Content 
          Analysis 
        
          - Content analysis is a method of research where you look 
            at content that has already been produced.
 
         
        
          - You look for things in the medium that you wish to study 
            in order to learn something about the people who created it. 
 
         
        
          - By quantitatively looking at what is in the texts, you can 
            find themes that may not be obvious when looking at the same content 
            at face value. 
 
         
        
          - Like other methods of quantitative analysis, you must form 
            concrete definitions of what you are studying, gather a representative 
            sample from the population you want to study, create codes for what 
            you are looking for, and analyze the data with statistics. 
 
         
        
          - The great benefit to content analysis is that it is non-reactive, 
            meaning that the act of studying the topic does not influence the 
            data.  
            
              - This is because the data is taken from sources which 
                already are produced.
 
             
           
         
        
          - Taking data from content which was not produced for the 
            purpose of the study is a critical part of content analysis.
 
         
        
          -  Very clear coding mechanisms must be created to make sure 
            that the data is accurate.  
            
              - Clearly articulating the coding procedure makes replication 
                possible. 
 
              - Coding depends on what medium you want to research, 
                but neutral coding is important so that researcher stereotypes 
                do not effect the data.
 
             
           
         
        
          - The units of analysis for content analysis are found in 
            the texts. Words, phrases, actions, articles, etc. can all be analyzed. 
            
 
         
        
          - Using structured observation, which is a systematic viewing 
            based on written rules, you code the units of analysis based on what 
            you are looking for. 
 
         
        
          - There are a few different things to look for in the content: 
            frequency, which is simply a count of something happening or not happening, 
            direction, which is the direction of some sort of message in the content, 
            intensity, which is the strength of a message in the content, and 
            space, which is simply the size of a message in the content. 
 
         
        
          - There are two types of coding in content analysis. 
 
         
        
          - Manifest coding looks at the explicit content of the text. 
            
 
          
            - This looks for words, phrases, etc. that are counted for 
              the data set. 
 
            - Manifest coding is more reliable than latent coding because 
              the word is either there or is not, and different results can only 
              come in error by missing a word. 
 
            - While the reliability is high, Manifest coding does not 
              take the context of the word into account, so the validity of the 
              measurement can come into question. 
 
           
         
        
          - Latent coding looks for the implicit meaning of the text. 
             
            
              - This type of coding uses a less strict guide to code 
                and looks for the messages behind the text. 
 
              - While latent is less reliable than manifest coding because 
                the coders interpretation is involved, the codes are often more 
                valid because it looks at meaning rather than face content. 
 
             
           
         
        
          - Intercoder reliability is important when more than one coder 
            is used to ensure that all coders are coding the text in the same 
            way. If there are differences in coding then a stricter guide must 
            be used or the coders must learn to code similarly. 
 
         
        
          - An important part of content analysis is the inferences 
            that can be made from the analysis.  
            
              - You are looking at the content of some text, not the 
                intent behind that text. 
 
              - The intent of the authors or the readers of the text 
                cannot be inferred. 
 
              - The texts themselves do not reveal anything about the 
                intent of the authors' effect on the audience.
 
             
           
         
         
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