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Orientation to Field Work

Orientation to Field Work. Orientation to Field Work. Why field work is necessary Why this orientation is necessary What NOT to do in the field What to do in the field Other field issues Conclusion. Why is field work necessary?. You can’t solve a problem unless you really understand it.

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Orientation to Field Work

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  1. Orientation to Field Work

  2. Orientation to Field Work • Why field work is necessary • Why this orientation is necessary • What NOT to do in the field • What to do in the field • Other field issues • Conclusion

  3. Why is field work necessary? • You can’t solve a problem unless you really understand it. • You can’t solve rural poverty by sitting at a desk in an air-conditioned office on the other side of the world.

  4. Why is this orientation necessary? • We hold our field staff to these same rules • Rural areas and India are new to many of you • Field work is new to almost everyone in the room • There have been past incidents!

  5. What NOT to do in the field • Do NOT accept food, water, or anything else from respondents • Do NOT smoke, curse, drink alcohol, consume paan, etc. in or around respondents • Do NOT take photos of someone without his or her explicit permission • Do NOT give money, gifts, etc. to respondents or surveyors

  6. What NOT to do in the field • Do NOT interrupt an ongoing survey, even if you see problems. Instead, immediately after the survey, talk to the surveyor separately. Additionally, inform the supervisor afterwards.

  7. Ladies AND men: • Anything “tank top,” camisole, etc. (Even sleeveless is a little risky in the rural areas) • Anything above the knee • Anything really tight • Anything that reveals underwear • If you are unsure, ask your fellow RA

  8. What to do in the field • Pay attention to what your supervisor asks you to do: he or she knows best how to act in your particular situation. • Keep your mobile charged and on, but on SILENT or VIBRATE mode

  9. What to do in the field • Be polite. Remember, you are a guest in someone’s home and in someone’s village. • Do your best not to attract attention. • Walk behind the surveyors • Sit in the back of a room, instead of at the chair in the front • Smile!

  10. What to do in the field • Be gracious • Thank the respondent for letting us visit her home and take her time • Thank the surveyor who let you visit

  11. Other Field Issues • Fake Surveys: - surveys completed without visiting HH - Goat surveyed - Surveyed a respondent who is not in the village for years - Part filled up/part made up • Common Excuse: -HH not found -HoH/members not present • Lack of clarity: -Concept behind each question -Definition -Protocol -Over confident

  12. Other Field Issues • Field decorum: - Flashy dress - Not respecting village complexities (girl/boys holding each other hand and going around the village • Behavioral issues - Arrogant - Not respecting people privacy • Missing surveys - Reported as completed • Scrutiny • Manipulation (expense)

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