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Summary Methodology for Pre-Master CIS (all important theory exam!)

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Summary Methodology for Pre-Master CIS (Fall 2022) All important definitions are provided and explained. Important tables are provided. And the goals and a short extra summary of every chapter. This summary is in order of syllabus of Methodology Premaster CIS

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Methodology for Pre-Master CIS (Fall 2022)
Summary; Introducing Communication Research: Paths of Inquiry (4th ed.), D.
Treadwell.


Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 9, 10, 11, 13
This summary is in order of syllabus of Methodology Premaster CIS
Mentioned pages are the page number of the pdf of the book!
All the definitions are also in the back of the book on alphabetical order if you are interested.

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Chapter 1. Getting started: Possibilities and Decisions
This chapter will help you
 Identify basic assumptions behind human communication research.
 Identify research questions that might be asked about communication.
 Describe some of the decisions required when planning communication research.


Any research project requires that you start by getting yourself oriented toward an area of
interest. And then decide what questions, assumptions and methods will answer your
question.
Every research question has assumptions behind it that reflect the researcher’s view of
communication.
Basic assumptions behind communication research:
Consciously or implicitly, researchers bring these assumptions to their research. Several
major assumptions are outlined below.
 Observation capture/ do not capture an underlying reality.
no one has ever actually seen an attitude, but the behaving in a particular way for example.
We research attitudes on the assumption that they exist, or at least that it provides a useful
tool for thinking about communication processes.
 Theories about human behaviour can/ cannot be generalized
If our world is full of unique individuals, we are not entitled to make any generalizations
about them. Nonetheless, researchers using survey or experimental methods typically will
want to assume that the results of their research will apply to people who are similar to the
study participants assumption that people are similar.
 Researches should/ should not distance themselves from their research participants.
The more distant the observer becomes, the more neutral or dispassionate she can be, but
she will be unable to get deeper insights. But moving closer will make her open to
influencing the group dynamics or becoming biased.
 Research should/ should not be done for a specific purpose
 There is/ is not one best position from which to observe human behaviour
Some aspects of a question are more important to look at than others and there is one best
standpoint from which to observe human communication.
Some aspects of a question are more important to look at than others and, related, that there is one
best standpoint from which to observe human communication. A simple way to understand this is to
consider an early telecommunications-based model of communication (Shannon & Weaver, 1949).
Given the complexities of human communication, it is an overly simplistic model, but it does identify
major components in any human interaction as follows:

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 Source—the provider or initiator of content
 Message or messages—the content of communication
 Channel or medium—the vehicle for communication content; for example, social media
 Receiver(s)—the recipient(s) or consumer(s) of information
 Noise—extraneous information or distractions that can disrupt an interaction
 Context—the relationships between individuals, the situation in which the interaction occurs,
and the cultural norms around that interaction.

Page 53; Looking at how researches approach an advertisement. You see that there are many
possible approaches to studying such communication content.

Globally:

A situation let to many research questions  advertisement for driving without texting  making
ads  does the ad work? (receivers of the message)  scientific approach  what can readers and
viewers tell us?  opinions of audience  what can the content tell us? (message content)  many
angles from which to study media content  (including rhetoric, content analysis, and critical theory)
 what can the creators of the ad tell us? (source of the message)  how/ why decisions about
content/ production were made.



Communication researchers have different agendas and assumptions that underpin the methods
they use. Because of the complexity of human communication, researchers focus on a part of that
totality.

Researches have to make choices, based on their theoretical resources.

 The field of study – wide or narrow?
 The researcher – Dispassionate or involved?

Dispassionate vs involved  quantitated vs qualitied research.

 The approach – Objective or subjective?
 The perspective – Your questions or their answers?
 The sample – Large or small?

Quantitative researcher mostly interested in larger samples. Qualitative researches more interested
in details, so go for smaller sample sizes.

 The data – Quantitative or qualitative?
 The report – subjective or objective?

Chapter Summary

This chapter introduced the ways scholars think about communication research, their main areas of
research, and the methods they use. In summary:

 Communication research is a process of posing questions about human communication and
designing and implementing research that will answer those questions.
 Communication researchers typically specialize in one aspect of communication.
 Researchers may use qualitative methods, quantitative methods, or both.
 Researchers have empirical, interpretive, or critical perspectives on communication.
 Human communication research inescapably involves ethical decisions.

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