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| List of Tables and Figures | p. ix |
| List of Examples | p. xi |
| Introduction | p. xvii |
| What Is Ethnography? | p. 1 |
| Ethnography as Science | p. 1 |
| The Historical Evolution of Ethnographic Methods | p. 5 |
| Ethnography for Problem Identification and Solving | p. 8 |
| Characteristics of Ethnography | p. 12 |
| What Is Culture? Differentiating the Individual from the ... MORE | p. 24 |
| A Note on Ethnicity, Culture, and Race | p. 27 |
| Power, Situatedness, and Positionality | p. 30 |
| The Impact of Cultural Politics on Identity and Research | p. 32 |
| When, Where, and By Whom Should Ethnography Be Used? | p. 35 |
| Situations Requiring Ethnographic Research | p. 35 |
| Settings Appropriate for Ethnographic Research | p. 41 |
| Who Should Do Ethnographic Research? | p. 45 |
| Important Personality and Stylistic Requisites for Ethnographers | p. 46 |
| Paradigms for Framing the Conduct of Ethnographic Research | p. 55 |
| Multiple Perspectives: A Cultural Way of Doing Research | p. 56 |
| What Are Research Paradigms? | p. 57 |
| The Positivist Paradigm | p. 58 |
| The Critical Paradigm | p. 62 |
| Interpretive Paradigms: Meaning-Making in Interactional Contexts | p. 67 |
| The Ecological Paradigm | p. 71 |
| The Social Network Paradigm | p. 73 |
| A Paradigmatic Synthesis | p. 76 |
| Summary | p. 85 |
| An Overview of Research Design | p. 87 |
| Research Design: A Blueprint for Action | p. 87 |
| Research Designs in Social Science Research | p. 95 |
| Quantitative Designs | p. 95 |
| Qualitative Designs | p. 112 |
| Rapid or Compressed Research | p. 122 |
| Mixing Designs: Integrating Quantitative and Experimental with Qualitative Research Designs | p. 126 |
| Choosing and Designing an Ethnographic Research Project | p. 129 |
| Where Do Research Questions Come From? | p. 130 |
| Deciding What to Investigate: Transforming Research Purposes into the Elements of a Research Design | p. 134 |
| Putting Together the Elements of a Research Design | p. 135 |
| Elaborating Research Questions | p. 137 |
| What Are Data? | p. 143 |
| The Processes of Operationalization and Research Modeling | p. 147 |
| Conceptualizing Research Models and Conceptual Modeling | p. 150 |
| Identifying Populations and Study Sites | p. 154 |
| Strategies for Selection of Sampling and Units for Study | p. 169 |
| Collecting Ethnographic Data | p. 173 |
| Techniques for Collecting Multiple Types of Data | p. 173 |
| Resources and Logistics: How Ethnographers Allocate Time, Money, and Staff | p. 183 |
| Creating Planning Documents and Timelines | p. 187 |
| Summary | p. 192 |
| Data Analysis: How Ethnographers Make Sense of Their Data | p. 195 |
| Analysis as Both a Cognitive Process and a Technical Procedure | p. 195 |
| "Chunking" Data into Large Conceptual Categories or "Bins" | p. 199 |
| Defining Terms: Operational and Conceptual Levels of Analysis | p. 204 |
| Finding Initial Themes or Regularities | p. 210 |
| The Item Level of Analysis: Isolating Empirical "Bits" from Streams of Data | p. 213 |
| The Pattern Level of Analysis: Aggregating Similar or Related Items into Groups | p. 215 |
| The Structural Level of Analysis: Assembling Multiple Patterns into Structures or Local Theories Informed by Conceptual Domains | p. 217 |
| Seeking Complex Relationships across Domains and Structures by Using Multiple Levels and Sources of Data | p. 220 |
| Interpreting the Results: Figuring Out What the Story Means | p. 220 |
| Levels of Theory | p. 222 |
| Summary | p. 224 |
| Identifying and Building Research Teams and Research Partnerships | p. 227 |
| Building and Conducting Ethnographic Team Research | p. 231 |
| Building Interdisciplinary Community Research Partnerships | p. 243 |
| Challenges and Rewards in Ethnographic Teamwork and Interdisciplinary Intersectoral Collaborations | p. 249 |
| Applying Ethnography | p. 251 |
| Introduction to Applying Ethnography | p. 251 |
| Products of Ethnography | p. 252 |
| Informing Public Audiences: Dissemination | p. 254 |
| Developing Interventions: Formative Research | p. 262 |
| Improving Quantitative Instruments | p. 265 |
| Influencing Teacher/Educator Practice | p. 267 |
| Democratizing Ethnography through Participatory Action Research | p. 270 |
| Improving Process and Outcome Evaluations | p. 272 |
| Influencing Policy | p. 277 |
| Supporting Advocacy | p. 279 |
| Contributing to Science | p. 281 |
| Summary | p. 282 |
| Protection of Risk to Human Subjects and the Ethics of Ethnographic Fieldwork | p. 285 |
| A Brief History of Concern for the Ethical Treatment of Research Participants | p. 286 |
| Ethics and the Individual Researcher | p. 303 |
| Ethics and Institutional Issues | p. 306 |
| The Special Concerns and Ethical Responsibilities of Ethnographers | p. 309 |
| Conclusion | p. 316 |
| References | p. 319 |
| Index | p. 337 |
| About the Authors | p. 353 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |