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RESEARCH METHODS FOR GENDER ISSUES:The Procedure of Content Analysis

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Gender Issues In Psychology (PSY - 512)
VU
Lesson 05
RESEARCH METHODS FOR GENDER ISSUES
Content Analysis:
Content analysis is one of the most commonly used methods for assessing the impact of electronic  media,
literature, art, textbooks, and oral discussions. Content analysis is done keeping specific goals, objectives,
themes, and constructs in mind.
It is a part of archival research. Concept is an approach for systematically categorizing and analyzing the
content of the behavior or its related aspects or variables being studied. The analysis may cover contents of live
human behavior, books, journals, magazines, poetry, drama, movies, folktales, TV programs, school textbooks
and curricula, advertisements etc.
The Procedure of Content Analysis:
The content of the behavior or its related aspects/variables being studied is systematically categorized with
reference to some theory .The analyst scans contents of live human behavior, books, journals, magazines,
poetry, drama, movies , folk tails, TV programs, school curricula, advertisements etc. according to the
categories under consideration. Once objective identification of specific characteristics of contents has been
done, inferences are made and conclusions are drawn. For example, a number of researches have done content
analysis of TV programs, or textbooks to see how the two genders have been portrayed and presented.
Some other descriptive methods:
·  Unobtrusive measures
·  Archival data
Unobtrusive measures:
These are a form of indirect observation and indirect ways of data collection. The subjects under study may not
be present at the time of investigation. Information is gathered about the lifestyles, behaviors, and habits of the
people being studied through indicators present in the surroundings. Unobtrusive measures may be used as the
sole source of evidence, or for supplementing or cross-checking information collected through direct
observation.
At times when direct observation is not possible, such measures may replace observation. Physical Traces are
one of the sources of data in unobtrusive measures. Remains, remnants, fragments, objects, and products of
past behavior are used as evidence. For example, information regarding the life style of the women of the Indus
Valley civilization can be obtained by studying the dresses, pieces of jewelry, other bodily adornments, and
objects found through excavations and kept in museums.
Products and Use traces:
Cues to the use or nonuse of objects and items can also be used as evidence e.g. wall chalking, or graffiti on
walls of educational institutions can be used as indicators of how the people at the concerned locations think
about the opposite gender. The products used by people also reveal information about their habits and
lifestyles e.g. cosmetic products used by men and women have been noted through a study of garbage cans.
The researchers observed the contents of the area's garbage bins, instead of interviewing the residents.
Archival data or archival research:
Already existing records, documents, different forms of literature, newspaper items, photographs, movies,
documentaries, biographies, autobiographies etc are used as evidence or information in this type of research
e.g. using newspaper records to study the rate of crime during the past 20 years. Archival data may be used to
supplement data gathered through other sources.
Archives are places where data or Information are stored. Archives can be public or university libraries,
government offices, computerized databases, TV or radio libraries etc.
Experimental Research: Experimental Research is the type of research that brings scientific status to
psychology. It employs experimental method for finding evidence.
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Gender Issues In Psychology (PSY - 512)
VU
Experimental method: refers to using experimentation for studying a phenomenon. Experiments are
designed carefully in order to have carefully tested findings.
Experimental design: is the plan or structure or lay out of according to which an experiment is conducted.
Experiment: is the research procedure whereby the variable of interest (independent variable) is manipulated
and the effect of this manipulation is studied.
The main feature of experimentation is control.
When do we need to conduct experiments?
Experiments are needed:
When we have to test hypotheses, or
When we have to test the impact of a treatment, or program, on behavior.
Experiments are primarily used for investigating cause and effect relationships.
Main components of experimental research:
A hypothesis about the causal relationship.
An independent variable.
A dependent variable.
Manipulation of the independent variable.
Complete control over the dependent variable.
Types of variable involved in an experiment:
Three types of variables are involved in experimental research:
·
Independent variable
·
Dependent variable
·
Control/Intervening or confounding or extraneous variable
Independent:
Variable:
(IV)
Independent variable is the variable that the researcher hypothesizes to be the causal variable. The impact of IV
is investigated in the experiment. IV is manipulated in terms of kind or level.
Dependent Variable: (DV):
The variable thought to be the consequence or effect of IV. It is the measure of behavior on which the impact
of independent variable is being studied.
Control variable:
A potential independent variable that can have an impact upon the dependent variable; it has to be controlled
so that it does not interfere with findings about the impact of IV.
The logic of Experimental Research:
If there is a cause and effect relationship between the independent and dependent variables, then the
manipulation of the independent variable will bring about a change in the value of the dependent variable.
All other variables that can interfere with the findings have to be controlled in order to be sure of the findings.
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Gender Issues In Psychology (PSY - 512)
VU
A conventional experiment uses two groups of subjects:
Experimental
Group
Groups
in a Typical
Experiment
Control
Group
·Experimental research may adopt two main formats:
Within- Subjects
Design
Experimental
Design
Between- Subjects
Design
Example of experimental research on gender issues:
Although experimental research is used for investigating gender issues, it is not a method commonly preferred
by gender researchers.
Example: The study of the impact of viewing aggressive behavior in cartoons on male and female children:
Two groups of children, one male and one female were allowed to watch a cartoon series containing frequent
acts of aggression.
Their baseline level of aggression and indulgence in aggressive behaviors was measured before hand. The same
were measured after the cartoon- viewing phase.
Both groups showed an increase in the expression of aggression.
Advantages of Experimental Research:
·  The element of control gives edge to this approach, strengthening the status of psychology a science.
·  We can be sure about the cause and effect relationship.
Disadvantages of Experimental Research:
·  The subjects may exhibit artificial behavior instead of natural behavior.
·  Subjects may experience stress or pressure that may affect their behavior or performance.
