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BJSW Advance Access originally published online on October 31, 2005
British Journal of Social Work 2006 36(7):1187-1207; doi:10.1093/bjsw/bch345
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© The Author 2005. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The British Association of Social Workers. All rights reserved.

Factorial Surveys: Using Vignettes to Study Professional Judgement1

Brian J. Taylor

Brian Taylor has been in social work for over twenty years and is currently Lecturer in Social Work at the University of Ulster. He has a particular interest in decision making, assessing and managing risk, and evidence-based practice.

Correspondence to Dr Brian Taylor, Department of Social Work, University of Ulster at Jordanstown, Shore Road, Newtownabbey BT37 0QB, Northern Ireland. E-mail: bj.taylor{at}ulster.ac.uk

Decision making is becoming an increasingly central feature of social work practice, yet there is limited research on the topic. Experimental methods of investigating decision making tend to be constrained by practical and ethical difficulties, whilst questions about validity and generalizability surround ethnographic and other descriptive methods. It is argued here that the factorial survey addresses these methodological difficulties as a research design to study the way that professionals make decisions in real life. In this research design, true-to-life vignettes (case scenarios or paper cases) are presented to social workers or other staff to make a judgement about a familiar type of scenario. The randomized factors within the vignettes, combined with the randomization of the selection of vignettes for each decision maker, give the factorial survey a unique capability to investigate the effect of multiple factors in complex decisions, unlike the more common factorial experiment. The method is explained, and prospects and issues for the development of this research design to study professional judgement within social work are discussed. The factorial survey has potential as a method for rigorous study of the impact of client, family and context factors on decisions by social work and social care staff.

Keywords: decision making, professional judgement, research methods, factorial survey, vignettes, assessment, risk


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