The Ethnographic Research
The Ethnographic Research
The Ethnographic Research
Abstract This chapter of the book deals with the nature of ethnographic research
and the research tools it employs—ethnographic interviews and participant obser-
vation. The chapter focuses on the role of ethnographic researchers, the dimensions
that ethnographers must consider in order to get a comprehensive collection of
information, and the analysis of findings.
belonging, their roles and place, are extremely important in ethnographic research
(Harrington 2003; Heyl 2001). Researchers’ identity, origins and professional
background are significant in social processes needed by the research, and
researchers who come from similar professions or society are perceived as
authoritative and reliable, able to listen, allow expression and better understand the
relationships in which they are involved.
During research, researchers must maintain reliable and participatory relation-
ships with research population, and prevent, as much as possible, any opposition or
restraint on their part. They must carry out extensive documentation about what
occurs and behaviours, a process that sometimes arouses suspicion and makes it
more difficult for participants to cooperate. Therefore, their role is to recruit par-
ticipants who will cooperate with and trust them, and to develop significant dia-
logue and interpersonal relationships with sensitivity, flexibility and care. Creating
a healthy interaction such as this between subjects and researchers is gradual and
takes time (Harrington 2003). However, researchers remain on the fence as external
observers of events, who do not try to interfere with or influence events or change
participants’ behaviours. Researchers must choose what they observe and what
interests them, according to the aims of their research; to understand phenomena
they witness without influencing them at all (Alpert 2006).
As it is difficult to predict events and happenings, researchers must take the
unexpected into account, be flexible, patient and consistent in their work, in case
data collection is disrupted by local events or social, political or other changes
(Reeves et al. 2008).
Ethnographers gather their information using different research tools, such as
observations, interviews, structured and informal conversations, document analysis
and others (Gordon et al. 2001; Stemler 2001). Data is collected from a number of
information sources and in a variety of ways, such as observing processes and
interpersonal interactions, listening to what people say and discuss, examining
phenomena, texts and customs as they happen, documenting interviews with par-
ticipants, analysing documents, journal, photographs and certificates and examining
objects and accessories (Genzuk 2003; Karnieli 2008; Shlasky and Alpert 2007).
Owing to the vast complexities of natural social life, Reeves et al. (2008) sug-
gested a number of dimensions that ethnographers must consider in order to get a
comprehensive collection of information:
Dimension examining where research took place: examination and detailed
description of the physical space and place where research was carried out;
Dimension examining participants/subjects: description of the range of people
active in the surrounding and involved in the activities under investigation;
Dimension examining activities: description and documentation of the activities
that transpired during and at location of research;
Dimension examining objects: detailed descriptions of objects, physical elements
found in the research space;
Dimension examining actions: description of individual actions performed by each
and every participant;
12 2 The Ethnographic Research
Interviews are a means of collecting rich and detailed information directly from
research population, as presented in their words. The purpose of interviews is to
establish basic processes for transmitting information, opinions and perceptions,
while giving interviewees time and opportunities to express their opinion fluently
and openly and giving interviewers time to ask questions and request clarifications
in order to get a broad picture of information, opinions, thoughts and emotions.
Interviewees have the opportunity to provide completely honest answers, to explain
what they mean and how events and place in their lives and environment, to present
their relationships with people around them and provide their interpretations to all
these (Heyl 2001; Zanting et al. 2003). They are asked to reconstruct and describe
in their words events and social experiences, their opinions, beliefs and feelings.
Ethnographers must be skilled in-depth interviewers, enabling their subjects to
recount their experiences, describe their thoughts and feelings. For them, this re-
search tool contributes to expanding information they collect and enable them to get
a comprehensive picture as well as broad and rich insights about their subjects, their
culture and conduct (Reeves et al. 2008). Interpersonal relationships between
interviewer and interviewees are very important to the research process and
therefore researchers must be punctilious and respectful listeners (Harrington 2003;
2.2 Ethnographic Interviews 13
Heyl 2001). They must maintain interviewees’ dignity during interviews and
encourage them to participate and narrate while maintaining interaction with them.
Sometimes only partial information is revealed in interviews and therefore
interviewers must encourage interviewees to impart information. Nevertheless, they
must take into account unspoken information and silences that testify to intervie-
wees’ deliberations and complexities of their answers. Hesitations, contradictions,
indecisions, changes in points of view and subjects that are not spoken about in
interviews are a significant part of the information gathered for research (Heyl
2001). The way in which interviewees choose to present their words enables one to
understand their identity and the significance that they attribute to their words
(Clandinin et al. 2007) while giving voice to personal experiences, to the “I” that
operates in a cultural context, to advance interpersonal conversation and appreciate
social happenings (Holt 2003; Trahar 2009; Wall 2008).
Observations are a further means used by ethnographers to collect data for research.
In observations, researchers watch personal happenings in specific contexts, by
making themselves suitable to the environment, but not part of it. Participant
observation enables provision of explanations, contexts, reasons and reinforcement
for assumptions, and as such will take place often during research and at different
times.
Researchers who use observations to collect information must be intimate
partners, as much as possible, in the lives and activities of participants. They must
act skilfully, as an internal observer of everything that happens, see and feels things
as part of a group without influencing participants’ behaviour. This way,
researchers can study the culture of a subject group in depth, and accordingly
explain participants’ behaviour and events (Genzuk 2003).
Observations enable distinction between behaviours and gestures, examination
of interactions and lack of interaction between people, listening to formal and
random conversations and their tone and seeing people’s movements and extent of
their presence (Guest et al. 2013). They take place in natural surroundings and
researchers report what they saw, heard and felt from their point of view.
Work on the final product of research, the researcher will connect emic issues
arising from subjective perspectives and etic issues arising from external perspec-
tives, so as to consolidate them into one research whole (Harris 1976; Olive 2014;
Shkedi 2003).
In summary, the characteristics of ethnographic research enable its presentation
as a diagnostic, as a microcosm of knowledge on a subject, and turn this knowledge
into generic and recursive knowledge. Collecting information on real situations that
took place in complex realities of social, cultural and political cultures as they are,
makes it possible to reach conclusions, construct a developing body of knowledge
and contribute directly to existing practical knowledge (Harvey and Myers 1995).
Ethnography presents an opportunity to conduct meticulous research directed at the
relevance of practice, which makes it an appropriate tool to link between scientific
and practical knowledge, and to enable them to exist cooperatively:
This makes the ethnographic approach a worthy contender for bridging the gap between
scholarly knowledge and practical knowledge, thus allowing for scholarship and practice to
develop in collaborative coexistence (Harvey and Myers 1995, p. 24).
Analysing the unique experiences of a veteran teacher educator was carried out
with the intention of deriving important insights from her personal experiences that
would benefit her colleagues, both in teacher education and the accumulated body
of research knowledge in this profession. Research characterized analysis of
experiences produce conclusions that both other teacher educators and the system
of teacher education can use, and as such the research, which is a type of
socio-cultural academic experience, becomes generic knowledge that everyone can
use.
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