Title: Qualitative Research An Introduction
1Qualitative ResearchAn Introduction
- AEF 801
- Mary.Brennan_at_ncl.ac.uk
2Qualitative Research
- Qualitative research is an interdisciplinary,
transdisciplinary, and sometimes
counterdisciplinary field. It crosses the
humanities and the social and physical sciences.
Qualitative research is many things at the same
time. It is multiparadigmatic in focus. Its
practitioners are sensitive to the value of the
multimethod approach. They are committed to the
naturalistic perspective, and to the
interpretative understanding of human experience.
At the same time, the field is inherently
political and shaped by multiple ethical and
political positions. - Nelson et als (1992, p4)
3Qualitative Research
- Qualitative Researchinvolves finding out what
people think, and how they feel - or at any rate,
what they say they think and how they say they
feel. This kind of information is subjective.
It involves feelings and impressions, rather than
numbers - Bellenger, Bernhardt and Goldstucker, Qualitative
Research in Marketing, American Marketing
Association
4Qualitative Research
- Qualitative research is multimethod in focus,
involving an interpretative, naturalistic
approach to its subject matter. - Qualitative Researchers study things (people
and their thoughts) in their natural settings,
attempting to make sense of, or interpret,
phenomena in terms of the meanings people bring
to them.
5Qualitative Research
- Qualitative research involves the studied use and
collection of a variety of empirical materials -
case study, personal experience, introspective,
life story, interview, observational, historical,
interactional, and visual texts-that describe
routine and problematic moments and meanings in
individuals lives. - Deploy a wide range of interconnected methods,
hoping always to get a better fix on the subject
matter at hand.
6The Qualitative Researcher as Bricoleur
- Bricoleur
- A Jack of all trades or kind of professional DIY
person - Produces a bricolage, that is a pieced together,
close-knit set of practices that provide
solutions to a problem in a concrete situation - The solution which is a result of the bricoleurs
method is an emergent construction that changes
and takes new forms as different tools, methods
and techniques are added to the puzzle.
7The Qualitative Researcher as Bricoleur
- The Qualitative Researcher as Bricoleur uses the
tools of his methodological trade . The choice
of research practices depends upon the questions
that are asked, and the questions depend on their
context, what is available in the context, and
what the researcher can do in that setting. - The Bricoleur is adept at performing a large
number of diverse tasks ranging from interviewing
to observing, to interpreting personal and
historical documents, to intensive
self-reflection and introspection.
8The Qualitative Researcher as Bricoleur
- The bricoleur understands that research is an
interactive process shaped by his own personal
history, biography, gender, social class, race,
and ethnicity and those of the people in the
setting. - The product of the bricoleurs labour is a
bricolage, a complex, dense, reflexive,
collage-like creation that represents the
researchers images, understanding and
interpretations of the world or phenomenon under
analysis. - The bricolage will connect the parts to the
whole, stressing the meaningful relationships
that operate in the situations and social worlds
studied.
9Positivist Paradigm
- Emphasises that human reason is supreme and that
there is a single objective truth that can be
discovered by science - Encourages us to stress the function of objects,
celebrate technology and to regard the world as a
rational, ordered place with a clearly defined
past, present and future
10Non-Positivist Paradigm
- Questions the assumptions of the positivist
paradigm - Argues that our society places too much emphasis
on science and technology - Argues that this ordered, rational view of
consumers denies the complexity of the social and
cultural world we live in - Stresses the importance of symbolic, subjective
experience
11The Five moments of Qualitative Research
- Traditional Period 1900s-World War II
- Wrote objective colonising accounts of field
experiences that were reflective of the
positivist scientist paradigm - Concerned with offering valid, reliable, and
objective interpretations in their writings. - The subject who was studied was alien, foreign,
and strange.
