What are the three categories of field notes and what do they include?
What will be an ideal response?
1. Verbal exchanges (between others or the researcher and others): These can be interviews with participants, eavesdropped exchanges, messages and communications between various individuals, conversations, arguments, discussions, dialogues, complaints, and any communication-based interactions spoken to or overheard by the researcher.
2. Practices (various routines, actions, and interactions among and between participants): Observed practices are the ways that individuals or groups say or do things routinely; the way that participants regularly engage in behaviors.
3. Connections between and among observed exchanges and practices: Connections are associations between observed actions, interactions, and behaviors. They are the meanings and understandings apprehended by the researcher (etic), and the participants (emic).
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What theory can be attributed to the belief that students and families are embedded in multiple systems influenced by social processes?
a. Ecological theory b. Hope theory c. Attachment theory d. Strain theory
Todd conducted a study of American Indian tribes in the state of Colorado between 1880 and 1920. He interviewed elderly Indians about what they remembered of their childhood and the stories told to them by their parents and grandparents
His data is a(n) A) running records. B) oral history. C) supporting evidence. D) non-source based knowledge. E) primary sources.
A social services practitioner is treating an adult lesbian client who is
addicted to alcohol. The client came out a year ago and lost relationships with several friends and family members. The practitioner should probably ________. A. find out if the client has a partner and have them enter behavioral couples therapy B. counsel the client on the losses but not the alcoholism C. treat the client's sexual orientation as the problem causing the alcoholism and the pain of her losses D. treat the client's alcoholism within the context of the client's life as a lesbian
Radical movements in the social work field emerged during
(a) the Progressive Era; (b) the 1930s; (c) the 1960s; (d) all of the above.