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FORMAL INVESTIGATION - Coggle Diagram
FORMAL INVESTIGATION
Start of the investigation
Open interview. The researcher is the research instrument and not the protocol or interview form. Your role involves not only getting answers, but also learning what questions to ask and how to ask them.
Semi-structured interview. The researcher prepares a thematic script about what he wants to be discussed with the informant. The questions that are asked are open. The informant can express their opinions and even deviate from the script.
Initial interview and presentation. The interview is the technique with which the researcher tries to obtain information in an oral and personalized way.
Structured interview. The researcher prepares a script. The questions will be closed. The interviewee will not be able to make any kind of comments, they can only affirm or deny an answer or give an exact and concrete answer.
Research proposal
Research sources. Those that provide us with information for our research. The sources can be the content of books, newspapers, conferences, web pages, videos, databases, interviews, theses, manuals, among others.
Times to invest and levels of analysis. Its definition has a lot to do with the thematic location of the object to be investigated.
Research technique. Set of methodological and systematic procedures whose objective is to guarantee the operability of the investigative process.
Research Problem. It is the starting point of an investigation that demonstrates the existence of a situation or context on which it is worth indicating and clarifying different points.
Category construction
Set of questions. The information is collected in a standardized way by means of a questionnaire for all subjects, which enables comparisons to be made.
Situational diagnostic. The purpose of the research effort is to help explain why things are the way they are or happen the way they do.
Bibliographic foundation, The textual strata and the bibliographic records point to the explanation of the problem posed.
Initial solution proposals. The first step toward solving a research problem is to consider these problems as part of researching and documenting and analyzing them.
Field analysis
Spaces and subjects. A detailed description of the setting and the position of the people within it provides important insights into the nature of the participants' activities, their patterns of interaction, their perspectives and ways of presenting themselves to others.
Observation and interview records. Accessory details such as gestures, non-verbal communications, tones of voice, and the speed of people's speech are important in understanding the interaction and interpreting the meaning of the words of the people interviewed
Intervening dimensions. Field notes should include a record of the researcher's feelings, interpretations, intuitions, preconceptions, and future areas of inquiry. These comments will be symbolized with the initials "C.O" (observer comments).