Title: What is Qualitative Research?
1What is Qualitative Research?
A lecture by
Dr. Christopher Kollmeyer
- Sociology 3522
- 31 Jan. 2008
2Key Epistemological Question Can the social
world be studied with the same methods used in
the natural sciences?
- YES ? Positivism and deductive research
- Theory ?Hypothesis ? Collect Data ? Findings ?
- Hypothesis confirmed or rejected ? Revise theory
- Building blocks of positivistic research
- Theories, hypotheses, variables (proxies,
measurement validity)
3In-Class Exercise
- 1) Write a one sentence hypothesis about the
following social problems - poverty
- gender inequality in the workplace
- anti-social behavior among teenagers
- 2) Identify the variables in your hypotheses
- 3) How you would measure these variables?
4Possible Answers for In-Class Exercise
- 1) Write a one sentence hypothesis about
poverty. - Answer Most families living in poverty are
headed by individuals with low levels of
education. - 2) Identify the variables in your hypotheses.
- Answer Poverty and education
- 3) How you would measure these variables?
- Answer Poverty s by which a familys annual
income falls below the national poverty line.
Education number of years of formal education
for head of household. - 4) Whats the unit of analysis?
- Answer Families
5Key Epistemological Question Can the social
world be studied with the same methods and
principles used in the natural sciences?
- NO?Interpretativism (or Verstehen)
- Focuses on understanding motivations for
actions rather than anonymous social forces
operating beyond the individuals control - Emphasizes the subjects point of view and how it
influences his or her behaviour. - Inductive research (usually qualitative research)
- General Interest ? Collect Data on Topic ?
Develop Findings/Insights ? Revise or develop
theories
6Example of Inductive Research
- Degiuli, F and C Kollmeyer. 2007. Bringing
Gramsci back in Labor control in Italy's new
temporary help industry. Work, Employment
Society 21(3) 497-515 - http//wes.sagepub.com/cgi/content/abstract/21/3/4
97
7Key Ontological Question Does the social world
contain forces that operate wholly independent of
individual social actors?
- Yes Objectivism ? positivistic approach
- Social forces seen as external realities lying
beyond our control - No Constructionism ? interpretive approach
- People and groups often actively participate in
creating and interpreting social forces. Thus,
they are embedded in the social process. Its
not external to them.
8Structure, Agency, and Reflexivity
Social Forces
Free Will
Social Reproduction or Social Change
9Example of Research in the Interpretivistic
Tradition
- Duneier, Mitchell. 1999. Sidewalk. New York FSB
- Basic Steps
- Interested in the Creation of Safe Urban
Communities - Broken Widows Thesis
- Informal Social Control
- Pick Field Work Site
- Participant-Observer
- Conceptualize Findings / Generate Theoretical
Insights - Reframe Original Research Question
10Key Differences Between Quantitative and
Qualitative Research