Title: Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes
1Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes
- Robert M. Emerson
- Rachel I. Fretz
- Linda L. Shaw
2What is ethnographic field research?
- The study of groups and people as they go about
their everyday lives, involving - 1. Entering into a social setting to participate
in the routines, develop relations with members,
and observe what is happening - ? participant-observation
- 2. Writing down in a systematic way your
observations to produce a textual record of your
experience
31. Participation
- Immerse yourself in others social worlds
- Enables you to grasp what is meaningful to
members - Gives you access to peoples experiences as
dynamic processes and interactions - Allows you to experience for yourself events and
the limitations/constraints of others lives that
give rise to such experiences
41. Participation
- Immersion precludes passive/detached observation,
meaning - DO NOT BE A FLY ON THE WALL!
51. Participation
- Immersion involves resocialization
- Becoming subject to their behavioral norms and
matrix of meanings - Learning what is required to become a member of
their social world - e.g. joining a church or religious group and
studying its beliefs
61. Participation
- The inside-outside distinction
- You cannot become a natural member
- Participation as an ethnographer is always
transient, and never as committed or constrained
as a natural member - The act of researching and writing is
marginalizing, ensuring that you will certainly
remain an outsider in some small way
72. Creating a written account
- Transforming and reducing a passing event that
exists at a certain point in time into a
permanent record, this involves selection! - There is no single or accurate way to write ones
observations of an event because of differences
in perception and interpretation - 3 accounts of a supermarket express lines, each
begins with a different perspective that compels
them to make different choices on what to
emphasize, marginalize, omit
82. Creating a written account
- Ethnographers take a stance in writing fieldnotes
- A stance is an orientation towards that topic of
study - Ones stance can be a theoretical discipline, or
a system of personal/moral beliefs, or political
orientation - Ones stance will influence which interactions
draw your attention, and the way you frame them
92. Creating a written account
- Social interactions in natural settings are
multichanneled while writing is linear - It is impossible for one observer to record or
notice everything in a scene - Must chose which dimensions of an event you would
like to record - an ethnographer who does not know the language of
a social setting can still benefit from his/her
understanding of non-verbal cues
102. Creating a written account
- Methods and Findings are inextricably linked
- An ethnographers data is a product of the
methods used, it is not just objective data - Any single situation consists of multiple
realities, one method will lead to one aspect of
this reality - Fieldnotes should account for this limitation
112. Creating a written account
- Indigenous vs. preconceived meanings
- Understand what an experience means to those
experiencing it, and preserve these indigenous
meanings - Personal reactions or preconceived concepts
should be marginalized, as they hinder your
understanding of indigenous meanings - Do not entirely deny personal reactions but
compare and contrast them to indigenous responses
122. Creating a written account
- Ethical Considerations
- Immersion may involve intimate relationships with
people, is it a betrayal of trust or invasion of
privacy to record their experiences textually - Does full disclosure of research intentions
relieve the ethnographer from ethical concerns?
132. Creating a written account
- An alternative perspective
- Ethnographers have no obligation to disclose
research intentions to subjects - Social life involves ones consent to be
observed, by either by-standers or social
researchers - All social beings dissemble their lives,
maintaining separate public and privates spheres
142. Creating a written account
- Ethical Considerations
- Some may see ethnographic research as an invasion
of ones intimate and private experiences. - ? Is this justified by the claim that this
research serves the greater good?
15Participating in order to write
- Record initial impressions
- - environment tastes, smells, sounds, sights,
spatial details, colors - -people gender, class, race, appearance, dress,
interactions with one another, tone, mannerisms - Record dialogue verbatim rather than as
summarized dialogue
16Participating in order to write
- Pay attention to what members react to as
meaningful or interesting - Account for the fact that indigenous meanings are
not static, they are inextricable from when,
where, and from whom they were discovered
17Participating in order to write
- Keep your range of interests broad if you
observe a single situation, be open to observing
others of a similar type - Keep in mind that exceptions to a pattern that
youve observed can buttress your argument, try
to discover what conditions led to such an
exception
18Participating in order to write
- Avoid making unqualified generalizations
- e.g. She wasnt a talker as opposed to
- She didnt say very much
- Avoid making inferences about a persons
motivations or internal thoughts - Make note of what someone says, and how they say
it, but not why
19Participating in order to write means.
- Orienting yourself to see events and interactions
as potential written records
20The process of jotting notes
- Concentrate on a remembered scene more than on
single words which can narrow your attention to
the entire scene after the fact - Record as much detail as quickly as possible
- Save evaluation and editing of the scene until
you have written all the details you can
remember, your notes should be as spontaneous as
the interactions you are observing