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MagistrateStork2869
I NEED AN EXPERT TUTOR WHO CAN MAKE THIS TASK. PLEASE EXPLAIN EACH…

I NEED AN EXPERT TUTOR WHO CAN MAKE THIS TASK. PLEASE EXPLAIN EACH BY NUMBER. USE YOUR OWN WORDS BY EXPLAINING AND STRICTLY DO NOT COPY FOM INTERNET.

INSTRUCTION: EXPLAIN EACH BY NUMBER. ELABORATE IT. PLEASE FOLLOW MY INSTRUCTION.

1. Sensory perception has a lot to do with identifying and characterizing “facts” in the social data set. Practically, everything that people do as outcome of their interaction with other people within a given social context is considered a “social fact.” These facts should, from the beginning, be able to reveal themselves through the sensory faculties of the one doing the observation.

2. Ethnography is a special methodology in the social sciences that aims to describe what constitutes a particular social phenomenon: event, actors, interactions, relationships, ideas, symbols, and objects.

3. The simple practice of ethnography of food, for example, will teach us so many things about an aspect of human life and human society-from the microperspective-which is a formidable intellectual project in itself. This mode of inquiry is related to an “inductive” type of reasoning, which means understanding the “general” context through an examination of the “specific” situation.

4. participant observation – actual and physical participation of the researcher in group activities;

5. in-depth interviews – formal and detailed interview of Kls;

6. focus group discussion – facilitating a discussion with a number of Kls guided by the researcher’s agenda;

7. life history method – in-depth examination of the social phenomenon from the lens of the personal life story of a Kl; and

8. ocular inspection – familiarization with the location and physical context of the subject area.

9. “Fieldwork” is the social research technique of going to the “field” to conduct a face-to-face study of the subject matter. Though traditionally associated with far-flung areas and nonindustrial, rural societies and linked to ethnography and anthropology (including archaeology), more and more disciplines are now taking up the fieldwork as a vital piece of their curriculum, training, and agenda.

10. Sociology, Linguistics, and Geography are also drawn to this method because the nature of their disciplines involves an examination of human phenomena-social, linguistic, and geographic-from where they actually manifest or unfold.

11. Political scientists, psychologists, and demographers enrich their analyses by going to the field and interacting with people in their everyday contexts and knowing about their informants’ life histories.

12. Applied social science disciplines-social work, media studies, communication, arts studies, ethnomusicology, and the like-benefit a lot from fieldwork and face-to-face, primary, and firsthand data gathering of social issues, events, and concerns.