crisis communication: Moving from crisis to opportunity. Sage Publications.
Ritchie, L. A., Little, J., & Campbell, N. M. (2018). Resource Loss and Psychosocial Stress in the Aftermath of the 2008 Tennessee Valley Authority Coal Ash Spill. International journal of mass emergencies and disasters, 36(2), 179.
.
Kate Chopins concise The Story of an Hour. What does Joseph.docxdonnajames55
Kate Chopin's concise "The Story of an Hour".
* What does Josephine represent in the story? What does Richards represent?
*The doctors said Mrs. M. died of "heart disease - of joy that kills." How is this ironic?
* What are some themes in the story? What are some symbols?
.
K-2nd Grade
3rd-5th Grade
6th-8th Grade
Major Concepts, Principles, and Learning Theories (To be completed in Topic 3)
Cognitive
Linguistic
Social
Emotional
Physical
.
Just Walk on By by Brent Staples My firs.docxdonnajames55
Just Walk on By
by Brent Staples
My first victim was a woman—white, well dressed, probably in
her early twenties. I came upon her late one evening on a deserted street
in Hyde Park, a relatively affluent neighborhood in an otherwise mean,
impoverished section of Chicago. As I swung onto the avenue behind her,
there seemed to be a discreet, uninflammatory distance between us. Not so.
She cast back a worried glance. To her, the youngish black man—a broad
six feet two inches with a beard and billowing hair, both hands shoved
into the pockets of a bulky military jacket—seemed menacingly close.
After a few more quick glimpses, she picked up her pace and was soon
running in earnest. Within seconds she disappeared into a cross street.
That was more than a decade ago. I was 23 years old, a graduate
student newly arrived at the University of Chicago. It was in the echo of
that terrified woman’s footfalls that I first began to know the unwieldy
inheritance I’d come into—the ability to alter public space in ugly ways. It
was clear that she thought herself the quarry of a mugger, a rapist, or
worse. Suffering a bout of insomnia, however, I was stalking sleep, not
defenseless wayfarers. As a softy who is scarcely able to take a knife
to raw chicken—let alone hold it to a person’s throat—I was surprised,
embarrassed, and dismayed all at once. Her flight made me feel like an
accomplice in tyranny. It also made it clear that I was indistinguishable
from the muggers who occasionally seeped into the area from the
surrounding ghetto. That first encounter, and those that followed signified
that a vast unnerving gulf lay between nighttime pedestrians—particularly
women—and me. And I soon gathered that being perceived as dangerous
is a hazard in itself. I only needed to turn a corner into a dicey situation,
or crowd some frightened, armed person in a foyer somewhere, or make
an errant move after being pulled over by a policeman. Where fear and
weapons meet—and they often do in urban America—there is always the
possibility of death.
In that first year, my first away from my hometown, I was to
become thoroughly familiar with the language of fear. At dark, shadowy
intersections in Chicago, I could cross in front of a car stopped at a traffic
light and elicit the thunk, thunk, thunk, thunk of the driver—black, white,
male, or female—hammering down the door locks. On less traveled streets
after dark, I grew accustomed to but never comfortable with people who
crossed to the other side of the street rather than pass me. Then there were
the standard unpleasantries with police, doormen, bouncers, cab drivers,
and others whose business it is to screen out troublesome individuals
before there is any nastiness.
I moved to New York nearly two years ago and I have remained an
avid night walker. In central Manhattan, the near-constant crowd cover
minimizes tense one-on-one stre.
Just make it simple. and not have to be good, its the first draft. .docxdonnajames55
Just make it simple. and not have to be good, it's the first draft.
I want it a complete essay of 2 pages before 10 am on Sunday.
The instructions in the second file. There is a picture in the third file.
CDT (Central Daylight Time)
UTC/GMT -5 hours
.
JUST 497 Senior Seminar and Internship ExperienceInternationa.docxdonnajames55
JUST 497: Senior Seminar and Internship Experience
International Film Critique: The Whistleblower
· Due: April 3
· Reaction Paper: 10 Points
· Presentation: 5 Points
Your first written assignment was to critique a newspaper article dealing with misconduct and/or corruption at a local level within the United States. The capstone essay asks you to consider a social injustice and its consequences that occur on a national level. The International film assignment asks you to consider issues of international law and justice.
The Whistleblower based on a true story depicts the horrors of human trafficking and human rights violations across international borders.
Please choose Assignment A or B.
Assignment A
Write a 3-4 page Reaction Paper to the above film. Summarize the producer’s main message in no more than a half page. The remainder of the paper should reflect your opinion of the content of the film based on your knowledge of international law. Make specific references to scenes in the film that correlate with information you have gained in previous or current coursework. Cite all sources in-text according to the Hacker & Sommers APA Manual of Style.
Cautionary Notes
· Do not summarize the video.
· Cite specific information from the film using the required APA Manual of style.
· Use 12 font, double spacing and 1 inch margins.
Students who need a special accommodation and cannot find a copy of a closed caption video, must meet with their instructor to design an alternative assignment.
Assignment B
The Whistleblower implicates the United Nations, the U.S. State Department, and private contractors in post war Bosnia in an organized human trafficking scheme. Kathryn Bolkovac discovers a lucrative, far-reaching operation involving the local police and United Nations peacekeepers, many of them protected by diplomatic immunity. This film is based on a true story and reflects the international concern with corruption and human trafficking.
