20
NUR AIN BINTI MOHAMAD P83010

archival Study

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

archival study

Citation preview

Page 1: archival Study

NUR AIN BINTI MOHAMAD P83010

Page 2: archival Study

DEFINITION• Information that already exists in

someone else’s files• Primary research which involves seeking

out and extracting evidence from original archival records

• Non experimental strategy that involves studying existing records/archival data to test hypotheses

Page 3: archival Study

• archival research can be defined as the locating, evaluating, and systematic interpretation and analysis of sources found in archives.

Page 4: archival Study
Page 5: archival Study

WHEN?

• Investigate events in the past • To get a complete picture• Address issues of change over time

Page 6: archival Study

TYPES OF ARCHIVAL DATA

• Knowledge and awareness of issues• Demographics of the population (e.g.,

age, education, income)• Behavior• Health and development outcomes• Environmental conditions or

risk/protection factors affecting the population

Page 7: archival Study

RECORD FORMATS

• Unpublished manuscripts and records • Printed and published materials • Maps, plans, and architectural drawings • Visual materials, including photographs• Audiovisual materials • Computer-generated materials • Artifacts, ephemera, and memorabilia

Page 8: archival Study
Page 9: archival Study

SOURCES OF ARCHIVAL DATA

• Public records from governmental agencies

• Research organizations• Health and human service organizations• Schools and education departments• Academic and similar institutions• Business and industry

Page 10: archival Study
Page 11: archival Study
Page 12: archival Study

ADVANTAGES• It’s easier and less time-consuming• already been processed by people with more

statistical expertise. • Even with raw data, the basic organization

and preparation (transcription of interviews, entry of numbers into a spreadsheet or specific software, etc.) may have already been done, again saving time and resources.

• It’s quite possible that you can find more information than you’d be able to gather if you did it yourself.

Page 13: archival Study

• Archival data could touch on important areas you have not considered, or identify patterns or relationships you wouldn’t have looked for

• It may eliminate the need to correct for problems,

• Archival data allows the possibility of looking at the effects of your work over time.

• Archival data can make it possible for small organizations with limited resources to conduct thorough evaluation studies.

Page 14: archival Study

DISADVANTAGESa. Survival bias It has to survive through time for you to

see it • institutional preservation bias • period bias (wars destroy many

documents) • so absence of evidence needs to be

interpreted carefully

Page 15: archival Study

b. All information is filtered c. Problem of interpretation given

difference in time D. Time consuming - approval

Page 16: archival Study

EXAMPLES

Page 17: archival Study

IMPLICIT EGOTISM(Pelham, Carvallo & Jones, 2005)

• Using a data from social security record - Social Security Death Index (SSDI)

Page 18: archival Study

• Virginia, Georgia, Louise, and Florence were especially likely to have moved to the states of Virginia, Georgia, Louisiana, and Florida.

Page 19: archival Study

THE EFFECTS OF PSYCHOTHERAPY: AN EVALUATION

(Eysenck, 1952)

• Archival data from state hospital and insurance company records showing that similar patients recovered at about the same rate without receiving psychotherapy

Page 20: archival Study

• Bordens, K. S., & Abbott, B. B. (2011). Research Design and Methods: A Process Approach (8th Ed.). New York, NY: McGraw-Hill

• Corti, L. (2004). sage research methods. Retrieved Oktober 20, 2015, from Sage: https://srmo.sagepub.com/view/the-sage-encyclopedia-of-social-science-research-methods/n20.xml

• Eysenck H J. The effects of psychotherapy: an evaluation. J. Consult. Clin. Psychol. 16:319-24, 1952. [Inst. Psychiatry, Maudsley Hosp., Univ. London, London, England]

• Pelham, B. W., Carvallo, M., & Jones, J. T. (2005). Implicit Egotism. American Psychological Society , 106-111.