Very short post just to say; this is my Radio & Factual research blog.
I will be using different research methods in this blog:
Secondary research, Primary research, Audience research, Market research, Production research & Interpreting results.
I will be making at least a 5 minute podcast that involves an interview.
Research Unit 3 & Factual Unit 46
Thursday, 6 February 2014
Wednesday, 5 February 2014
Unit 3.1-Research Methods Assignment
Primary research
Research methods are needed to back up theories or
statements. Without research, you have no proof and therefore no one will
believe or agree with your theory/statement. The research methods that will
help with this are primary, secondary, qualitative and quantitative.
Primary research is basically, your research. It could be an
interview, observations or even a questionnaire. With primary research you have
more control. In an interview you could ask someone to elaborate on his or her
answers, this would give us more information that we need. However, if the
interviewee isn’t prepared to elaborate or is tense, they will get confused and
muddled-up. Less information will come from this.
In an interview, if you are informal you will get the
interviewee to feel more relaxed, this minimises the chances of them getting
muddled-up. If you are formal, you will make the interviewee feel more nervous
thus making it harder to get the needed information out of them. This will get
more information because they will be more relaxed and wouldn’t be ‘fake’ by
giving false information.
A structured interview is more specific. These are basically open/closed
questions. If you want reliable and specific answers to find the information
you are after then a simple yes or no answer is best. A semi-structured
interview though is more formal. You would ask additional questions,
then ask questions relating to their answer.
Observations are another primary method. These could be over
a short or long period of time. They are very reliable and less expensive, if
they work. They might not work though because people may feel uncomfortable and
nervous being watched. This would affect their behaviour; they would become
‘fake’ and act differently, the way they think you want them to act.
Questionnaires are effective if you want specific answers.
You could also separate them into groups by asking questioning whether they are
male/female or ask their age. However, if they don’t understand a question you
are unable to rephrase it or explain it, so they will skip it and you lose
information. They may also feel judged and therefore put an answer they feel
you want or put what others have put. Thus making it bias.
Secondary research
Secondary research is other people’s work. It
could be Books, Internet forums even the World Wide Web. Books are quite useful
in secondary research as you can pick out the relevant information you need.
You also only need to go to a library to access the books needed, so easy
access. However, The books could be biased, one-sided, or out of date. This
would make the books unreliable.
Secondary research is mainly used because it costs less than
primary research and can be found in a larger variety of sources and
interpretations. The World Wide Web is quick and cheap to use, gives a basic
understanding of the information it gives and allows you to expand your
research. But, websites like Wikipedia are not really trustworthy because
anyone can edit it and they could be wrong and therefore the information taken
isn’t reliable.
Qualitative research
Qualitative research is word-based research. This could be
field notes, journals, observations & interviews. The advantages of
qualitative research are that it is straight to the point instead of key
information surrounded by unneeded information. It is just pure, specific
information. With that it is easier to have an idea of what to expect in the
bigger picture unlike quantitative research. It is a lot cheaper than
quantitative as well since it is on a small scale. The disadvantage is that
because it is on a small scale then you can only make assumptions on the small
amount of info that you have and not on further audiences. This means that a
safe assumption is not feasible.
Quantitative
research
Quantitative research is number based. This could be
statistics, surveys & viewing figures. This research has a relationship
with both dependent and independent study. The advantages are that it can give
a lot of detailed, accurate information. The disadvantages are that for
quantitative research you need a large sample of the population since the
larger the sample the more accurate. This leads to it being expensive. Also the
numbers can change often so to keep up with the changes, the research needs to
be done often. Thus wasting more money, as the process is expensive.
Audience Research
Audience research is split into different sub-catagories which are social capital, cultural capital, financial capital and educational capital. These sub-catagories are known as the Anthony Giddens theory. Social class is the main focus of Audience research. Social class is divided up
into these classes, A~Upper Middle Class, B~Middle Class, C1~Lower Middle Class, C2~Skilled Working Class, D~Working Class and E~Non-Working. Audience research into social class will help you understand what each class likes and expects so that when your production is finished you will have more people viewing your production.
Market Research
Market research is used to find out what people enjoy watching and listening to. This relates closely to audience research as people will be split into categories like sex, age, social class and education. Surveys can be used to find out what people like and also know what type of audience they are. This also requires looking at other productions similar to ones you ant to create to see which ones are popular and which are not. This also allows you to find out what type of information you can put into you production as you need to know if they can watch/listen to hard or soft news. This allows you to gain more ratings as by the end of the research you will know what interests different people.
Production research
Production research is focused on copyright, financial, locations, facility and time issues. These need to be research because if left un-researched the whole production could fall flat. Copyright is important as if you want to use somebody's song you have to credit the owner and sometime have to pay for usage, if you don't you can and most probably will get sued for forgery. Finance is important as you need to create a budget so that you can make profit on the production, within this budget you need to pay for actors/actresses, equipment and locations. You need to know when an actor/actress is available since you could hire a location for £500 a month and only have the actor/actress for two weeks, this makes it two weeks waste of money and have to pay extra to book it longer. Otherwise it would be a waste of time.
Market Research
Market research is used to find out what people enjoy watching and listening to. This relates closely to audience research as people will be split into categories like sex, age, social class and education. Surveys can be used to find out what people like and also know what type of audience they are. This also requires looking at other productions similar to ones you ant to create to see which ones are popular and which are not. This also allows you to find out what type of information you can put into you production as you need to know if they can watch/listen to hard or soft news. This allows you to gain more ratings as by the end of the research you will know what interests different people.
Production research
Production research is focused on copyright, financial, locations, facility and time issues. These need to be research because if left un-researched the whole production could fall flat. Copyright is important as if you want to use somebody's song you have to credit the owner and sometime have to pay for usage, if you don't you can and most probably will get sued for forgery. Finance is important as you need to create a budget so that you can make profit on the production, within this budget you need to pay for actors/actresses, equipment and locations. You need to know when an actor/actress is available since you could hire a location for £500 a month and only have the actor/actress for two weeks, this makes it two weeks waste of money and have to pay extra to book it longer. Otherwise it would be a waste of time.
Conclusion
There is a potential for all research to obtain
false information. In primary research people could give pressured answers,
where they answer the same as the most popular answer. This could mess up the
whole research. However, each research technique could give the researcher
valuable information that the others might not.
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