Cast
· Kathryn Bolkovac: Nebraska police officer who accepts an offer to work with the U.N. International Police in Bosnia run by a private company in the U.K., Democra Security
· Madeleine Rees: Head of the United Nations Human Rights Commission
· Nick Kaufman: Kathryn’s Field Commander
· Peter Ward: Internal Affairs Specialist
· Luba, Raya and Irka: teenagers sold to the sex trafficking ring
· Fred Murray: Democra Security Officer
· John Blakely: Head of Human Resources
Based on the movie, address the following questions. Answers should be in a Question and Answer format and not essay style.
1. Discuss the suffering and oppression witnessed by (not experienced by) the main character. Cite specific scenes from the movie to support your discussion.
2. In whatspecific ways does Kathryn advocate for the victims she encounters? Cite scenes from the movie to support your answer.
3. Discuss how both local citizens and higher ranking officials contribute to organized corruption in post-war Bosn.
July 2002, Vol 92, No. 7 American Journal of Public Health E.docxdonnajames55
July 2002, Vol 92, No. 7 | American Journal of Public Health Editorial | 1057
⏐ EDITORIAL
A Code of
Ethics for
Public Health
The mandate to ensure and pro-
tect the health of the public is an
inherently moral one. It carries
with it an obligation to care for
the well-being of communities,
and it implies the possession of an
element of power to carry out
that mandate. The need to exer-
cise power to ensure the health of
populations and, at the same time,
to avoid abuses of such power are
at the crux of public health ethics.
Until recently, the ethical na-
ture of public health has been im-
plicitly assumed rather than ex-
plicitly stated. Increasingly,
however, society is demanding ex-
plicit attention to ethics. This de-
mand arises from technological
advances that create new possibil-
ities and, with them, new ethical
dilemmas; new challenges to
health, such as the advent of HIV;
and abuses of power, such as the
Tuskegee study of syphilis.
Medical institutions have been
more explicit about the ethical
elements of their practice than
have public health institutions.
However, the concerns of public
health are not fully consonant
with those of medicine. Thus, we
cannot simply translate the princi-
ples of medical ethics to public
health. In contrast to medicine,
public health is concerned more
with populations than with indi-
viduals, and more with prevention
than with cure. The need to artic-
ulate a distinct ethic for public
health has been noted by a num-
ber of public health professionals
and ethicists.1–5
A code of ethics for public
health can clarify the distinctive
elements of public health and the
ethical principles that follow from
or respond to those elements. It
can make clear to populations and
communities the ideals of the pub-
lic health institutions that serve
them, ideals for which the institu-
tions can be held accountable.
THE PROCESS OF
WRITING THE CODE
The backgrounds and perspec-
tives of people who identify
themselves as public health pro-
fessionals are as diverse as the
multitude of factors affecting the
health of populations. Articulating
a common ethic for this diverse
group is a formidable challenge.
In the spring of 2000, the gradu-
ating class of the Public Health
Leadership Institute chose writing
a code of ethics for public health
as a group project. The institute
provides advanced leadership
training to people who are al-
ready in leadership roles in pub-
lic health. Because the fellows
bring a wealth of experience from
a wide variety of public health in-
stitutions, they are uniquely able
to represent diverse perspectives
and identify ethical issues com-
mon in public health.
At the 2000 meeting of the Na-
tional Association of City and
County Health Officers, the group
added a non-institute member
( J. C. Thomas) and charted a plan
for working toward a code. The
plan included receiving a formal
charge as the code of ethics work-
ing group at the annual meeting of
the American Public Health Asso-
c.
Journals are to be 2 pages long with an introduction, discussion and.docxdonnajames55
Journals are to be 2 pages long with an introduction, discussion and conclusion. They must be double spaced. Your formatting, sentence structure, spell checking, etc., will all be taken into account.
Utilizing YouTube, do a search for and listen to at least two perspectives from CNN, Fox News and/or MSNBC regarding culture wars. Provide me with an analysis that discusses two different perspectives. I typed in CNN/Fox News/MSNBC and then culture war, and was able to find quite a few 5 minute vignettes with regard to the topic. If you find a discussion of the culture wars either in written form or at another site, you must insure that it is a legitimate source and provide a link to the site.
Make sure to first provide your understanding of the definition of culture wars as outlined in the text readings, then provide me with your analysis obtained from the news outlets.
.
Judgement in Managerial Decision MakingBased on examples fro.docxdonnajames55
Judgement in Managerial Decision Making
Based on examples from one of the recommended articles selected by you, the lecture notes, the text, and other sources, discuss one or several of the themes: the nature of managerial decision making, the steps in the managerial decision making, organizational learning and creativity, judgmental heuristics, common biases in managerial decision making, bounds of human judgment, strategies for making better decisions.
.
Joyce is a 34-year-old woman who has been married 10 years. She .docxdonnajames55
Joyce is a 34-year-old woman who has been married 10 years. She has three children, all less than 10 years old: Sheena (age 9), Jack (age 6), and Beth (age 2). Her husband is a prominent attorney. They present an ideal picture of an upper-middle-class family. They live in a fashionable suburb. The husband has been successful to the extent that he has been made a full partner in a large law firm. The family is very active in church, the country club, and various other social organizations. Joyce is an active member of several charitable, civic, and social groups. Joyce’s initial call to the abuse center was vague and guarded. She expressed an interest in inquiring for “another woman” in regard to the purpose of the center. After she had received information and an invitation to call back, a number of weeks elapsed. Joyce’s second call occurred after receiving a severe beating from her husband.
