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Diario de Investigación×Método del diario×Etnografía×
CampoMetodología de encuestasMetodología de encuestasCualitativa
FamiliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Año de origen1981 (methodological codification); diary use in research dates to 19th-century anthropology1920s–1940s (systematised by Allport, 1942)c. 1922 (Malinowski's Argonauts of the Western Pacific)
Autor originalRobert G. Burgess (systematic methodological treatment)Gordon Allport (systematic social-science use); Nels Anderson (early fieldwork diaries)Bronisław Malinowski (modern ethnography); rooted in 19th-century anthropology
TipoQualitative data collection and reflexivity toolQualitative / mixed-methods data-collection techniqueQualitative fieldwork tradition
Fuente seminalBurgess, R. G. (1981). Keeping a research diary. Cambridge Journal of Education, 11(1), 75–83. link ↗Alaszewski, A. (2006). Using Diaries for Social Research. Sage. ISBN: 978-0761941415Hammersley, M. & Atkinson, P. (2019). Ethnography: Principles in Practice (4th ed.). Routledge. ISBN: 978-1138504462
Aliasresearcher diary, field diary, research journal, reflexive diarydiary study, diary technique, self-report diary, daily diary methodEtnografi, participant observation, fieldwork, ethnographic research
Relacionados655
ResumenA research diary is a systematic, dated log maintained by the researcher throughout a study to record methodological decisions, emergent observations, analytical hunches, and reflections on researcher positionality. Unlike a participant diary, it is authored by the researcher and functions simultaneously as a data source, an audit trail, and a reflexivity instrument.The diary method is a data-collection technique in which participants record their thoughts, behaviours, events, or experiences in their own words at regular or event-contingent intervals over a defined study period. By capturing data close in time to the event, diaries reduce retrospective recall bias and give researchers access to the texture of everyday life as it unfolds — something one-off surveys and retrospective interviews cannot provide.Ethnography is a qualitative research tradition in which a researcher immerses themselves in a social group or community over an extended period — typically three to six months or longer — to study its culture, values, and behaviours in their natural setting. Originating in social and cultural anthropology, and consolidated as a rigorous method by Bronisław Malinowski in the early twentieth century, ethnography produces rich, contextualised accounts of how people live, work, and make meaning together.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Research Diary · Diary Method · Ethnography. Recuperado el 2026-06-18 de https://scholargate.app/es/compare