The Thing
Make it Make Sense
Do it Right
Talk About It
Wild Card
100

This method uses guiding questions but allows the participant to lead the conversation.




What is a semi-structured interview?

100

The most commonly occurring value in a numerical data set. 

What is the mode?

100

This report, released in 1979 created guidelines for ethical research in the United States. 

What is the Belmont Report?

100

This term describes the entire group you want to understand — like all students at a university.




What is the population?

100

A student says their survey is “anonymous,” but they also collected emails for extra credit. You explain that this actually makes their survey this.




What is confidential (not anonymous)?

200

This observational product includes both descriptive notes and your immediate reflections.




What are field notes?

200

This process uses multiple data sources to cross-check findings for credibility.




What is triangulation?

200

This ongoing self-questioning process helps researchers stay ethically accountable and aware of bias.

What is reflexivity?

200

This term means your measure gives the same results when you use it again.


What is reliability?

200

Name three tips for crafting a research question. Think Dos/Donts.

Varies. 

300

This social method allows you to map who talks to whom, who supports whom, or who shares resources in a group.




What is social network analysis (SNA)?

300

A table aligning qualitative themes and quantitative results to synthesize meaning is called this.

What is a crosswalk?

300

Tuck (2009) warns against this kind of research that defines communities solely by harm or trauma.

What is damage-centered research?

300

Turning a concept like “community well-being” into measurable indicators is this step.




What is operationalization?

300

A step in between when your survey is complete and when you begin to recruit.

What is pilot testing?

400

The method used when you have members of a youth group take photos and write captions to explore how their neighborhood shapes their feelings of safety.

What is photovoice?

400

A form of coding that uses the participant's own words as the code labels. 

What is in-vivo coding?

400

The process of confirming findings with participants.

What is member-checking?

400

This term describes the thing you’re actually studying — whether it’s people, neighborhoods, relationships, or memes.




What is the unit of analysis?

400

Your professor's zodiac sign.

What is Virgo?

500

During an interview, a participant keeps giving short answers. You switch to follow-up questions like, “Can you tell me more about that?” You’re using this interviewing skill to improve your data.

What is probing?

500

The method you were taught to prepare quantitative data for analysis. You must describe at least 3 of the steps. 

What is the CLEANR method?

Compile

Label/Name

Examine

Alter

Reconfigure/Re-examine

New Variables


500

A researcher enters a community, collects interviews, publishes a paper, and never returns. This violates this major ethical principle in community work.

What is non-extractive research?

500

You want to study “community safety,” so you intentionally recruit people who have experience with policing or neighborhood issues. You’re using this sampling strategy.




What is purposive sampling?

500

A hater tells you arts-based research isn't real research. Give them a three-pronged rebuttle in support of ABR.

Varies.