Joyce tells the crisis worker in the phone:"Well, last night he beat me worse than ever. I thought he was really going to kill me this time. It had been building up for the past few weeks. His fuse was getting shorter and shorter, both with me and the kids. It’s his work, I guess. Finally he came home late last night. Dinner was cold. We were supposed to go out, and I guess it was my fault . . . I complained about his being late, and he blew up. Started yelling that he was gonna teach me a lesson. He started hitting me with his fists . . .knocked me down . . . and then started kicking me. I got up and ran into the bathroom. The kids were yelling for him to stop and he cuffed Sheena . . . God, it was horrible! (Wracked with sobs for more than a minute. CW waits.) I’m sorry, I just can’t seem to keep control."
As the crisis worker:
1-What typical dynamics did you see occurring—denial, guilt, fear, rationalization, withdrawal, and so on—in the victim? How would you as the crisis worker handle them?
What are some of the domestic violence intervention strategies? Pick one and how would you apply it to the scenario
.
Journal Write in 300-500 words about the following topic.After .docxdonnajames55
Journal: Write in 300-500 words about the following topic.
After watching some news and some television shows, including movies and anime. What are some portrayals of sexual harassment and rape myths that are perpetuated by social media, entertainment media, and news outlets?
What is the motivation of rapists on TV and in the movies?
What “types” of women get raped or sexually assaulted and harassed in movies and television?
Some research suggests that on TV and in the movies nontraditional women get raped more often than traditional women as a means of putting nontraditional women “in their place.”
How does what you saw compare to the research? How do gender stereotypes perpetuate rape and harassment culture?
In your experience or opinion, what are some ways society can address some of these issues around sexual assault and sexual battery, especially on college campuses and workplaces?
.
Journal Supervision and Management StyleWhen it comes to superv.docxdonnajames55
Journal: Supervision and Management Style
When it comes to supervising and managing personnel in human services organizations, everyone has his or her own leadership style. Some styles are effective and supportive; others may be ineffectual and unhelpful. When supervising and managing staff, it is important for human services administrators to first identify their leadership style and examine personal strengths and weaknesses related to their leadership style. Understanding how to utilize strengths and address weaknesses in leadership style is important for administrators to be both effective and supportive when supervising and managing.
In order to complete the Application Assignment, you must first complete the "Types of Leadership and Patterns of Management" interactive graphic provided in the Learning Resources. Once you have done so, take note of your leadership style and think about your areas of strengths and weaknesses.
After completing the self-assessment tool in this week’s Learning Resources, reflect on the results.
RESULTS:
I am very good at executing the work of a task, though I like clarity about the desired outcome.
1.
Engaging
2.
I really prefer to be peaceful and calm, finding ways to help others achieve their goals
3.
Achieving consensus among followers assures the best success
4.
It is ok to breech boundaries if we can all move in the same direction
5.
Being a change agent is never easy, but it is very stimulating for me
6.
I really prefer to be in control, though it does not have to be out in public
7.
Challenges should be addressed head on
8.
I like predictability
9.
I like to always put my best foot forward
10.
I am known to sometimes be argumentative, I believe it is the way new ideas emerge
11.
The best way to succeed is to trust oneself
12.
When determining goals to reach, we should always challenge ourselves a little beyond what we can see ourselves accomplishing
13.
The best way for me to relax is to spend some time alone quietly.
14.
When decisions are necessary my primary concern is its effect on the persons involved
15.
I am confident and assertive
16.
I am a compassionate person and there is significant value in the person (s) knowing where it comes from
17.
I am a very consistent person and am guided by my values
18.
I am a compassionate person but would rather show it behind the scenes
19.
I am conscientious and organized
20.Next
I like to focus on group cohesion
21.
When decisions are necessary I can make them easily and quickly as circumstances demand it
22.
My strong ability to envision the future makes me a result oriented leader
23.
Building and sustaining a strong image is a principle contributor to progress
24.
I see the big picture
25.
The best way for me to relax is to be reflective with a friend
26.
I am known to create harmony among others as it creates an optimal working environment. I am unimpressed with conflict
27.
Realistic
28.
I lik.
Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics, Fall 2018, Vol. 15, No.docxdonnajames55
Journal of Social Work Values & Ethics, Fall 2018, Vol. 15, No. 2 - page 37
Ethnicity, Values, and Value Conflicts of African
American and White Social Service Professionals
Andrew Edwards, MSW, Ph.D.
Cleveland State University, Emeritus
[email protected]
Mamadou M. Seck, Ph.D.
Cleveland State University
[email protected]
Journal of Social Work Values and Ethics, Volume 15, Number 2 (2018)
Copyright 2018, ASWB
This text may be freely shared among individuals, but it may not be republished in any medium without
express written consent from the authors and advance notification of ASWB.
Abstract
This aspect of a broader study included 110 (68
White/European American and 42 Black/African
American) social service professionals. The primary
focus of this aspect of the study was to verify the
value orientation or core beliefs of the practitioners
who deliver services to clients through social service
agencies and programs. The conceptualization
of the core beliefs explored the values and value
conflicts in relation to professional practice. The
participants were employed in a Midwestern
metropolitan region. They responded to a survey
instrument that included vignettes, closed-ended
items, scaled responses, as well as either-or type
items. Major categories of the exploration included:
life and death issues, lifestyle, domestic and
social perspectives, value conflicts with the social
work profession, and personal responses to value
conflicts. Specific items measuring values related
to abortion, homosexuality, religiosity, euthanasia,
and corporal punishment were included. Study
results showed statistical significance on 26 issues
as African American participants were compared
with White participants.