·  Experiments are expensive, both in terms of time and money.
·  Ethical issues: We can not deceive and keep the subjects in dark about reality; but if we disclose the
nature and purpose of the experiment it may seriously affect the experimental procedure as well as the
findings.
Ex Post Facto Research:
It is a type of Quasi Experimentation, a form of Applied Research. Quasi Experimentation can be taken as
"sort of experimentation", not true experimentation. Quasi Experiments fit into the experimental framework,
although not planned, initiated, or controlled by the experimenter. In such studies the independent variable
occurs, or has occurred, naturally and the researcher studies its impact the way it is done in a laboratory
experiment.
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Gender Issues In Psychology (PSY - 512)
VU
The difference between the experimental design and ex post facto design:
Experiments involve random assignment of the subjects to the treatment conditions, whereas in ex post facto
research only those subjects are chosen who have already been exposed to theory variable under investigation.
Groups in a Quasi- Experiment:
Exposure group
Comparison group
Ex Post Facto Studies
Ex post facto research is used when the researchers are interested in studying causal relationship between two
variables, but the nature of the phenomenon is such that experimentation is not possible.
For example the impact of isolation for long durations, the behavior of boys brought up as girls, brain damage,
impact of high doses of androgens taken accidentally by pregnant mothers, or exposure to harmful drugs or
chemical substances.
The subject variable is the characteristic of interest and the readings or scores on a chosen aspect of behavior will
be the dependent variable.
Ex post facto research can employ different formats:
Nonequivalent Control Group Design: Two groups are compared, one exposed to the subject variable and the
other taken as the control or no-exposure group.
One-group pretest-posttest design: A design in the before- after format i.e., readings or data before exposure
are compared with those after exposure. It is a weak design involving problems of accuracy of the pretest data.
But at times this is the only resort e.g. when we have to study changes in behavior of acid burn victims, after
being burnt.
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Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION:Common misconception, Some questions to ponder
  2. FEMINIST MOVEMENT:Forms or Varieties of Feminism, First wave feminists
  3. HISTORICAL BACKGROUND:Functionalism, Psychoanalytic Psychology:
  4. Gender- related Research:Andocentricity, Overgeneralizing, Gender Blindness
  5. RESEARCH METHODS FOR GENDER ISSUES:The Procedure of Content Analysis
  6. QUALITATIVE RESEARCH:Limitations Of Quantitative Research
  7. BIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GENDERSHormones and Chromosomes
  8. BIOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN GENDERS: HORMONES AND NERVOUS SYSTEM
  9. THEORIES OF GENDER DEVELOPMENT:The Biological Approach,
  10. THEORIES OF GENDER DEVELOPMENT (2):The Behavioral Approach
  11. THEORIES OF GENDER DEVELOPMENT (3):The Cognitive Approach
  12. THEORIES OF GENDER DEVELOPMENT (3):Psychoanalytic Feminism
  13. OTHER APPROACHES:The Humanistic Approach, Cultural Influences
  14. GENDER TYPING AND STEREOTYPING:Development of sex-typing
  15. GENDER STEREOTYPES:Some commonly held Gender Stereotypes
  16. Developmental Stages of Gender Stereotypes:Psychoanalytic Approach, Hostile sexism
  17. CULTURAL INFLUENCE & GENDER ROLES:Arapesh, Mundugumor
  18. DEVELOPMENT OF GENDER ROLE IDENTIFICATION:Gender Role Preference
  19. GENDER DIFFERENCES IN PERSONALITY:GENDER DIFFERENCES IN BULLYING
  20. GENDER DIFFERENCES IN PERSONALITY:GENDER, AFFILIATION AND FRIENDSHIP
  21. COGNITIVE DIFFERENCES:Gender Differences in I.Q, Gender and Verbal Ability
  22. GENDER AND MEDIA:Print Media and Portrayal of Genders
  23. GENDER AND EMOTION:The components of Emotions
  24. GENDER, EMOTION, & MOTIVATION:Affiliation, Love, Jealousy
  25. GENDER AND EDUCATION:Impact of Educational Deprivation
  26. GENDER, WORK AND WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT:Informal Work
  27. GENDER, WORK AND WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT (2):Glass-Ceiling Effect
  28. GENDER, WORK & RELATED ISSUES:Sexual Harassment at Workplace
  29. GENDER AND VIOLENCE:Domestic Violence, Patriarchal terrorism
  30. GENDER AND HEALTH:The Significance of Women’s Health
  31. GENDER, HEALTH, AND AGING:Genetic Protection, Behavioral Factors
  32. GENDER, HEALTH, AND AGING:Physiological /Biological Effects, Changes in Appearance
  33. GENDER DIFFERENCES IN AGING:Marriage and Loneliness, Empty Nest Syndrome
  34. GENDER AND HEALTH PROMOTING BEHAVIORS:Fitness and Exercise
  35. GENDER AND HEALTH PROMOTING BEHAVIOR:The Classic Alameda County Study
  36. GENDER AND HEART DISEASE:Angina Pectoris, The Risk factors in CHD
  37. GENDER AND CANCER:The Trend of Mortality Rates from Cancer
  38. GENDER AND HIV/AIDS:Symptoms of AIDS, Mode of Transmission
  39. PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH FEMALES’ REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH
  40. OBESITY AND WEIGHT CONTROL:Consequences of Obesity, Eating Disorders
  41. GENDER AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY:Gender, Stress and Coping
  42. GENDER AND PSYCHOPATHOLOGY:The Diagnostic Criteria
  43. GENDER AND PSYCHOTHERAPY:Traditional Versus Feminist Theory
  44. FEMINIST THERAPY:Changes targeted at societal level
  45. COURSE REVIEW AND DISCUSSION OF NEW AVENUES FOR RESEARCH IN GENDER ISSUES