Getting Better Quality Stuff
- 1 April 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Urban Life
- Vol. 9 (1) , 34-50
- https://doi.org/10.1177/089124168000900102
Abstract
EDITOR'S NOTE: As the previous article suggested, critics as well as practitioners of ethnographic research have observed that researchers tend to overrely on informants, and as a comsequence they may overemphasize those data which support a favored imagery rather than reporting counterinstances which challenge that imagery or indicate possible variations. Michael Agar suggests that one remedy to this problem is a mix of quantitative and qualitative procedures. Drawing from cognitive anthropology, he suggests two formalization strategies which the ethnographer could employ in improving both data acquisition and analysis.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Place of Anthropology in Program EvaluationAnthropological Quarterly, 1978
- Drug Use and Abuse: Some Culture-Crossing QuestionsJournal of Psychedelic Drugs, 1977
- The Personal Approach in Cultural Anthropological Research [and Comments and Reply]Current Anthropology, 1976
- The Ethnologist as Stranger: An Essay in the Sociology of KnowledgeSouthwestern Journal of Anthropology, 1963
- Component, Assemblage, and Theme in Cultural Integration and DifferentiationAmerican Anthropologist, 1959