Keywords: value conflicts, social work, ethical
dilemmas, ethnicity, professional relationship
Introduction
The complexity of American society (Jarrett,
2000), specifically due to its historic, economic,
social, and ethnic makeup, requires that social
work professionals take their clients’ ethnicity,
values, and professional-client value conflicts
into consideration. Historical dynamics, such as
unproductive treatment, have contributed to the
reluctance of various population groups to engage
with professional service providers. This history
(Barker, 2014) has influenced the adoption of
guidelines that require social workers to be culturally
aware during interventions and recognizing that
diversity-related characteristics have influence upon
an individual’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors.
Barker (2014) further noted that the concept of
values is influenced by one’s perceptions of what
comprises appropriate principles, practices, and
behaviors. An individual’s personal values are often
considered as a representation of one’s core beliefs
and what an individual may perceive as right.
Therefore, these beliefs do not require supporting
evidence for those who embrace them and may
result in behavio.
Journal of Personality 862, April 2018VC 2016 Wiley Perio.docxdonnajames55
Journal of Personality 86:2, April 2018
VC 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
DOI: 10.1111/jopy.12301Unique Associations Between Big
Five Personality Aspects and
Multiple Dimensions of Well-Being
Jessie Sun ,
1,2
Scott Barry Kaufman,
3
and
Luke D. Smillie
1
1
The University of Melbourne
2
University of California, Davis
3
University of Pennsylvania
Abstract
Objective: Personality traits are associated with well-being, but the precise correlates vary across well-being dimensions and
within each Big Five domain. This study is the first to examine the unique associations between the Big Five aspects (rather
than facets) and multiple well-being dimensions.
Method: Two samples of U.S. participants (total N 5 706; Mage 5 36.17; 54% female) recruited via Amazon’s Mechanical Turk
completed measures of the Big Five aspects and subjective, psychological, and PERMA well-being.
Results: One aspect within each domain was more strongly associated with well-being variables. Enthusiasm and Withdrawal
were strongly associated with a broad range of well-being variables, but other aspects of personality also had idiosyncratic
associations with distinct forms of positive functioning (e.g., Compassion with positive relationships, Industriousness with
accomplishment, and Intellect with personal growth).
Conclusions: An aspect-level analysis provides an optimal (i.e., parsimonious yet sufficiently comprehensive) framework for
describing the relation between personality traits and multiple ways of thriving in life.
Keywords: Personality, aspects, Big Five, subjective well-being, psychological well-being
When multiple positive end states are examined, it becomes
apparent that aspects of psychological well-being may be
achieved by more people than just the nonneurotic, extra-
verted members of society. (Schmutte & Ryff, 1997, p. 558)
The large literature describing the associations between person-
ality traits and well-being suggests that Extraversion (the tendency
to be bold, talkative, enthusiastic, and sociable) and Neuroticism
(the tendency to be emotionally unstable and prone to negative
emotions) are especially strong predictors of well-being (e.g.,
Steel, Schmidt, & Shultz, 2008). But is well-being only accessible
to the extraverted and non-neurotic? We propose that more
nuanced insights can be revealed by examining the relation
between narrower traits and a broader spectrum of well-being
dimensions. The goal of the current study is to comprehensively
describe the unique associations between personality aspects and
dimensions of well-being across three well-being taxonomies.
Personality Traits and Three Taxonomies
of Well-Being
Personality traits and well-being dimensions can each be
described at different levels of resolution. The Big Five domains
provide a relatively comprehensive framework for organizing
differential patterns of affect, behavior, and cognition (John,
Naumann, & Soto, 2008). These broad traits can be further bro-
ken dow.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology1977, Vol. 35, N.docxdonnajames55
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
1977, Vol. 35, No. 9, 677-688
Self-Reference and the Encoding of Personal Information
T. B. Rogers, N. A. Kuiper, and W. S. Kirker
University of Calgary, Canada
The degree to which the self is implicated in processing personal information
was investigated. Subjects rated adjectives on four tasks designed to force
varying kinds of encoding: structural, phonemic, semantic, and self-reference.
In two experiments, incidental recall of the rated words indicated that adjec-
tives rated under the self-reference task were recalled the best. These results
indicate that self-reference is a rich and powerful encoding process. As an
aspect of the human information-processing system, the self appears to func-
tion as a superordinate schema that is deeply involved in the processing, inter-
pretation, and memory of personal information.
Present research and theory in personality
appear to be placing more and more empha-
sis on how a person has organized his or her
psychological world. Starting with Kelly's
(1955) formulation of personal constructs,
we see a gradual emergence of a number of
avenues of inquiry that use this as their focal
point. In person perception, the concept of
lay personality theory stresses that the ob-
server's analytic network of expected trait
covariations is an integral part of how he
processes (and generates) interpersonal data
(Hastorf, Schneider, & Polefka, 1970). Bern
and Allen (1974), in their embellishment of
Allport's (1937) idiographic position, argue
that an important determinant of predictive
utility of trait measurement is the manner
in which the respondent has organized his or
her view of the trait being measured. These
authors see the overlap between the respond-
ent's and the experimenter's concept of the
trait as a necessary prerequisite of predic-
tion. Attribution theory (Jones et al., 1971)
is another example of this increased accent
on personal organization. Here the emphasis
is on how the subject explains past behavior
This research was supported by a grant from the
Canada Council. We would like to thank the fol-
lowing persons for their useful ideas and comments
on earlier drafts: F. I. M. Craik, E. J. Rowe, P. J.
Rogers, H. Lytton, J. Clark, J. Ells, C. G. Costello,
and especially one anonymous reviewer.
Requests for reprints should be sent to T. B.
Rogers, Department of Psychology, The University
of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada, T2N 1N4.
and how these explanations are organized in
an attributional network. The common
thread in all of these contemporary research
areas is the notion that the cognitions of a
person, particularly their manner of organ-
ization, should be an integral part of our
attempts to explain personality and behavior.
