1 / 17

Qualitative Research

Qualitative Research. Theoretical Approaches Modalities of Qualitative Research Sampling Methods Software Packages. Qualitative Research. Qualitative research seeks to gain a comprehensive and holistic view of social life through the study of people in a wide range of natural settings.

yehudi
Download Presentation

Qualitative Research

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Qualitative Research Theoretical Approaches Modalities of Qualitative Research Sampling Methods Software Packages

  2. Qualitative Research • Qualitative research seeks to gain a comprehensive and holistic view of social life through the study of people in a wide range of natural settings. • It is used to capture expressive information not conveyed in quantitative data about beliefs, values, feelings, and motivations that underlie behaviors.

  3. Questions • How can you gather good data? • What should you do with the data?

  4. Theoretical Approaches • Grounded Theory: Theory that emerges from data • Superimposed Theory: Start with theory & determine if the data support your theory

  5. Qualitative Techniques • Observational Studies • Unstructured data collection • Structured data collection • Categorizing phenomena • Checklists • Rating scales • Interviews central to the relevant group or process • Focus groups • Key Informants • Critical incident reports • Case study evaluation

  6. Qualitative Techniques • Recording and analysis of key interactions • Audiotape or videotape • Attention to data validity • Triangulation: collection from independent sources using differing means • Feedback from study participants • Thorough examination of outlying cases • Attention to data reliability • Detailed documentation of analysis • Parallel review by independent investigators

  7. Content Analysis • Researchers thoughtful reflections • Researchers analyze the data based on themes • Statistical packages

  8. Software Packages • Disadvantages • Slow down analysis phase • Stifle creativity • Doesn’t do thinking for you • Researcher is part of the analysis • Loose context • Don’t know what was said before, • Can include more information as you input the data • Advantages • Organize data • Store data • Easy to retrieve data • Frequency count of words • Easier to examine relationship between data

  9. Strategies for Combining Qualitative & Quantitative Methods: The Priority Sequence Model • Qualitative method serves as an input to a primarily quantitative study • Can generate hypotheses, develop content for questionnaires & interventions • Example: You are uncertain about how to communicate with a particular group, so you conduct focus groups to develop the content for a survey or intervention • Source: David Morgan (1999)

  10. Strategies for Combining Qualitative & Quantitative Methods: The Priority Sequence Model • Quantitative method serves as an input to a primarily qualitative study • Can guide purposive sampling, establish preliminary results to pursue in depth • Example: You are unsure which groups have the characteristics you are interested in, so you conduct a brief survey, prior to selecting the groups you will study in depth • Source: David Morgan (1999)

  11. Strategies for Combining Qualitative & Quantitative Methods: The Priority Sequence Model • Qualitative method serves as an extension to a primarily quantitative study • Can provide interpretations for poorly understood results, help explain outliers • Example: You want to understand more about why the results of a survey or intervention came out the way they did, so you run focus groups to help interpret the results • Source: David Morgan (1999)

  12. Strategies for Combining Qualitative & Quantitative Methods: The Priority Sequence Model • Quantitative method serves as an extension to a primarily qualitative study • Can generalize results to different samples, test elements of emergent theories • Example: You want to determine where else the conclusions from a case study are likely to apply, so you use a brief survey to determine the characteristics of other sites • Source: David Morgan (1999)

  13. Measurement Bias • Researchers frequent immersion in the day-to-day lives of their subjects make some qualitative studies susceptible to measurement bias • Researcher is not detached or unbiased • Full disclosure has been suggested as a way to deal with bias • Minimize bias in other ways

  14. Inclusion of Qualitative Approaches in NIH grant applications • Systematic description of the nature of the data collection methods to be used • Presentation of a clear and convincing rationale why qualitative approaches are not only appropriate for addressing the research questions at hand but why they are the most likely to produce useful findings • Source: Qualitative Methods In Health Research, Office of Behavioral & Social Sciences Research, NIH

  15. Inclusion of Qualitative approaches in NIH grant applications • Focused discussion of the universe studied and the sample recruited for qualitative assessment (including accounting for the relationship between the sample to the universe, by using a clearly described sampling plan) • Specification of the timeframes that bound data collection (e.g., observations designed to sample variation across hours of the day, days of the week, and weeks of the year • Source: Qualitative Methods In Health Research, Office of Behavioral & Social Sciences Research, NIH

  16. Inclusion of Qualitative approaches in NIH grant applications • Careful presentation of the nature of the data to be collected • An orderly account of the analytic procedures to be performed, including specification of how findings can be interpreted • Source: Qualitative Methods In Health Research, Office of Behavioral & Social Sciences Research, NIH

  17. References • Daly, Kerry. The Fit Between Qualitative Research and Characteristics of Families. In Jane Gilgun, Kerry Daly, and Gerald Handel (Eds), Qualitative Methods in Family Research (pp.3-11). Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1992. • Emerson, Robert, Rachel I. Fretz, and Linda L. Shaw. “In the Field: Participating, Observing and Jotting.” In Emerson et al., Writing Ethnographic Fieldnotes (pp. 17-38). Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1995. • Gold, Seven. “Ethical Issues in Visual Field Work.” In Grant Blank, James McCartney and Edward Brent (Eds.) New Technologies in Sociology (pp. 99-109). New Brunswick, New Jersy: Transaction, 1989. • Harrell-Bond, Barabra. “Studying Elites: Some Special Problems.” In Michael Rynkiewich and James Spradley, Ethics and Anthropology (pp. 110-122). New York: Wiley, 1976. • Lofland, John and Lyn Lofland. “Data Logging in Observation: Fieldnotes.” In John Lofland and Lynland, Analyzing Social Settings (pp. 89098). Albany, New York: Wadsworth, 1995. • Morgan, David. “Planning and Research Design for Focus Groups.” In David Morgan, Focus Groups as Qualitative Research (pp. 31-45). Newbury Park, CA: Sage, 1997. • Weiss, Robert. “Writing the Report.” In Robert Weiss, Learning from Strangers: The Art and Method of Qualitative Interview Studies (pp. 183-206). New York: Free Press, 1994.

More Related