250 likes | 399 Views
Qualitative Data: Oxymoron, right? Christine Maidl Pribbenow Wisconsin Center for Education Research cmpribbenow@wisc.edu. Session Outline. General discussion about educational research, assumptions, and contrasting educational research with research in the sciences
E N D
Qualitative Data:Oxymoron, right?Christine Maidl PribbenowWisconsin Center for Education Researchcmpribbenow@wisc.edu
Session Outline • General discussion about educational research, assumptions, and contrasting educational research with research in the sciences • Define common qualitative analysis terms • Code text and discuss
Definition Qualitative data is information which does not present itself in numerical form and is descriptive, appearing mostly in conversational or narrative form. Words, phrases, text…
Qualitative Data: Oxymoron or inherent tensions? • Hard vs. soft (mushy) • Rigor • Validity and reliability • Objective vs. subjective • Numbers vs. text • What is The Truth?
What are some of the assumptions that you have about educational research?How are they helping or hindering the development of your study?
Research in the sciences vs. research in education • “Hard” knowledge • Produce findings that are replicable • Validated and accepted as definitive (i.e., what we know) • Knowledge builds upon itself– “skyscrapers of knowledge” • Oriented toward the construction and refinement of theory • “Soft” knowledge • Findings based in specific contexts • Difficult to replicate • Cannot make causal claims due to willful human action • Short-term effort of intellectual accumulation– “village huts” • Oriented toward practical application in specific contexts
What are some sources of qualitative data? • Lab notebooks • Open-ended exam questions • Papers • Journal entries • On-line discussions, blogs • Email • Twitter/ ‘tweets’ • Notes from observations • Responses from interviews and focus groups
Qualitative Data Analysis Qualitative analysis is the “interplay between researchers and data.” Researcher and analysis are “inextricably linked.”
Qualitative Data Analysis • Inductive process • Grounded Theory • Unsure of what you’re looking for, what you’ll find • No assumptions • No literature review at the beginning • Constant comparative method • Deductive process • Theory driven • Know the categories or themes using rubric, taxonomy • Looking for confirming and disconfirming evidence • Question and analysis informed by the literature, “theory”
Example Research Questions Why do faculty leave UW-Madison? Do UW-Madison faculty leave due to climate issues?
Definitions: Coding and Themes • Coding process: • Conceptualizing, reducing, elaborating and relating text– i.e., words, phrases, sentences, paragraphs. • Building themes: • Codes are categorized thematically to describe or explain phenomenon.
Let’s Code #1 Read through the reflection paper written by astudent from an Ecology class and highlight words, parts of sentences, and/or whole sentences with some “code” attached and identified to those sections.
Let’s Code #2 Read through this reflection paper and code based on this question: What were the student’s assumptions or misconceptions before taking this course?
Let’s Code #3 Read through this reflection paper and code based on this question: What did the student learn in the course?
Can we say that the students learned something in the course using reflection papers? Why or why not?
Ensuring “validity” and “reliability” in your research • Use mixed methods, multiple sources. • Triangulate your data whenever possible. • Ask others to review your design methodology, observations, data, analysis, and interpretations (e.g., inter-rater reliability). • Rely on your study participants to “member check” your findings. • Note limitations of your study whenever possible.
References • Designing and Conducting Mixed Methods Research, Creswell, J.W., and Plano Clark, V.L., 2006, Sage Publications. • Discipline-Based Education Research: A Scientist’s Guide, Slater, S.J., Slater, T.F., and Bailey, J.M., 2010, WH Freeman. • “Educational Researchers: Living with a Lesser Form of Knowledge,” Labaree, D.L., 1998, Educational Researcher, 27(8), 4-12. • Software • Atlas.ti and Nvivo