Of concern in the present article is the
construct of self and how it is implicated in
the organization of personal data. Our gen-
eral position is that the self is an extremely
active and powerful agent in the organizati.
Journal of Pcnonaluy and Social Psychology1»M. Vd 47, No 6. .docxdonnajames55
Journal of Pcnonaluy and Social Psychology
1»M. Vd 47, No 6. 1292-1302
Copynghi I9S4 by the
American Psychological Association. Inc
Influence of Gender Constancy and Social Power
on Sex-Linked Modeling
Kay Bussey
Macquarie University
New South Wales, Australia
Albert Bandura
Stanford University
Competing predictions derived from cognitive-developmental theory and social
learning theory concerning sex-linked modeling were tested. In cognitive-develop-
mental theory, gender constancy is considered a necessary prerequisite for the
emulation of same-sex models, whereas according to social learning theory, sex-
role development is promoted through a vast system of social influences with
modeling serving as a major conveyor of sex role information. In accord with
social learning theory, even children at a lower level of gender conception emulated
same-sex models in preference to opposite-sex ones. Level of gender constancy
was associated with higher emulation of both male and female models rather
than operating as a selective determinant of modeling. This finding corroborates
modeling as a basic mechanism in the sex-typing process. In a second experiment
we explored the limits of same-sex modeling by pitting social power against the
force of collective modeling of different patterns of behavior by male and female
models. Social power over activities and rewarding resources produced cross-sex
modeling in boys, but not in girls. This unexpected pattern of cross-sex modeling
is explained by the differential sex-typing pressures that exist for boys and girls
and socialization experiences that heighten the attractiveness of social power
for boys.
Most theories of sex role development as-
sign a major role to modeling as a basic
mechanism of sex role learning (Bandura,
1969; Kagan, 1964; Mischel, 1970; Sears,
Rau & Alpert, 1965). Maccoby and Jacklin
(1974) have questioned whether social prac-
tices or modeling processes are influential in
the development of sex-linked roles. They
point to findings that in laboratory situations
children do not consistently pattern their
This research was supported by Research Grant No.
M-S162-21 from the National Institute of Mental Health,
U.S. Public Health Services, and by the Lewis S. Haas
Child Development Research Fund, Stanford University.
We thank Martin Curland, Brad Carpenter, Brent Sha-
phren, Deborah Skriba, Erin Dignam, and Pamela Minet
for serving as models. We are indebted to Marilyn
Waterman for filming and editing the videotape modeling
sequence, to Eileen Lynch and Sara Buxton, who acted
as experimenters, and to Nancy Adams, who assisted in
collecting the data. Finally, we also thank the staff and
children from Bing Nursery School, Stanford University.
Requests for reprints should be sent to either Kay
Bussey, School of Behavioral Sciences, Macquarie Uni-
versity, North Ryde, Australia, 2113, or to Albert Bandura,
Department of Psychology, Stanford University, Building
420 Jordan Hall, Stanford,.
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
Main Java[All of the Base Concepts}.docxadhitya5119
This is part 1 of my Java Learning Journey. This Contains Custom methods, classes, constructors, packages, multithreading , try- catch block, finally block and more.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
How to Manage Your Lost Opportunities in Odoo 17 CRMCeline George
Odoo 17 CRM allows us to track why we lose sales opportunities with "Lost Reasons." This helps analyze our sales process and identify areas for improvement. Here's how to configure lost reasons in Odoo 17 CRM
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
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Discover the Simplified Electron and Muon Model: A New Wave-Based Approach to Understanding Particles delves into a groundbreaking theory that presents electrons and muons as rotating soliton waves within oscillating spacetime. Geared towards students, researchers, and science buffs, this book breaks down complex ideas into simple explanations. It covers topics such as electron waves, temporal dynamics, and the implications of this model on particle physics. With clear illustrations and easy-to-follow explanations, readers will gain a new outlook on the universe's fundamental nature.
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Conducting Culturally Sensitive Qualitative Research DEVIKADIBYA.docx
1. Conducting Culturally Sensitive Qualitative Research
DEVIKADIBYACHOUDHURI THE MULTICULTURAL
GUIDELINES
One of the key elements of the American Psychological
Association’s (APA, 2003) “Guidelines on Multicultural
Education, Training, Research, Practice, and Organizational
Change for Psychologists” is the notion of a cultural lens. The
Multicultural Guidelines define culture as an embodiment of
worldview, a complex of systems of values, beliefs, and
resultant practices that shape the way individuals make meaning
of the world. Using a visual metaphor, a cultural lens is then
simply the field of vision that incorporates the landscape of
culture. The Multicultural Guidelines invite psychologists to
use a cultural lens, acknowledging the ways in which culture
shapes their own lens, the multiple meanings that individuals
may make about themselves and their contexts, and ways to be
responsive and sensitive to such understandings of the world.
Specifically, in terms of conducting research, Guideline 4 asks
investigators to appreciate the importance of conducting
culture-centered research and be sensitive to cultural issues
regarding research focus, design, and methods. A cultural lens,
by definition, is rooted in the subjective, the internal worldview
view of a particular person from his or her particular location
intheworld.Thissubjectivityofinternallyconstructedmeaning,asop
posedtoapresumedexternallyobjectiverealitytrueforallpersonsin
alltimesandcontexts,isthesociallyconstructedpositionofqualitativ
e research.
