Assessment Type | Assessment length / details | Proportion |
---|---|---|
Semester Assessment | 2,500 word essay 1 x Critical Reflection on Practice, 2,500 words | 33% |
Semester Assessment | 2,500 word essay 1 x Developed Research proposal, 2,500 words | 34% |
Semester Assessment | 2,500 word essay 1 x Critical Review, 2,500 words | 33% |
On successful completion of this module students should be able to:
1. understand and utilise a range of methods in the pursuit of grounded knowledge in understanding audiences and reception processes
2. evaluate different kinds of research for the security of their evidence, and the strengths and limitations of the methods used to acquire the evidence
3. consider critically their implicit conceptualisations of their `object of research? and their ethical and political implications
to ground students in a range of methods used in the researching of audiences and reception, with particular emphasis on qualitative traditions to enable them to evaluate the strengths and limits of each of these methods, to appreciate the practical tasks they impose, to consider critically both their implied definitions of the `object of research' and the ethical and political issues they raise to lay the foundations necessary for the kinds of research that students may wish to undertake for their dissertations
The module will explore issues of formulation of research questions, the grounding of these within traditions of research and theory, and effective modes of presentation of research findings. Students will encounter and evaluate a wide range of methods of research which have been utilised in the study of audiences and reception, most notably: observation; interviews; focus groups; content analysis; discourse analysis. A case study of a major research issue, for instance of the Disney Corporation, will be developed in order to highlight issues of sources of information, and applicable modes of research. Teaching and learning will be by a mixture of closely-investigated case-studies of published research, the consideration of cases of possible research (considering possible methods of investigation, associated issues of relations between investigators and research subjects, and ethical questions arising therefrom), and the carrying out of small research exercises subsequently discussed and evaluated.
Skills Type | Skills details |
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Subject Specific Skills | A considerable emphasis is placed in this module on combining ways of approaching and grasping methods of research: the close consideration of examples of the uses of methods; and the designing, conducting and evaluation of both processes and outcomes of their use. The module also gives experience of the division of labour and of collaboration in the conduct |
This module is at CQFW Level 7