Doing Media Research
An Introduction
- Susanna Hornig Priest - Oregon State University, USA
Features and Benefits: ·
- Explores both qualitative and quantitative approaches to help beginning students understand both, so they can choose the right approach for a particular problem
- Assumes no background in statistics and
introduces most topics with a minimum of algebra, explaining all technical
concepts in simple language in the text (and in the extensive glossary)
- Explains the disciplinary origins of our various research methods, the nature of academic publishing, and the importance of the academic literature
- Emphasizes the process of research design as applied to real-world problems and incorporates discussion of research ethics throughout the book
- Gives students a chance to practice as they go along through chapter-by-chapter exercises, rather than approaching methods as an abstract subject that must be learned by rote
- Describes advanced techniques in general terms to give beginning students an understanding of the full range of tools available without getting in the way of their ability to use more basic approaches right away
too quantitatively focused
This is a great introductory book for undergraduate and postgraduate journalism and media students. It uses simple language and straight forward examples and avoids being verbose or alienating. However it is definitely a starter book rather than one for students who have already undergone a lot of research methods reading already.
Proved to be more generic that specific to media studies. I was looking for a text that would help students to specifically work with research questions using mass communication data. Hence i choose it as a supplementary text
Too simplistic for postgraduate research. More attention needed to be paid to qualitative methods of analysis.