OVERVIEW OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
The practice of qualitative inquiry covers a variety of research
methods and approaches that operate from an interpretive
paradigm, developing portrayals of a complex and dynamic
reality (Glesne & Peshkin, 1992). Symbolic interactionism
(Blumer, 1969), feminist inquiry (Olesen, 1994), grounded
theory (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) action research, case studies,
2. and ethnographies are examples of the plethora of approaches
constituting qualitative inquiry (Bogdan & Biklen, 1992).
Qualitative research strives to understand the epistemological
nature of phenomena through the subjective experiences of the
persons who are concerned with such phenomena. Essentially, it
is the process of finding out what people think and feel
impressionistically and narratively rather than quantifiably. As
such, this methodology lends itself particularly well to
understanding the experiences and worldviews of diverse
persons. For instance, Gibson (2002) looked at the experience
of African American grandmothers who were caregivers to
grandchildren whose parents were not able to provide them with
adequate care. This phenomenon of kinship care, culturally
congruent in the African American community, needed a
qualitative approach to explore a complex, sensitive, and
contextually rich situation and capture the lived experience of
this clinically significant group. Qualitative approaches are
becoming increasingly popular as a methodology for conducting
research in psychology (Ponterotto, 2002). Unlike many of the
social sciences that have viewed humans as social beings,
psychology typically considered humans as individuated selves
in isolation (McLeod, 1996) and tended to link itself more
closely with the natural sciences. Quantitative methods
dominated the field, the gold standard of empiricism being the
randomized control-trial experiment (Walsh-Bowers, 2002).
Qualitative research methods were used primarily in clinical
case studies to generate further understanding, and such
research was usually presented in ways that implied objectivity
and authoritative expertise on the part of the researcher. Walsh-
Bowers (2002) used the qualitative approach of interviewing to
investigate the experiences of psychology researchers with
qualitative methods and found that a strong theme was the
perceived difficulty of qualitative research being accepted
within the canon of psychology, as well as the lack of adequate
training in qualitative research. Despite these obstacles, over
the past few decades, there has been an increasing realization
3. that qualitative methods might be useful in answering particular
kinds of questions (Rennie, 1996). The place of qualitative
research may well be to generate discovery of phenomena rather
than verification, because when there is little known about a
field, qualitative inquiry is useful for generating themes that
may be operationalized by later quantitative research (Heppner,
Kivlighan, & Wampold, 1992). One way of comparing these
methodologies and seeing the resultant gain is to examine two
approaches to a single topic. Bracey, Bámaca, and Umaña-
Taylor (2004) explored the relationship between self-esteem and
ethnic identity development among biracial and monoracial
adolescents through administering different measures to a large
group of adolescents. They found that biracial adolescents had
significantly lower selfesteem than Black adolescents but
significantly higher than Asian adolescents. Biracial adolescents
reported higher levels of ethnic identity than White adolescents,
though lower than Black and Asian adolescents. The authors
also found a significant positive relationship between
selfesteem and ethnic identity. In a qualitative approach to the
topic of biracial identity, Gillem, Cohn, and Throne (2001) used
a case study method following two biracial youth to describe
their identity development. Rather than deriving statistical
significance from their findings, this approach allowed the
generation of narrative examples of the complex process of
racial identity development. Although each participant
identified as Black, the paths they took were very different and
had different meanings and consequences. Embracing Blackness
for one individual meant feeling betrayed by White physical
traits and experiencing rejection from other Blacks, resulting in
his low self-esteem; for the other, it meant finally achieving
high self-esteem and a refusal to reject any part of herself,
including her positive relationship with her White parent. Both
quantitative and qualitative approaches, therefore, generate
useful information that is derived differently and can be applied
differently. Whereas the first allows for generalizability, the
second allows for deeper understanding of an issue in terms of
4. context and complexity. Hill, Thompson, and Williams (1997)
described a step-by-step process of conducting consensual
qualitative research, a method of action research well-suited for
studying complex clinical phenomena in counseling. Beyond
coding therapist and client behaviors or creating scales to
determine the strength of the working alliance, qualitative
research can focus on the meanings such experiences hold for
the client and the therapist as they naturally occur, discovering
inductively what may guide the process. By focusing on the
meaning of experience, qualitative research can be helpful in
generating more ideas about what clients find helpful, useful,
non oppressive, and empowering, while taking into account the
diversity of clients and the context of their interactions with
counselors. The following set of studies demonstrates the
building of a strong foundational basis through qualitative
research. Thompson, Worthington, and
Atkinson(1994)investigated how African American women
college students responded in simulated client sessions to
African American and European American counselors who
either made a point of raising racial issues or avoided the topic.
Sessions were
videotapedandtheinteractionsqualitativelyanalyzed.Oneofthefind
ingsthatemergedwasthatthepseudo-clientsself-
disclosedmoreintimatelywhenaskeddirectlyabouttheirexperience
sasBlackwomenona
majorityWhitecampus.Extendingthatstudy,ThompsonandJenal(1
994) focusedonthepseudo-
clientsandfurtheranalyzedtheirinteractionswith theirrace-
avoidantoruniversalisticcounselors.Theyfoundthatthe pseudo-
clientswhoraisedissuesofracewerelikelytoeitherconcedeto
theircounselor’suniversalisticresponsesortodisengagefromtheirc
ounselor.Frequently,whenthepseudo-clientsweremetwithrace-
neutralizing
responsesonpresentingtheirracialissues,theywouldbecomeexaspe
rated.Inessence,theclientsneededtonegotiatetheircounselor’spost
ure
6. foundational understanding that all qualitative research is
informed by culture. Because all individuals, including the
researcher, are cultural beings, the impetus, focus, and methods
of the research will be shaped by the researcher’s worldview.
