Title: Naturalistic Inquiry: Methods of Qualitative Analysis
1Naturalistic InquiryMethods of Qualitative
Analysis
- Recurring Features, Multiple Approaches
- Analytic Method
- E. Ayn Welleford, PhD,
- VCU Department of Gerontology
2Recurring Features of Qualitative Method
- Qualitative Research
- Is Naturalistic
- Is conducted through an intense and/or prolonged
contact with a field or life situation - Typically involves normal day to day experiences,
reflective of everyday life of individuals,
groups, societies, and organizations. - Requires that the researcher gains a holistic
(systematic, encompassing, integrated) overview
of the context under studyits logic,
arrangements, explicit or implicit rules
3Recurring Features of Qualitative Research
- Qualitative Research
- Attempts to capture data from the inside
through - Deep attentiveness
- Empathetic understanding
- Suspending or bracketing preconceptions about
the topics under discussion - Directs the researcher to isolate certain themes
and expressions that can be reviewed with
informants, but must be maintained in their
original forms throughout the study.
4Recurring Features of Qualitative Research
- Primary task
- explicate the ways people in particular settings
come to understand, account for, take action, and
otherwise manage their day-to-day situations.
5Recurring Features of Qualitative Research
- Interpretation
- ah, the big question!
- Many interpretations are possible but some are
more compelling for theoretical reasons or on
grounds of internal consistency
6Recurring Features of Qualitative Research
- Qualitative Research
- Involves the researcher as a measurement device
- Involves little standardized instrumentation
- Participant directed
- Emergent process
- Involves mostly analysis of text data
- Words are organized to permit the researcher to
compare, contrast, analyze, and bestow patterns.
7Three Approaches to Qualitative Data Analysis
- Interpretivism
- Phenomenologists are looking for the deep
understanding - Capturing the essence of an account
- interpretation of the account by the actors and
the researcher - Require that researcher is no more detached than
the informants - Often difficult to separate interviewer from
interviewee - Phenomenlogists generally do not use coding
- Semiotics, deconstructivism, aesthetic criticism,
ethnomethodologists
8Three Approaches to Qualitative Data Analysis
- Social anthropology
- Ethnographers focus on extended contact within a
given community, looking for patterns, or
rules - Description of local particularities,
individuals perspectives and interpretations of
their world - Uses multiple data sources (language, artifacts,
diaries) - Condense the data with less concern for
conceptual or theoretical meaning than observation
9Three Approaches to Qualitative Data Analysis
- Social anthropology
- Many social anthropologists are interested in the
genesis or refinement of theory and may begin
with a conceptual framework and field test - Cross-cultural theory in socialization,
parenting, and kinship has resulted from field
research - Life history, Grounded theory, ecological
psychology, narrative studies, wide range of
family studies follow this line
10Three Approaches to Qualitative Data Analysis
- Collaborative social research
- Action research is a general strategy for
institutional change. - Researcher, with local help, design a field
experiment (e.g., changing the offerings in a
cafeteria, redesigning staffing of a unit,
student evaluations, program evaluation) - Date are collated and given to the activists
both as feedback and to craft the nest stage of
operations
11Three Approaches to Qualitative Data Analysis
- Collaborative social research
- Collaborative action research
- Researchers join closely with the participants
from the outset - The aim is the transform the social environment
through a process of critical inquiry to act on
the world rather than being acted on. - Critical ethnography, action science
12Analytic Methods
- Affixing codes to field note drawn from
observations or interviews - Noting reflections or other remarks in the margins
13Analytic Methods
- Sorting to identify similar phrases,
relationships between variables, patterns,
themes, distinct differences between subgroups,
and common sequences - Isolating patterns and processes, commonalities
and differences, and taking them out to the field
in the next wave of data collection
14Analytic Methods
- Gradually elaborating a small set of
generalizations that cover the consistencies
discerned in the database - Confronting those generalizations with a
formalized body of knowledge in the form of
constructs and theories
15Analytic Methods Specific to Grounded Theory
Method
- Theoretical Sampling
- Constant comparison
- Generative concept relating questions
- Conceptual integration
- Member checks
- Peer review
16Analytic Methods Specific to Grounded Theory
Method
- The object of grounded theory is to discover or
validate a conceptual framework that explains the
scene being investigated.
17Grounded Theory MethodFit, Grab, Work
- To Fit, means that the categories that are
generated must be indicated by the data and
applied readily to the data - To have Grab, a theory must be relevant to the
participant group and the practice group. - To work, a theory should be able to explain what
happened, predict what will happen and interpret
what is happening
18Analytic Methods
- Data collection
- Data reduction
- Data display
- Drawing verifying conclusions
19Process of Constant Comparative Analysis
Sources
Data
Stage 1
Incidents
Coding
Stage 2
Categories/Properties/ Memos
Stage 3
Concepts/Propositions/ Memos
Stage 4
Theory
Source Pickler, R.H. 1990
20Strengths of Qualitative Data
- Focus on naturally occurring, ordinary events in
natural settings - Local groundedness
- Case based
- Richness holism thick descriptions
- Sustained period of analysis
21Strengths of Qualitative Data
- Assess causality
- Flexibility - emergent design
- Discovering the meanings of lived experience
- Connecting meaning to the social world
22Strengths of Qualitative Data
- Develop hypotheses
- Test hypotheses
- Supplement, validate, explain, illuminate, or
reinterpret quantitative data
23Weaknesses of Qualitative Analysis
- Lengthy process
- Stigma Misunderstanding of qualitative method
24Application to your work?
- Jim Birren states that Gerontology as a field is
data rich but theory poor. How does this relate
to the need for qualitative exploration? - Can you see a use for qualitative data analysis
in your work?