Explain the four distinct elements that go into creating full and detailed field notes:
What will be an ideal response?
1. Cryptic Jottings: Brief statements, sketches, short notes, or odd/unusual terms heard in the field that will trigger a memory later when writing full field notes.
2. Detailed Descriptions: The heart of field notes that includes as much texture, color, and sensation remembered. Conversations should be replicated as close to verbatim as possible with details including how people appeared, what they said, what they did, and noticeable characteristics (scars, tattoos, concealed weapons).
3. Analytic Notes: Sometimes referred to as observer comments, these are the ideas that occur to you as you write up full field notes. They might be linkages between people or theories serving to explain something in the field, or a judgment observation about a subject. They should be noted as an observer comment.
4. Subjective Reflections: These are the personal observations and comments about feelings that the researcher may have had as a result of observing something in the field. These should be labeled as subjective reflections.
5. Additionally, researchers must record time and duration or field notes, and consistent pseudonyms for places and people. An ethnographer should maintain a list of the pseudonyms assigned to each person and location recorded in their field notes.
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In the context of process evaluation, quantitative fidelity measures include:
A) focus groups with colleagues.? B) ?observation of sessions. C) ?audit interviews with clinicians. D) ?quality assurance data.
The "buffering hypothesis" is best exemplified by?
a. an ability from infancy on to gain other's positive attention b. sporadic nurturing during the first year of life. c. the absence of role models. d. all of the above
Genograms are
a. diagrams of how a family interacts with the rest of its environment.
b. schematic diagrams of family relationships.
c. maps of generational social deviance.
d. charts depicting family support systems.
Catharsis is typically evident in:
A) ?Working groups B) ?Nonworking groups C) ?All therapeutic groups to one degree or another D) ?Working groups, however, only in the Working Stage