Given this position, it is impossible to conduct culturally
neutral qualitative research. Thus, all strategies are developed
to identify, articulate, and manage subjectivity rather than to
eliminate it. There are several important aspects of highlighting
the cultural lens and participant perspectives which will be
discussed in the following sections.
BRACKETING
The task of the researcher is to interrogate the cultural lens he
or she brings to the research, explaining it to the reader so as to
provide the reader with a direction from which to judge the
research. This reflexivity (McLeod, 1996) in qualitative
research defines the trustworthiness of the researcher. It also
allows researchers to bracket their own subjectivities to allow
participant voices and meanings to be more clearly heard.
For example, when a European Canadian woman seeks to do
research with women of color (Gerrard, 1995), it is critical to
articulate why she chose to engage in such research as well as
describe the conflicting tensions that her participants felt and
her own positions on these issues. With less soul searching, but
as much attention to detail, the authors of a study on African
American and European American therapists’ experiences of
addressing race in psychotherapy (Knox etal., 2003) described
themselves in terms of their identities, positions, and
experiences with multiculturalism. Obviously, this is very
different from the quantitative research position, where the
investigators are separate from their research and are subjects
who report but are not scrutinized in turn. In qualitative
research, the question is one of exploring and clarifying the
boundaries of subjectivity rather than seeking to banish it. On a
related note, Nevid and Sta Maria (1999) point out that it is
important when working with participants from ethnic minority
groups that have a long history of oppression to acknowledge
7. cultural mistrust. A researcher needs to both account and
prepare for the potentially mistrustful and hostile reactions and
responses she or he may encounter and strategize means of
building trust.
helpfultechniquetousetosensitizetheresearchertoculturalissues
istheuseofthebracketinginterview(Fontana&Frey,2000).Priortoen
teringthefieldtocollectdata,theresearcheristhoroughlyinterviewe
d
byacolleague.Thefocusoftheinterviewisontheresearcher’ssubjecti
vityandbackground.Oneparticularstrategytodelineatethisistoask
theresearcherquestionssimilartothosetheresearcherproposestoask
participants.Becausequalitativeresearchersoftenbringidentitiesas
wellasintrinsicexperiencesandperspectivestotheirresearch,thispr
ocessallowsthosephenomenologicalassumptionstobearticulateda
nd
thensetasidesoastosensitizetheresearchertowhatmayemergefrom
theparticipants.
SENSITIZINGRESEARCHQUESTIONS
Once the researcher has developed a coherent statement that
explains his or her cultural location, it is time to apply a
cultural lens to the research itself. Several areas are germane
here that are peculiar to qualitative inquiry. On the one hand,
qualitative research can be explicitly designed to be action
research, focused on sociopolitical and historical problems of
domination, alienation, and social struggle. For instance,
Gerrard (1991) explored the intersections of racism and sexism
in three stories of women of color experiencing counseling.
Constantine (1999) analyzed the themes arising in 17
autobiographical narratives of racism generated by counselors.
On the other hand, a research method that strives to capture the
richness and complexity of experience may also be extremely
intrusive and potentially harmful. It is necessary to tread
cautiously when the focus of research is on areas of
vulnerability, with the concurrent potential for impeding and
doing harm to clients (McLeod, 1996). There are a number of
resources available to researchers to sensitize them to the issues
8. relevant to the population of interest. For instance, Stubben
(2001) details some of the particular issues around American
Indian and Alaskan Native family values and environments that
a researcher must be sensitive to in conducting research with
such populations. Examining areas of social identity such as
race, gender, sexual orientation, or socioeconomic class, where
the researcher is treading on sensitive ground mined by the
experiences of oppression and discrimination, requires
sensitivity. As an example, if the researcher wishes to study the
experiences of Latinas, the questions designed to explore this
issue will need to be asked only after building a trusting
relationship. It will be important for the researcher to develop a
coherent explanation of who is meant by the identity label
“Latina.” Are participants approached on the basis of
selfidentification, identification based on appearance, familial
heritage, identified culture of origin, or perhaps familiarity with
Spanish? This is where work done prior to entering the field is
crucial so that the researcher is not caught completely off-guard
by complexities about which he or she is unaware. Imagine the
potential harm done by a naïve researcher, unaware of the
implications, who expresses surprise that the Latina participant
does not speak Spanish. The Latina participant needs to
understand the researcher’s interest, believe that the experience
of sharing will have ultimate positive value, and feel safe when
she chooses to disclose. The consequences of the process
undertaken by the researcher impact not only the participant’s
safety but also the quality of the data. After all, a participant
who is distrustful will either refuse to participate or will give
shallow or misleading responses. The complexity and richness
of her experience will be lost to the study.
PROTECTINGPARTICIPANTS
Beyond asking unsafe or potentially hurtful questions, ethical
issues arise because anonymity is difficult to maintain in
intimate samples where stories told are saturated with unique
markers and changing too many such markers will drastically
change the landscape of the narrative. Given the exploratory
9. nature of the inquiry, risks are harder to determine in advance.
