Salstein studied people in these kinds of friendships.
What are long distance friendships?
100
This research method involves going out into the field, as Dunn does in the sexuality chapter.
What is sexuality?
100
Harris and Kalbfleisch were most interested in THIS stage of relationship development between people of different races.
What is initiation?
100
The researchers in this study examined women's experiences in STEM. STEM stands for THIS.
What is science, technology, engineering, and mathematics?
100
This theory describes the seemingly contradictory tensions that people face in relationships, such as wanting both independence from and connection with a romantic partner.
What is relational dialectics theory?
200
Before the episode we watched in class, these two "Friends" lived far apart.
Who are Monica and Rachel?
200
This term refers to the ethical practice in research whereby participants make a conscious and free choice to be included in a study.
What is informed consent?
200
According to Orbe's co-cultural theory, THIS term describes what someone knows based on her or his lived reality.
What is field of experience?
200
Instead of a research report, the study in this chapter was presented as THIS.
What is a performance script?
200
This term describes everyday talk that constitutes and is constituted by relationships and identities.
What is discourse?
300
THIS specific method of research, used in the friendship chapter, is qualitative but lands toward the realist end of the qualitative research continuum.
What are open-ended surveys?
300
In contract to media depictions of their profession, Dunn's participants defined their jobs in THIS way.
What is as legitimate work?
300
Karla Scott conducted focus groups with people at THIS intersection of identities; she found that her participants overcompensated and worked to dispel stereotypes.
Who are black women?
300
This is the primary difference between the narratives collected from participants in this study and other kinds of interview methodology studies we've read this semester.
What is narrative interviews are more open-ended, trying to elicit a whole story rather than a specific response.
300
Jennings-Kelsall and Solomon's study focused on the wives of this specific population.
What are wounded warriors?
400
According to the participants in Sahlstein's study, THIS is necessary for maintaining the friendships they discussed.
What is use of social media and other forms of CMC?
400
According to Madison, THIS term describes the notion that a researcher's identity and opinions on a topic necessarily influence that person's work.
What is positionality?
400
This term describes the belief that everyone in a group is the same, such that the perspectives of white women can stand in for all women. In her article, Karla Scott takes exception to it.
What is essentialism?
400
This scholar's narrative ontology is known as the "Narrative Paradigm"
Who is Walter Fisher?
400
When words "do things," or are performative, they can be described with this term.
What are speech acts?
500
This type of analysis involves the creation of a typology and the classification of communication behaviors as such.
What is taxonomic analysis?
500
This type of analysis imagines life as a play or performance; it focuses on tensions and conflicts in "characters'" lives.
What is dramaturgical analysis?
500
This research method, used in Harris and Kalbfleisch's study, involves asking people to rank various behaviors based on how likely they are to engage in them in different contexts.
What is Q-sort methodology?
500
Laura Ellingson uses THIS term to describe a postmodern approach to triangulation that brings together multiple perspectives, methods, traditions, and manners of dissemination into a coherent whole in a research project.
What is crystallization?
500
This theory focuses on the stress of transitions and turning points in romantic or family relationships.