12The Modernist PhasePost war-1970s
- The modernist ethnographer and sociological
participant observer attempted rigorous,
qualitative studies of important social
processes, including social control in the
classroom and society - Researchers were drawn to qualitative research
because it allowed them to give a voice to
societys underclass
13Blurred Genres1970-1986
- Researchers had a full complement of paradigms,
methods and strategies - Applied qualitative research was gaining in
stature - Research strategies ranged from grounded theory
to the case study methodology - Methods included qualitative interviewing and
observational, visual, personal and documentary
methods. - Computers were becoming more prevalent
- Boundaries between the social sciences and
humanities had become blurred - Social science was borrowing models, theories and
methods of analysis from the humanities - Researcher acknowledged as being part of the
research process
14Crisis of RepresentationMid 1980s-Current Day
- Caused by the publication of a book called
Anthropology as Cultural Critique (Marcus and
Fischer, 1986) - Made research and writing more reflexive and
called into question the issues of gender, class
and race. - Interpretative theories as opposed to grounded
theories were more common as writers challenge
old models of truth and meaning - Crisis of Representation and Legitimisation
15The Fifth MomentCurrent Day
- Defined and shaped by the dual crisis of
representation and legitimisation - Theories now beginning to be read in narrative
terms as tales of the field - Concept of an aloof researcher has finally been
fully abandoned - More action oriented research is on the horizon
- More Social criticism and social critique
- The search for grand narratives is being replaced
by more local, small-scale theories fitted to
specific problems and specific situations
16Qualitative v.'s Quantitative
17Popularity of Qualitative Research
- Usually much cheaper than quantitative research
- No better way than qualitative research to
understand in-depth the motivations and feelings
of consumers - Qualitative research can improve the efficiency
and effectiveness of quantitative research
18Limitations of Qualitative Research
- Marketing successes and failures are based on
small differences in the marketing mix. - Qualitative research doesnt distinguish these
differences as well as quantitative research can. - Not representative of the population that is of
interest to the researcher - The multitude of individuals who, without formal
training, profess to be experts in the field
19Qualitative Research as a Process
- Theory
- Method
- Analysis
- All three interconnect to define the qualitative
research process
20Theoretical ApproachDeductive
- Deductive Theoretical Approach
- Seek to use existing theory to shape the approach
which you adopt to the qualitative research
process and to aspects of data analysis - Analytical Procedures
- Pattern Matching
- Involves predicting a pattern of outcomes based
on theoretical propositions to explain what you
expect to find - Explanation Building
- Involves attempting to build an explanation while
collecting and analysing the data, rather than
testing a predicted explanation as in pattern
matching
21Inductive Approach
- Inductive Theoretical Approach
- Seek to build up a theory which is adequately
grounded in a number of relevant cases. Referred
to as Interpretative and Grounded Theory - Art of Interpretation
- Field Text Consists of field notes and documents
from the field - Research Text Notes and interpretations based on
the filed text - Working interpretative document Writers initial
attempt to make sense out of what he has learned - Public Text The final tale of the Field
22Qualitative Data Collection Techniques
- In depth Interviewing
- Focus Groups
- Participant Observations
- Ethnographic Studies
- Projective Techniques
23Analysis Qualitative Data An Approach
- Categorisation
- Unitising data
- Recognising relationships and developing the
categories you are using to facilitate this - Developing and testing hypotheses to reach
conclusion
24Interactive Nature of the Qualitative Process
- Data collection, data analysis and the
development and verification of relationships and
conclusion are all interrelated and interactive
set of processes - Allows researcher to recognise important themes,
patterns and relationships as you collect data - Allows you to re-categorise existing data to see
whether themes and patterns and relationships
exist in the data already collected - Allows you to adjust your future data collection
approach to see whether they exist in other cases
25Tools for helping the Analytical Process
- Summaries
- Should contain the key points that emerge from
undertaking the specific activity - Self Memos
- Allow you to make a record of the ideas which
occur to you about any aspect of your research,as
you think of them - Researcher Diary