Finally, the close contact between researcher and participant
blurs traditional boundaries that separate researcher and subject
(Grafanaki, 1996). Researchers must give careful attention to
the protection of their participants. Beyond the requirements for
the protection of human subjects, researchers must also consider
the particular threats that can arise when someone speaks out
about issues of culture or oppression. For instance, if a
researcher is exploring the organizational system of a school, is
it possible to sufficiently disguise the voices of the two African
American teachers while retaining the integrity of their
experience? If there are few people of color in the setting,
simply changing the specific ethnic group identification will not
create anonymity. Is there a possibility that members of the
setting who read the research can not only identify the
participants but also negatively target them for speaking out
about racial matters? Researchers can use several strategies to
protect their participants. Careful explanation to participants
about the risks of participation encourages participants to give
informed consent, as well as demonstrating respect for the
participant’s ability to weigh risks and choose with
deliberation. Developing multiple ways to protect anonymity,
including inviting participants to choose pseudonyms, changing
identifying details of location, and conducting interviews in
neutral sites, is also helpful. Often, presenting participants with
completed research reports allows them the option to comment,
critique, and perhaps withdraw participation if the risks are too
great. In presenting research, developing blended narratives that
exemplify the emerging themes also reduces the presence of
unique identifying markers.
TRIANGULATION
Triangulation is the combination of various methodologies in
the study of the same phenomena (Patton, 1990). Taken from
the term used in land surveying, it implies that taking bearings
in two or more directions allows one to locate oneself more
accurately at the intersection. Triangulation can take place in
10. (1) data collection, using a variety of data sources; (2)
investigators, using multiple investigators or evaluators; or (3)
theories, by applying multiple perspectives to a single problem.
As pointed out by Halbrook and Ginsberg (1997), ethnographic
transference and countertransference become significant issues
to explore in conducting qualitative research. As foundational
elements of analytic theories of psychotherapy, transference and
countertransference originally referred to the client’s
displacement of feelings and attitudes applicable to significant
figures onto the analyst and vice versa (Reber, 1995). In the
context of qualitative research, it refers to the displacement of
such feelings and attitudes between the researcher and the
participant. For instance, when a counselor begins interviewing
participants who had been clients in counseling, many may
respond to the investigator as a counselor rather than a
researcher (Choudhuri, 2003). In turn, the boundaries of how
the researcher responds to these participants may begin to blur
as to whether a response is therapeutic or investigative. It is
important that researchers explore and address these issues in
multiple ways. As mentioned earlier, bracketing is important to
articulate why the research became the focus of the researcher’s
attention so as to be able to catch and filter the prevailing
reactivities that may lead to ethnographic countertransference.
During the course of the research, investigators may use
multiple interviewers to gather data from different sorts of
interview relationships. Therefore, the ways in which
Vietnamese American participants are responding specifically to
a Vietnamese American interviewer may be highlighted by the
different content of the participant’s responses to African
American and European American interviewers. Stephenson,
Wolfe, Coughlan, and Koehn (1999) conducted two sets of
qualitative interviews with older adults, changing the gender of
the interviewer/participant pairing to have both cross-gender
and same-gender interviews to assess the differences. They
found that both the male and female participants focused on
very different topics and content based on the interviewer’s
11. gender. Having multiple interviewers allowed for this effect to
be discovered and discussed. Another method of exploring these
issues is the safety of multiple staggered interviews with the
same participant, where the researcher can explore the content
of previous interviews and remain alert to transferential
phenomena, as well as bring it up to be explored with the
participants. Sharing transcripts of interviews with participants
for them to expand on, correct, or modify is another way of
addressing these issues. The act of bringing the research
toparticipants rather than simply getting it fromthem invites
participants to become partners in the research, and often they
will address the issues of authority and identity spontaneously.
One of the advantages of qualitative research is the flexibility
and creativity that can be used. For instance, Kim, Brenner,
Liang, and Asay (2003), in their study of 1.5-generation Asian
Americans, decided to use electronic mail as a way to safeguard
their participants from shame and possible loss of face as they
described sensitive adaptation experiences. Given traditional
Asian cultural values of restraint, the investigators believed that
a face-to-face interview format would reduce forthright and
comprehensive self-disclosure. On the other hand, Hendrix
(1998), in researching college students’ perceptions of professor
credibility by race, deliberately chose to be open with her
identity as a Black woman researcher investigating student
perceptions. Rather than having White confederates assist in
interviewing White students, she chose to present to the reader
her rationale for not doing so and then explore how both Black
and White student interviewees responded to her.
SENSITIVEDATAANALYSIS
The point when the researcher leaves the field and begins
making sense of the data is sometimes referred to as “data
mining,” with a very real sense that the researcher is entering
the overwhelming, claustrophobic, and dimly illuminated code
mines (Glesne & Peshkin, 1992). This is the part of the journey
where the researcher begins to make sense of the data and de
facto applies a particular cultural lens to the material. The data,
12. too, often consist of an intersubjective dialectical experience
(Crossley, 1996): the record of conversations between
researcher and participants, the record of observations by the
researcher, or memos by the researcher articulating responses,
reactions, and experiences in the fieldwork. Even texts and
historical materials that may be part of the data have been
purposefully selected. On this material, the researcher strives to
impose some order and meaning. Methods to maintain cultural
sensitivity and highlight multiple representations are necessary.
Strategies include using inductive analysis, so that codes,
categories, and themes come out of the data rather than being
imposed. Starting with indigenous concepts and typologies
(Patton, 1990), that is, verbal categories that were used by
participants rather than asked by researchers, helps this process.
For instance, if the researcher was studying children in a
diverse sixth-grade classroom, starting to code by applying
words used by the children and teachers rather than by the
theoretical literature may open more possibilities of capturing
the meaning of the diversity experience from the perspective of
the participants. Triangulation is again important in data
verification and validation. Many studies use teams of
researchers to examine the data and code separately, before
coming together to share their coding systems. In some cases,
the primary researcher will code the data and then ask an
external reader to review the codes assigned. Alternatively, a
helpful set of participants may review preliminary findings and
give feedback and critique of the data analysis. This testimonial
validity, where the interpretation is